10/06/2026
Defence Chaplains, commonly referred to as Padres, have been accompanying our armies into war zones for over 110 years. In wartime they have buried the dead, carried stretchers and tended to the wounded, counselled service personnel of all ranks, arranged entertainment behind the lines and provided comfort and pastoral care for those of faith and non-religious alike.
Their services were a great help to many during the long years of incarceration in Japanese Prisoner of War (POW) camps after the fall of Singapore. The allies captured in Singapore endured three and a half years as POWs and many drew on their religions to help them through. The building of Chapels, while in the camps, attests to this.
One such example was an Anglican chapel known as St. George’s Church, which saw four iterations. The first was built near Changi Village and the second at Kanchanaburi by those sent to the Thai-Burma Railway. The third was built in 1944 near Changi Gaol. The open-air construction had a roof that offered shelter for the altar, while the rest of the church was exposed to the elements. On the altar was the Changi Cross, which was fashioned from a 4.5 Howitzer shell in 1942 and followed the church to all its locations including its last one near the Officer’s area of Changi Prison. A replica of this chapel and the original Changi Cross can be seen at the Changi Museum in Singapore.
Our Lady of Roman Catholic Chapel was also built in Changi by the allied POWs in 1944. The Chapel, originally a crude hut structure, developed over time with access to additional materials. It reflects the ingenuity of the prisoners who constructed it in terms of both design and the materials they were able to scrounge. This Chapel is also an open-framed structure. However, its roof has terracotta tiles which were manufactured in India and were scrounged by the prisoners from damaged or abandoned British Army Barracks in the areas surrounding the camp.
When Changi camp was liberated in 1945, the chapel was dismantled and transported to Australia with detailed plans to reconstruct it. Originally it was to be part of the Australian War Memorial, however, stayed in storage until 1988. Finally, it was reconstructed at the Royal Military College Duntroon and stands as a National Memorial to the over 35,000 Australians who have been Prisoners of War.
Images: (photos taken by team member)
Replica of St George's Church and dedication at Changi Museum, Singapore.
Changi Chapel rebuilt and dedication at Duntroon, Canberra.