Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Chidorigafuchi National Cemetery

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Established
  
1959

Type
  
public

Address
  
Japan, 東京都千代田区三番町

Number of graves
  
358,260

Country
  
Japan

Size
  
16,063 square meters

Phone
  
+81 3-3262-2030

Chidorigafuchi National Cemetery

Location
  
Sanbanchō, Chiyoda Ward, Tōkyō Metropolis

Owned by
  
Ministry of the Environment

Hours
  
Open today · 9AM–4PMSunday9AM–4PMMonday9AM–4PMTuesday9AM–4PMWednesday9AM–4PMThursday9AM–4PMFriday9AM–4PMSaturday9AM–4PM

Owner
  
Ministry of the Environment

Similar
  
Chidori‑ga‑fuchi, Yasukuni Shrine, National Showa Memorial, Sekai Mumei Senshi n, Chidorigafuchi Ryokudo

Japanese cherry yasukuni shrine chidorigafuchi national cemetery park gopro timelapse


Chidorigafuchi National Cemetery (千鳥ケ淵戦没者墓苑, Chidorigafuchi Senbotsusha Boen) is a national Japanese cemetery and memorial for 352,297 unidentified war dead of the Second World War, located near the outer moat of the Imperial Palace and Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo, Japan.

Contents

chidorigafuchi national cemetery


Overview

The recovery of remains from the Pacific War presented an unprecedented problem for the Japanese government, as some soldiers could not be identified due to harsh battlefield conditions, and the families of others had perished in the extensive air raids on Japan and atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. In 1952, the recovery committee began storing human remains in the offices of the Ministry of Welfare while it sought a more permanent structure to house and honor the dead. In 1953 the Cabinet of the Prime Minister ordered a "tomb of the unknown soldier" constructed, the site was purchased in 1956, and it was completed in March 1959. It is a public institution and is infrequently visited by the Emperor and Prime Minister.

The cemetery is sometimes mentioned in connection with the Yasukuni Shrine debate, but Chidorigafuchi serves a separate purpose. The cemetery houses the actual remains of unidentified soldiers, in place of the usual family grave. Yasukuni Shrine is a privately run facility which honors not only unidentified soldiers from the Pacific War but all people who died for the sake of the country. However, in 2006 a Liberal Democratic Party leader proposed that the cemetery be expanded so that it might honor all war dead in a way akin to Arlington National Cemetery.

References

Chidorigafuchi National Cemetery Wikipedia