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Syonan Jinja

Syonan Jinja
Shōnan Shrine
昭南神社
Shinto shrine in Shonan (Singapore) - 194210.jpg
The near-completed Syonan Jinja in 1942
Religion
AffiliationShinto
DeityAmaterasu
TypeShinto shrine
Location
LocationMacRitchie Reservoir
Geographic coordinates1°20′41.17″N 103°49′21.12″E / 1.3447694°N 103.8225333°E
Architecture
Date establishedMay 7, 1942
DestroyedAugust 15, 1945
Shinto torii icon vermillion.svg Glossary of Shinto

Syonan Jinja (昭南神社, Shōnan Jinja, lit. "Shōnan Shrine") was a Shinto shrine at MacRitchie Reservoir, Singapore. Built by the Japanese Imperial Army during the Japanese Occupation of Singapore in World War II, the shrine was destroyed directly before British forces re-occupied Singapore. The National Heritage Board declared the site a Historic Site in 2002, although no plans have been made public to develop or to protect the site.

History

The Syonan Jinja (Light of the South Shrine) was envisioned to be a shrine that commemorated the many Japanese soldiers and military personnel who fell in the Japanese conquest of Singapore. Major Yasuji Tamura, the commander of the Japanese 5th Division's Engineers Regiment and the man in-charge of the design and the construction of the Syonan Jinja, planned that the shrine would be the best Shinto shrine in the whole of the southern areas of Asia (under Japanese occupation). It was also to be the second-greatest shrine of the Shinto faith after the Meiji Shrine in Tokyo, Japan.[1]

Destruction

Just before the Japanese officially surrendered on 15 August in 1945, they destroyed and burnt the shrine to the ground in fear of its desecration by the returning British forces.

Preservation

The ruins of Syonan Jinja (down to a few remaining support structures and broken pieces and chunks) can still be found in the dense tropical forest of the Central Catchment Nature Reserve, in which includes the MacRitchie Reservoir.[2] The remnants of the old shrine were designated as a historical site by the National Heritage Board (NHB) in 2002.[1] However, the historical site remains highly inaccessible to the public.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b "Syonan Jinja on Infopedia". National Library Board. 2004-12-24. Archived from the original on 2015-10-02. Retrieved 2015-08-11.
  2. ^ a b "Syonan Jinja". National Heritage Board. Archived from the original on 2015-10-23. Retrieved 2015-08-11.


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