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Wednesday, August 20, 2014

At Home In Balestier... Part II


Over the last few days that we stayed at Balestier, we got an interesting insight into how Singapore evolved as a nation. The Balestier area was an area where tigers roamed free. Free trade brought in an American, Joseph Balestier, who cultivated the place. Over time, Balestier developed with Chinese working class immigrants moving in, and then, the rich and the famous...
One of the residents of Balestier was Dr. Sun Yet Sen, the founder of the Republic of China. Dr. Sen was a frequent visitor to Singapore and South East Asia in the early 1900s. During his stay in Singapore, he was offered a villa, known as Wan Qing Yuan (Serene Sunset Garden). Today it is called the Sun Yat Sen Nanyang Memorial Hall.
Located right across Zhongshan Park on the Ah Hood Road, the villa is stately and elegant - an important landmark on the Balestier heritage trail...



Dr. Sn was a medical doctor turned revolutionary. He was the first president and is considered to be the founding father of the Republic of China, respectfully called "Father of the Nation" in Taiwan, Republic of China (ROC). Mainland China or the People's Republic of China reveres him as the "forerunner of democratic revolution". 
He played an instrumental role in the overthrow of the Qing dynasty during the years leading up to the Double Ten Revolution and was appointed as the Provisional President of the new republic, when it was founded in 1912. He later co-founded the Kuomintang (KMT) party, serving as its first leader. Sun was a uniting figure in post-Imperial China.
In 1905, Sun along with revolutionary Chinese students studying in Tokyo, Japan formed a group Tongmenghui (United League), which sponsored uprisings in China. He came to the region actively seeking funds for the Tongmenghui.
As you go on the heritage trail and walk across the the Zhongshan Park, the pathways are tiled with a timeline of Dr. Sun Yat Sen's tryst with Singapore - this is quite an innovative way of reminding people of their history.











A few days back, on August 15, 2014, I tried to visit the Memorial Hall, but it was closed. I could not help but appreciate the villa's stately elegance that last lasted over a century. The two-storied villa is steeped in Victorian grandeur.


The villa, then known as Bin Chan House, was built in the 1880s by a Chinese trader, Boey Chuan Poh for his mistress - indeed Balestier was then the playground for the rich and the famous...
The villa was bought by a rubber magnate, Teo Eng Hock in 1905 and renamed Wan Qing Yuan. Hock had bought the villa for his ageing mother. When Dr. Sen visited Singapore, he offered the villa as a base for the activities of the Tongmenghui. 
After the overthrow of the Qing Dynasty in China, the villa became the local headquarters of the KMT Party.
The villa changed hands and fell into Japanese hands during the Second World War. The Japanese used the villa as their communication centre and as an office of the Kempeitai or the dreaded military police.
The villa was dedicated as a national monument in 1994 and was reopened in 2011 to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the 1911 Revolution in China.



The Memorial Hall is scheduled to feature exhibits of Madam Soong Ching-ling, Dr. Sen's spouse...


A statue of Dr. Sen...


Verdant lawns of the Wan Qing Yuan...



A photograph of Teo Eng Hock's family...


Chinese calligraphy of the words "Bo Ai" or Universal Love which was presented by Dr. Sen to the Hock family...


Madam Soong's paper passport on display...


A background of Madam Soong...



A model of the villa and Dr. Sen's car...



Madam Soong's rather pretty dress...



A story of love blossoming between Dr. Sen and Madam Soong...


Marriage certificate of Dr. Sen and Madam Soong...


Model of the train that Madam Soong used to travel to the USSR in 1927...


The library...









A short history of Balestier Road on display in the Memorial Hall...



Caricatures from the newspapers of the early 1900s...





Currency of liberated China...





Dr. Sen addressing followers in a marketplace...



Chairman Mao's tribute to Dr. Sen...



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