Haunting of Changi Beach: Singapur's Ghosts of War

Haunting of Changi Beach: Singapur's Ghosts of War
25 June 2025 J.W.H
ghosts

After the massacre in the Second World War, it is said that Changi Beach in Singapore is haunted by her victims. Is it possible that the Sook Ching massacre made ghosts to persecute the beach, or is it something that is in the color of bloody red sand?

When you think about Singapore, you can imagine elegant skyscrapers, lively centers of eternal and impeccable streets of the city. But under a state-of-the-art veneer lies with blood saturated with blood, and few places are just as steeped in sadness and spectral legend as the Changi beach.

Changi Beach Park is located at the northern end of the Eastern Changa region in Singapore and one of the oldest coastal parks in the country. During the day it is a picturesque section of white sand 3 km total through the South China Sea. At night it is a haunted shoreline, in which it is said that the ghosts of betrayed and butchers are traveling – restless.

Haunted Changi Beach: Sunset in Changi Beach Park Changi Point. After the Sook Ching massacre during the Second World War, it is one of the Mot Haunted in Singapore

A bloody past: Sook Ching massacre

During World War II, after the Japanese forces captured Singapore in 1942, they began a brutal purge known as the Sook Ching-Systematic Massacre, the extermination of suspicious Chinese anti-Japanese people, considered resistance fighters or sympathizers. The name means “cleansing”, although Japanese imperialists called it: “Great Singapore inspection”.

How many, who were actually a part of resistance, are uncertain, because the Japanese summed up a group of Asians working on the changa beach, which had nothing to do with the POW, who sabotaged Japanese engines in Barrakks Sellang, a mechanical workshop used by Japanese soldiers. Employees, mainly from the Bukit Timah/Stevens Road area, were tortured for many days. Ultimately, the employees were made as a warning before POW on the Changa beach.

Changi Beach was one of several enforcement places on the massacre on February 20, 1942. On this section of seemingly peaceful sand in the queue, at least 66 Chinese men were set, shot and buried. It is believed that the real number of victims in all places of Sook Ching is up to 50,000 between February 18 to March 4.

The men were attached to each other and forced to cross the beach towards the water. When they reached the edge, they were shot and killed by Japanese Hojo Kempei. Those who did not die immediately after the shooting, were sunk or killed with bayonets.

Massacre bodies were buried in mass graves, dug by war prisoners in nearby camps.

After the war, the Japanese were forced to surrender and underwent a trial, and their punishment was the same as their crime: to be performed in the same way. 15 of them were convicted and taken to the Changi beach and shot there.

This was the case with people like lieutenant general S. Fukuyei. He commanded the camp and was found guilty of the execution of two Australian and two British on the banks of the Changi beach. When it was taken in the same way, photos from them were published in Singaporek newspapers.

Vice Admiral T. Hara together with his three men was found guilty in the murder of nine Burmese soldiers and was hanged in the Changa region a few years after the war.

Little is known about the victims after the war and what really happened to them. At least during the first few years, families needed a way to honor their dead. The Taoist ceremony took place in 1948 in the so -called Valley of Tears, in which mass graves of Japanese occupation were considered. It was also to peaceful the hungry ghosts they were afraid of creating.

The haunting changa beach

But did all Taoist ceremonies lend a hand to keep the ghosts? According to local knowledge of ghosts – no. For decades, both guests and residents have whispered amazing, inexplicable phenomena at Changi Beach. People believe that innocent employees who have been performed are haunted by the bad because of their fate.

Sounds of crying and screaming voices were reported, although the beach is empty and the source can not be found anywhere. The sound of pistols is also some things that beaches say. Some even say that they saw the spirits of executions playing again and again, Phantom Blood paints red sand.

Beachgoers say they were struck, pushed or caught for unseen hands when they bathe or relax in the sand. Some report a sudden feeling of brushed fingers against hair or shoulders, just to rotate and find themselves.

Women's ghostly screams are often heard in the wind, especially near aged enforcement places. Some say she is the spirit of the mother who watched her sons, the cursed to mourn eternity.

Headless revelations

A few terrifying stories require the view of quiet characters wandering on the beach, and their torso sway, as if they were looking for something – or someone – long lost. Witnesses report that these fears disappear after rapprochement, leaving only the persistent smell of decay and salt.

Perhaps the most grotesque tale is the infinite human remains appearing in the night sky, in the company of distant screams. Eye witnesses say that they see their arms, heads and torsos, drift over their heads like a twisted kites, disappear before they touch the sand or their heads, floating on the surface of the water.

Malay myth of removal spirits

Some believe that these floating heads and other limbs are not ghosts at all, but something obscure from folklore. They are called Hantu Penanggal and are not ghosts, but witches or a vampiric creature of Malay folklore who wants to live forever.

Source: Kurt chest of drawers/Flickr

They were able to separate their heads from the body and feed on women and pregnant children. They look like a woman herself during the day, at night, turn into a painful creature, their organs along the neck, flickering in the obscure like Will-A-Te-Te Wisp, leaving the smell of vinegar-

A beach that doesn't forget

Changi Beach, despite the entire tropical beauty and cheerful day facade, has a nightmare secret. It is a place where history does not want to be buried, and the spirits of war are still screaming on the waves.

If you visit, stop for a while. Listen to whispers in the wind. Feel the unseen fingers on your shoulder. And if you hear the funeral shouts of a crying woman – don't answer. Some voices are to remain in the shade.

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Haunted Changi Beach – Singapore

Changi Beach Park – Wikipedia

Sook Ching – Wikipedia

Image Source: Pixabay.com

  • J.W.H

    About John:

    John Williams is a Reincarnationist paranormal Intuitive freelance writer...he is living proof of reincarnation existence, through his personal exploration, he has confirmed its authenticity through visits to the very lands where these events transpired.

    Through guided meditation/s using hemi-sync technology he has managed to recollect 3 previous lives to his own, that go back to the Mid to Late 19th century.

    JWH - "You are the GODS! - Inclusion of the Eternal Light of Love and you shall never die”.

    “Death is Just the Beginning of Life”