During the
Empire of Japan's occupation of Singapore during the
Pacific War (1942–1945), thousands of ethnic Chinese were killed in the
Sook Ching massacre. In an effort to remove anti-Japanese elements in Singapore, Chinese men between the ages of 18 and 50 were to report to the
Kempeitai, the
Imperial Japanese Army military police. The death toll was reported to be 6,000 by the Japanese, but official estimates range between 25,000 and 50,000. In February 1962, remains belonging to civilian victims of the Japanese occupation were unearthed in areas like
Siglap,
Changi and
Bukit Timah. The
Singapore Chinese Chamber of Commerce and Industry (SCCC) undertook the responsibility of gathering the remains and creating a memorial.
The Civilian War Memorial project On 13 March 1963,
Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew set aside a plot of land at Beach Road for the building of a memorial dedicated to the civilians killed in World War II. The SCCC set up a fund committee that was later enlarged to include all ethnic groups due to good response from the community. With the support of the
Government and contributions from the public, construction of the memorial was able to start.
Architecture The design of the memorial was conceived by Leong Swee Lim of
Swan & Maclaren Architects whom it won first prize in an open design competition in that month. The design was one of Leong's most famous and significant contributions towards Singapore's architecture. The four identical pillars, each high, represent the shared experiences and unity of the four major
races of Singapore;– Chinese, Eurasian, Indian and Malay.
Ground-breaking ceremony On 15 June 1963, Lee Kuan Yew performed the ground-breaking ceremony of "turning (or breaking) the sod" to lay the foundation for the memorial witnessed by a gathering of representatives from the Inter-Religious Organisation and members of the consular corps. Construction of the memorial began on 23 April 1966. A ceremony was held on 1 November that year before the completion of the memorial, which saw 606 urns containing the remains of thousands of unknown civilians from the mass graves interred on either side of the memorial podium, added to the material significance of the structure whose history it represents. ==Unveiling of the Memorial==