Sunday 28 March 2010

Pre-visiting to the abandoned cemetery at Lorong Halwa (先行探訪被遺忘之新恆山亭)





On Saturday Morning (27 Mar 2010) at about 10.00Am, a group of us, including Reporters of Straits Time Singapore, we went to Lorong Halwa Cemetery to do a Pre-visiting before the Actual Visiting that took place on next Saturday to take some nice pictures.

In the following, it's a write-up by Bro Wee Cheng on the Day's Tour:

"
Do you know that just outside of the City at Lorong Halwa/Bukit Brown - south of Lornie Rd and off the PIE near Bukit Timah Rd - is a large piece of long forgotten cemeteries and old tombs, almost overgrown by the tropical rainforest? Today, I joined the Straits Times (doing an article about Qing Ming) and a few founders of the SG-Tao discussion yahoogroup for a photoshot at this place. Many of the tombs dated to as early as the late 19th century and some as late as 1971. Most of the tombs are long forgotten by the descendants of those buried there and overgrown with weeds.

We came across a few grander ones still tended by people, including one with elaborate fengshui water and sculpture features. At that stage of the trip, I was still a bit "pang tang" and didn't take any photos. We visited a temple which used to be the heart of the old Kampong Lorong Halwa but whose roof has almost collapsed. There was a Tua Beh Kong altar but Jave felt that it might be a different diety within...

We also came across a family headed by a 75y/o matriarch there to clear the tomb of her father-in-law buried here 60 years ago. Her son, brother-in-law and the latter's wife was also present. "The young these days do not even care about their living mother...why should they care about these long dead," she said aloud. Interestingly, we ended our trip at a monumental tomb (complete with stone sculptures of Sikh guards) over which a traditional Malay house was built many years ago by a fengshui master. Even the fengshui master had supposedly long past on and the house is now owned by someone. There was neither wall nor door and so we walked right through. The dog even posed for us over the tomb of the dead's spinster daughter.

What a day! An article on this visit would appear soon in the ST, possibly Monday.
"

10 comments:

  1. Pic 13-15, this is known as the Tomb House for Tan Boon Cheng, a famous Fortune-teller in Waterloo Street in the past.

    Now, this Tomb House is being taken care by a man who stayed in it.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Why this tua pek kong face so pale? pardon me..

    ReplyDelete
  3. From the overall, this Statue is not longer being enhanced by any Deities.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Does it mean pek kong has left the statue?

    ReplyDelete
  5. Hi Shifu.. So is it empty or another spiritual being is residing the statue?

    ReplyDelete
  6. Yup, can consider as empty and was being invaded by the other beings.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Shifu, you can re-empty that statue and enhance it with the good energy. If people honour such other beings, the other beings probably will "disturb" people in environment. *just my thought*

    ReplyDelete
  8. But due to someone is there guarding this, so its not possible for me to re-enhance for them, unless the people gave me the permission.

    ReplyDelete

Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.