This is something for history buffs, or if you had family who were in Singapore during the Japanese Occupation. It is out by the Singapore Airport, next to the forbidding bulk of Changi Prison. The Museum is a gallery wrapped around the very simple, and moving, chapel which served Christians and Jews. Great thanks to the many Australian contributors, who recorded the life of a large group of young Australians interned. The map of the site shows there was a Women's camp, and the Indian Army Camp, which deserve their own galleries.
The numbers who passed through, and the numbers who never returned from work camps outside Singapore, are sobering.
I was surprised at the amount of creativity the place unleashed in its population. 'Changi University', the skills taught to inmates by inmates; music, the visual arts; the diaries and the poetry.
In the chapel space there is a wall where you can leave your comments on your visit. The reference to how Japanese record their wishes, when visiting their temples, is unmistakable.