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Kantara Indian Cemetery Memorial

  • Country Egypt
  • Total identified casualties 283 Find these casualties
  • Identified casualties from First World War
  • GPS Coordinates Latitude: 30.87318, Longitude: 32.33118

Historical Note

Special report - historical note This memorial was built to commemorate the 283 Indian casualties who were originally buried or commemorated in Kantara Indian Cemetery, which in 1961 was declared unmaintainable. The original memorial had a general inscription, with the names recorded in a printed memorial register. In 2000, these names were added to the memorial.

 

You can find more information about historical inequalities in commemoration in our Special Committee’s report.

Read the Non-Commemoration report

Location information

Kantara War Memorial Cemetery, in which the memorial stands, is situated at Kantara East on the eastern side of the Suez Canal, 160 kilometres north-east of Cairo and 50 kilometres south of Port Said. Access to the cemetery is via vehicular or small passenger ferry from Kantara West. Kantara East is 30 kilometres north of Ismailia on the main Ismailia-Port Said road, and the cemetery will be found 3 kilometres by road from the ferry on the northern outskirts of the village. It is now possible to access the Cemetery crossing the Suez Canal Bridge. Once on the Sinai side of the bridge follow (north) the signs for Kantara. The Cemetery is located on the right side of the road (within 70 metres) as you enter the town of Kantara.

Visiting information

Visitors are advised to consult the Foreign Commonwealth Office travel advice before considering a visit to the region due to the current unrest. For up-to-date information visit www.gov.uk/foreign-travel-advice

Opening times:

Saturday to Thursday: 7.00am to 2.30pm.

Friday: closed

Wheelchair access to the cemetery is possible via the main entrance of the cemetery. For further information and enquiries please contact enquiries@cwgc.org

Download Cemetery Plan

History information

During the early part of the First World War, Kantara was an important point in the defence of Suez against Turkish attacks and marked the starting point of the new railway east towards Sinai and Palestine, begun in January 1916. Kantara developed into a major base and hospital centre and remained active until late 1920. The Second World War again saw Kantara as a hospital centre. No 1 General Hospital was there from July 1941 to December 1945 and two others, Nos 41 and 92, were there in turn for varying periods. One of the major allied medical units in the area, No 8 Polish General Hospital, adjoined the war cemetery. In 1961, Kantara Indian Cemetery became inaccessible and it was decided that the 283 First World War servicemen buried there should instead be commemorated at Kantara War Memorial Cemetery. Panels bearing the names of the dead were affixed to the wall of the cemetery behind the Stone of Remembrance, forming the KANTARA INDIAN CEMETERY MEMORIAL. KANTARA WAR MEMORIAL CEMETERY now contains 1,562 Commonwealth burials of the First World War and 110 from the Second World War. There are also 341 war graves of other nationalities in the cemetery, many of them made from the Polish hospital and concentrated in a distinct Polish extension. The cemetery also contains the KANTARA MEMORIAL, which is located near the entrance and bears the names of 16 New Zealand servicemen of the First World War who died in actions at Rumani and Rafa, and who have no known grave