The Japanese Cemetery Park
Official Site:
Entrance Fee: FREE
Location: 825B Chuan Hoe Avenue, Singapore 549853
Exploring Singapore: Japanese Cemetery Park
Check out this 19 century Japanese Cemetery that was built by brothel owners.
Caretakers: Japanese Cemetery Park
Caretakers: Japanese Cemetery Park introduces the historical facts of Singapore's unique cemetery. It also uncovers the underlying motivation of the tomb keepers, who kept the cemetery running and preserved over the century.
Japanese Cemetery Park (1/3) in Singapore
825B Chuan Hoe Ave, 20 mins walk from Kovan MRT
Japanese Cemetery Park Singapore
Rediscovering gems in the heartlands
Being the largest Japanese cemetery in Southeast Asia at close to 30,000 square metres, this place has a rich history. It houses the remains of members of the Japanese community in Singapore, including young prostitutes, soldiers, and convicted war criminals who were executed in Changi Prison.
Gazetted as a memorial park by the Singapore government in 1987, the area started off as a rubber plantation which was donated by a Japanese brothel owner to be used as a burial ground for young Japanese women who died in destitution.
JAPANESE CEMETERY
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Japanese Cemetery Park in Singapore
Exploring places which is considered haunted in Singapore.
The Japanese Cemetery Park is one of them.
Japanese prostitutes' forgotten graves (Forgotten tombs Part 1)
More than four hundred tombs at the Japanese Cemetery Park belong to Japanese prostitutes, or karayuki-sans, who came to Singapore in the late 1800s.Grave-hunting enthusiast Raymond Goh tells us the tragic stories of these girls who were tricked into coming to Singapore to work.
Ternyata di Hougang Chuan Hoe Ada Makam Bersejarah || THE JAPANESE CEMETERY PARK SINGAPORE ||
The Japanese Cemetery Park located in Hougang Chuan Hoe, this large Japanese Cemetery in Southeast Asia and the burial ground of Singapore early Japanese Community.
This prominent structure in the Cemetery Park is beautifully contracted Prayer Hall, built in 1986 sadly, it is out of bounds of visitors, but you can sit on the cooling smooth store ledge outside the hall for a rest.
Various walkways tastefully decorated by nature.
Cemeteries are places Where the dead lay to rest eternally, a place where they lay a place of their heart, encased by their soul and memories.
[NCS] The Ghost
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Beauty is in the Eye of the Beholder: The Japanese Cemetery Park
The Japanese Cemetery Park is a hidden gem in the midst of a tranquil private residential area in Northeast Singapore. It is the largest Japanese cemetery in Southeast Asia, with 910 tombstones of karayuki-san, business men and World War II soldiers. As of 1973, new burials were no longer allowed. It was also gazetted as a memorial park by the Singapore government in 1987.
In this documentary, we explore the beauty of the park instead of capitalizing on the common stereotype of cemeteries. Through various interviews, we found that the Japanese Cemetery Park was indeed uniquely different; it was immensely beautified and well-maintained. Essentially, we learnt that a place of death can also be as far from death at the same time. As the saying goes, beauty is in the eye of the beholder.
This documentary film is made by History students of Nanyang Technological University (Singapore): Abital Ang, Leong Hui Yee and Wong Ying Yin, as part of the course work for the module 'HH4014 A Global History of Death (Instructor: Dr Song-Chuan Chen)'. If there is any copyright infringement please email scchen@ntu.edu.sg, we will take the film down.
Bibliography
Blackburn, Kevin, and Edmund Lim. Spaces of the Dead a Case From the Living. Edited by Kevin YL Tan. Singapore: Ethos Books, 2011.
Emerys, Katy Meyers. Cemeteries: Peaceful Resting Places or Competitive Inactive Arenas? Spartan Ideas. Accessed November 16, 2015.
Japanese Cemetery Closed To Burials. The Straits Time, May 9, 1973.
Voices from a Forgotten past. The Long and Winding Road. December 18, 2012. Accessed November 14, 2015.
Warren, James Francis. Ah Ku and Karayuki-san: Prostitution in Singapore, 1870-1940. Singapore: Oxford University Press, 2003.
Caretakers: The Japanese Cemetery Park (Final Cut)
In the midst of Yio Chu Kang Road in Singapore, is a hundred year-old Japanese cemetery and the largest of its kind in Southeast Asia. Situated within a residential estate, the cemetery became an unlikely oasis for neighbors and visitors alike searching for fresh air and tranquility.
This documentary was done as a part of Temasek Polytechnic's Moving Images project, made possible with the aid of Japanese Association. I've decided to make this video public to share the story of the late Lim Qeok Qi, a hardworking and dedicated man who spent his entire life in the Japanese Cemetery Park.
Japanese Cemetery Singapore Makam bersejarah Jaman penjajahan Jepang Di Singapura
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#singapore #japanesecemetery #exploresingapore
Japanese graves at Singapore
Japanese cemetery at Singapore
Japanese Cemetery Park (3/3) in Singapore
Japanese Cemetery Park (3/3) in Singapore
Japanese Cemetery Park (2/3) in Singapore
Japanese Cemetery Park (2/3) in Singapore
Blood-stained tomb (Unusual Graves Pt 2)
Did you know there are Japanese soldiers and prostitutes buried in Singapore? They're lying in peace at the Japanese Cemetery Park.
A Japanese cemetery in Singapore
A Japanese cemetery in Singapore. Located at Chuan Hoe Ave near Serangoon North Ave 1.
Singapore's Japanese Cemetery
Audio Track: FairyTail Tsuioku ~Mezameru Tamashii~
Finding the MYSTERIOUS Japanese Tomb in SINGAPORE VLOG
Welcome to SINGAPORE
Hidden in the forested slope, at almost the top of the hill, is a tombstone commemorating a Japanese who worked in Singapore during the 1940s. According to the inscriptions on the tombstone, his name was Komoto Ekasa (小本江笠), and he was a civilian naval engineer who had worked for the Mitsubishi Heavy Industries.
Komoto Ekasa was said to be sent to Singapore in March 1942, shortly after the fall of Singapore. He was graduated from the Tokyo Imperial University (present-day University of Tokyo) and had studied ship building. Four months after arriving at Singapore, Komoto Ekasa died, at an age of 47, due to overwork.
Acknowledging his diligence and tireless efforts in working days and nights, the Imperial Japanese Navy commissioned the building of his tomb in December 1943 at the top of Mount Faber, with his tombstone facing southwards to the Keppel Harbour. A platform with steps was also constructed using red bricks supplied by the Alexandra Brickworks.
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