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Sook Ching

Sook Ching[e] was a mass killing that occurred from 18 February to 4 March 1942 in Singapore after it fell to the Japanese. It was a systematic purge and massacre of 'anti-Japanese' elements in Singapore, with the Singaporean Chinese particularly targeted by the Japanese military during the occupation. However, Japanese soldiers engaged in indiscriminate killing, and did not try to identify who was 'anti-Japanese.' Singapore was a crucial strategic point in World War II. From 8 February to 15 February, the Japanese fought for control of the city. The combined British and Commonwealth forces surrendered in a stunning defeat to the outnumbered Japanese on 15 February which led to its fall. The loss of Singapore was and still is Britain's largest surrender in history.[5]

Sook Ching

18 February 1942 (1942-02-18) – 4 March 1942 (1942-03-04)[b] (UTC+08:00)

Identify and eliminate suspected "anti-Japanese elements"; with specific targets for Chinese Singaporeans or others perceived as a threat to the Japanese

Systematic purge and massacre[c]

40,000 to 50,000 (consensus and retrospective analysis)[d][4]

Unknown

Three days later after the fall on 18 February, the occupying Japanese military began mass killings of a wide range of "undesirables", who were mostly ethnic Chinese, influenced by the events of the Second Sino-Japanese War that was raging simultaneously as far back as 1937. The operation was overseen by the Imperial Japanese Army's Kempeitai, its secret police. Along with Singapore, the Sook Ching was subsequently also extended to include the Chinese population in Malaya, which was also under occupation by the Japanese. Concurrently, non-Chinese individuals were also not completely spared in other parts of Asia under Japanese occupation; the Japanese had also killed at least 150,000 Tamil Indians as well as an additional 90,000 civilians in Burma and Thailand, many of which were also forced to work on the Siam–Burma Railway, infamously known as the Death Railway.


The aim for such a purge was to intimidate the Chinese community, which was considered by the Japanese to be potentially the main centre of resistance to Japanese aims of territorial expansion throughout the Asia-Pacific. The Japanese had also thought of it as a "revenge" for their perceived anti-Japanese activity in the Sinophone regions, such as procuring financial aid for China after the Japanese invasion of Manchuria and during the Second Sino-Japanese War. As a consequence, Sook Ching was aimed primarily at Chinese political and social activists, volunteers fighting on the side of the Allies,[f] as well as representatives of Chinese triads. In practice, however, the arrests and executions were carried out by the Japanese in a completely arbitrary manner, with many civilians randomly killed in summary executions even if they took no part in any organised resistance.[2]


After the war, the Japanese authorities acknowledged that the massacre took place, but disagreed about the number of deaths that Japan had caused. Japan alleged that no more "than 6,000 deaths" had occurred, while Singapore's first prime minister Lee Kuan Yew, who was himself almost a victim to Sook Ching, stated that verifiable numbers would put it at "about 70,000", including the figures in Malaya.[6] When mass graves were discovered in 1962, Singaporeans heavily lobbied for their government to demand compensation as well as an official apology from the Japanese government.[7] On 25 October 1966, the Japanese government ultimately agreed to reimburse S$50 million in reparations, half of which constituting as a grant and the rest as a loan.[7] However, the wording used for this reimbursement was classified as a "gesture of atonement", with words such as "damages" or "reparations" being avoided by the Japanese. Furthermore, the Japanese government continued to refuse to accept legal responsibility for the massacre, which would include carrying out an official investigation or inquiry of the deaths.[8] No official apology was made.[8] Remains of Sook Ching victims would subsequently continue to be unearthed by Singaporeans for decades after the massacre. In 1963, the Civilian War Memorial was constructed in memory of the civilians killed during the occupation, including Sook Ching. Remains belonging to some of the victims were also placed in a tomb under the memorial. In 1992, the various Sook Ching massacre sites around the country such as Changi Beach, Katong, Punggol Point, Tanah Merah and Sentosa were designated with historic plaque markers as heritage sites by the Singaporean government's National Heritage Board, to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the occupation.

Etymology[edit]

Japan[edit]

The Japanese referred to the Sook Ching as the Kakyō Shukusei (華僑粛清, 'purging of Overseas Chinese') or as the Shingapōru Daikenshō (シンガポール大検証, 'great inspection of Singapore'). The current Japanese term for the massacre is Shingapōru Kakyō Gyakusatsu Jiken (シンガポール華僑虐殺事件, 'Singapore Overseas Chinese Massacre').

Singapore[edit]

Singapore's National Heritage Board (NHB) uses the term Sook Ching in its publications.[9][10] In Chinese languages, the term (肅清, Hokkien siok-chheng/sok-chheng, Teochew sog4 cêng1, Mandarin sùqīng[11]) means, among other things, "eradication" or "purge".[12]

Activists in the

China Relief

Wealthy who had contributed generously to the China Relief Fund, such as modernist architect Ho Kwong Yew, who designed and built many notable houses in Singapore for the wealthy Chinese community

philanthropists

Adherents of , leader of the Nanyang National Salvation Movement

Tan Kah Kee

who were perceived to be communists

Hainan people

China-born Chinese who came to Malaya after the Second Sino-Japanese War

Men with , who were perceived to be triad members

tattoos

Chinese who joined the

Singapore Overseas Chinese Anti-Japanese Volunteer Army

Civil servants and people likely to sympathise with the British, such as and members of the legislative council

Justices of the Peace

Anyone who possessed weapons and were likely to "disrupt public security"

The Japanese military authorities defined the following as "undesirables":[16]

Kenpeitai East District Branch

Japanese war crimes

Nanjing massacre

Indonesian mass killings of 1965–66

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Tanaka, Hiroshi (1976). Meeting with Asian People (in Japanese). Tokyo: Tabata Shoten.  72006576.

JPNO

Kang, Jew Koon (1981). "Chinese in Singapore during the Japanese occupation, 1942–1945." Academic exercise – Dept. of History, .

National University of Singapore

Shinozaki, Mamoru (1982). . Singapore: Times Books International. ISBN 981-204-360-8.

Syonan—My Story: The Japanese Occupation of Singapore

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"A History of Singapore, 1819–1988. By C. M. Turnbull [Singapore, Oxford, New York: Oxford University Press, 1989, 2nd edit. 416 PP]"

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Lords of the Rim

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Singapore: A Pictorial History, 1819-2000

Blackburn, Kevin (2000). . Journal of the Malaysian Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society. 2 (279): 71–90. JSTOR 41493428.

"The Collective Memory of the Sook Ching Massacre and the Creation of the Civilian War Memorial of Singapore"

Uma Devi, G (2002). (Didier Millet ed.). Singapore: National Heritage Board. ISBN 9814068233. OCLC 50737462.

Singapore's 100 historical places

Ismail, Rahil; Shaw, Brian J.; Ooi, Giok Ling (2009). . Southeast Asian Culture and Heritage in a Globalising World. London: Routledge. pp. 93–111. doi:10.4324/9781315610047. ISBN 978-1-315-61004-7.

"Nation-building, Identity and War Commemoration Spaces in Singapore"

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"War Memory and Nation-Building in South East Asia"

Corrigan, Gordon (2010). . New York: Atlantic Books. ISBN 978-0-85789-135-8.

The Second World War: A Military History

A Short Walk – Animated short film of Sook Ching

Sook Ching Inspection Centre