Kubur Kassim
Kubur Kassim is a closed cemetery located in Siglap, Singapore. The cemetery was established in 1921 and named after Ahna Mohamed Kassim, its main benefactor. It contains the tombs of affluent Muslim figures, saints and mystics, as well as keramat shrines. The land is owned by the Singapore Land Authority and the cemetery has been earmarked for redevelopments since 1987.
History
In 1921, an Indian Muslim trader named Ahna Mohamed Kassim purchased a plot of land at Siglap and donated it as wakaf to serve as a burial ground for the Muslim community in the area. Kassim died in 1935 and management of the cemetery was transferred to his heirs. Burials ceased in 1973. The Singapore Land Authority later purchased the land of the cemetery and earmarked it for future redevelopments in 1987. However, the full process took two years to complete and by 1989 the cemetery had been acquired completely as state land.In 1997, most burials in Kubur Kassim were recorded on microfilm and saved into government archives. The cemetery was described as a popular destination for the Bugis community in Singapore by the early 21st century, especially those who wished to rediscover the roots of their ancestry.
Incidents
In 2019, a woman named Fauziah attempted to gain ownership of the land, claiming that her forefathers contemporary to Ahna Mohamed Kassim were the owners of the land and that the land grant signatures were invalid. Her case was immediately rejected from entering court and the land was not given to her.Internments
There are at least three thousand graves in the cemetery. Amongst them are the graves of:- Hafeezudin Sirajuddin Moonshi – a philanthropist and doctor who opened the first Muslim-owned clinic in Singapore.
- Khwaja Habibullah Shah – a Hanafi Maturidi scholar and Sufi mystic of the Chisthi and Suhrawardi orders.
- Sheikh Ali – a Sufi mystic with the title Habib.