History of Japan cave hole aceh Indonesia, stir the world

in #sejarah7 years ago

imageThe Japanese presence in Aceh began in early 1942. The Japanese built a fortress and various caves in the area.

The concept of defense by building the castle and cave is done by the Japanese along the coast and hills in Aceh.

Take a look along the beaches of Lhokseumawe, Sabang and other beaches, you will easily find the remains of the remains of Japan.

So is the cave. Especially in Lhokseumawe, throughout 1942, the Japanese army forced hundreds of Acehnese to build fortresses and caves imageonce entered Aceh, Japan decided to build a defense center in the hills of Blang Payang Village, Muara Dua District, Lhokseumawe City.

The hill is located 120 meters above sea level. From the direction of the hill stretching the Indian Ocean, so it is suitable to be a monitoring center of Japan at that time. imagewide cave mouth of the Japanese heritage that is 2 x 3 meters.

Lhokseumawe is squeezed by two hills, Cot Panggoi and Ramulah. In Aceh, caves are known as guha or keurokrok (hiding places). The cave divides the hilly area of ​​the region.

In addition to hiding places, the cave is often used to hold the prisoners.

"We used to work as a Japanese caterpillar maker. Forced by Japan. Romusha. No salary imageCurrently, the cave is used as a tourist attraction. Cave walls have paving blocks installed. But most of the walls are retained according to their original form.

Scars of weapons are still visible on the wall. It is said that in the detention room, hundreds of lives floated because of torture.

Even in some caves there is a detention room that is just enough to stand one person. These prisoners are left standing for 24 hours in a day. In the cave, like a Japanese cave model, there is generally a reconnaissance, logistics, custody, dining room, kitchen and bedroom space. Now, the cave is a silent witness to the atrocities of Japanese soldiers in Indonesia. imageThank you for reading my review about the history of the hill tour japanese cave aceh Indonesia, hopefully your day is fun

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I found your post to be fascinating, I am somewhat of a history buff with WWII as a particular interest. I was not actually aware that parts of Aceh were occupied.

To me turning these into tourist attractions is smart, because it is dangerous to forget your past. It is a reminder of how important sovereignty is, and that freedom is a fire to be maintained.

Thank you for sharing this, I will Follow you on Steemit.

Thank you for liking my post, have a nice day

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