TARLAC | The Capas National Shrine
Wednesday, April 02, 2014Whispers silently echo through the black circular walls of the Capas National Shrine in Tarlac. The sky was devoid of clouds and the mid-afternoon sun shone hard, full and unfiltered. It was sweltering hot, but somehow, these whispers sent a shiver down my body.
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THE THREE-PRONGED PILLAR AT THE CAPAS NATIONAL SHRINE IN TARLAC |
On the 9th of April 1942, around 60,000 to 80,000 Filipino and American soldiers, those who survived and surrendered after the Fall of Corregidor, were herded by the Japanese occupational forces at Mariveles, Bataan.
These prisoners of war were then forced to march for hundreds of kilometers, passing through the towns of Pampanga and Tarlac, their numbers dwindling every day due to hunger, disease, and fatigue until they reached Camp O’ Donnel in the town of Capas.
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A QUOTE FROM PRESIDENT MANUEL ROXAS |
This is their story.
The fallen heroes of the Death March. Those with their names forever etched across the black marble slabs that surround a dark, towering obelisk in the middle of a shrine surrounded by nothing but silent whispering trees.
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BENCHES AROUND THE SHRINE |
And these said trees echo their numbers. Growing where death once ruled. Each assigned to a specific fallen soldier. A forest reminding visitors of the shrine just how many fell. Somehow turning the darkness of the past into a brighter present.
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A LIST OF THOSE WHO DIED |
This is Tarlac’s Capas National Shrine.
A humble and silent memorial serving to honor the men who fell to one of the most atrocious acts ever done by humankind to its fellow beings. Names after names after names of the dead. It seemed endless in its dark loop.
THE CENTER OF CAPAS NATIONAL SHRINE |
And in its center, a three-pronged pillar terminating into a sharpened peak. A seventy-meter concrete obelisk soaring above the trees and pointing to the great blue sky.
It’s not inlaid with gold. It’s not adorned with ornaments. There is nothing fancy about it. It is simply there.
NATIONAL HISTORICAL MARKER |
Unlike the manicured American War Memorial in Taguig City, the Capas National Shrine is much more raw. It doesn’t feel like a park at all. Its atmosphere is solemn to almost being cemetery-like. It doesn’t have to pretend to be anything at all. It doesn’t ask people to come and have picnics. It doesn’t invite tourists to gawk at it.
It is what it is.
A memorial to our fallen heroes. A place for their families and kin to touch their names on that black marble wall and remember.
CAPAS NATIONAL SHRINE |
These men were the flowers of our youth. They typified the courage and loyalty of our race. We can never forget them. We will never forget them. Their heroic sacrifice set a measure of fidelity to our flag and our institutions for this and future generations. – President Manuel Roxas, November 30, 1946
Capas National Shrine
Address: Barangay Cristo Rey, Capas, Tarlac
Contact Number: +63 (936) 307-3105
Opening Hours: 6:00AM to 5:00PM
Entrance Fee: ₱20.00 | Parking Fee: ₱40.00
GPS Map Coordinates: 15.3509744,120.5460155
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