2020
DOI: 10.3390/rel11080382
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Ancestors Are Watching: Ritual and Governance at Peck San Theng, a Chinese Afterlife Care Organization in Singapore

Abstract: Kwong Wai Siew Peck San Theng 新加坡廣惠肇碧山亭 (hereafter PST) is a non-profit organization registered under Singapore’s Societies Ordinance, founded in 1870 by Chinese immigrants from three prefectures of Guangdong province: Guangzhou 廣州, Zhaoqing 肇慶 and Huizhou 惠州. Until the mid-1970s, it managed more than 100,000 graves spread over 324 acres of land. After the Singapore government acquired its land for urban development PST continued its service to the departed by managing a columbarium that accommodates urns and … Show more

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“…Living on this space was viewed by some Chinese as offensive to ancestors and ghosts, which may bring bad fortune on them. A nursing home built on the previous territory of Peck San Theng was also left empty (Choi, 2020). Further, the government's encouragement of sea burials disrupted the traditional ways of spiritual communication and interaction attached to burial grounds as well as the gifting relations behind the death rituals (Tong, 2004).…”
Section: The Affective Negotiation Of Secularised and Eco-friendly De...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Living on this space was viewed by some Chinese as offensive to ancestors and ghosts, which may bring bad fortune on them. A nursing home built on the previous territory of Peck San Theng was also left empty (Choi, 2020). Further, the government's encouragement of sea burials disrupted the traditional ways of spiritual communication and interaction attached to burial grounds as well as the gifting relations behind the death rituals (Tong, 2004).…”
Section: The Affective Negotiation Of Secularised and Eco-friendly De...mentioning
confidence: 99%