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Singapore’s hell theme park featuring Chinese folklore is dead serious about the afterlife

  • Hell’s Museum in Singapore showcases Asian culture, faiths and philosophy, and exhibits various religious views on the afterlife

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Visitors walking past statues at Haw Par Villa, an Asian cultural park that features Chinese folklore, legend and mythology in Singapore. Photo: AFP

Gory grottos with demons impaling sinners on stakes and people drowning in a pool of blood are not part of your average theme park experience.

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But at Hell’s Museum in Singapore, the main attraction at the Haw Par Villa park, visitors are welcomed to a kitschy, air-conditioned hell on Earth.

Inside the sprawling park complex with more than 1,000 statues and dioramas showcasing Asian culture, faiths and philosophy, Hell’s Museum exhibits various religious views on the afterlife.

Visitors are encouraged to learn about the 10 Courts of Hell through intense depictions of punishments for earthly sins.

At court number two, for instance, corruption gets you frozen in ice while rapists at court seven are thrown in boiling oil.

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The 10 Courts of Hell are “the result of the mixing of four different religions and philosophies: Buddhism, Taoism, Hinduism, Confucianism”, said Eisen Teo, the chief curator of Hell’s Museum in the multicultural city state.
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