Tag: Indian

  • Make Thaipusam A Public Holiday In Singapore Again!

    Make Thaipusam A Public Holiday In Singapore Again!

    I got this message yesterday. Anyone knows what the dish is?

    Ng Yi-Sheng

    Angelina who is a local Singaporean born Hindu who converted to Christianity will be filing an application this afternoon to challenge the banning of the drums during Thaipusam by the Law Minister Shanmugam. She will also be challenging the removal of Thaipusam as a public holiday by Lee Kuan Yew with its purported replacement Vesak Day.

    Further, Angelina will tomorrow be carrying a kavadi at Sri Perumal Temple, Desker Road and she invites all members of the public to turn up to show solidarity with her. Her legal team from M Ravi’s practice will also be there to witness her religious observances.

     

    Source: Ng Yi-Sheng

  • Discriminatory Sheng Shiong Job Advertisement Causes Stir

    Discriminatory Sheng Shiong Job Advertisement Causes Stir

    Dear The Real Singapore,

    I came across this job ad from Sheng Shiong: http://jobs.jobstreet.com/sg/jobs/4399626?fr=23

    They are looking for a management trainee to assume the position of a buyer. In this position, it said: “You will learn the ways of sourcing, merchandising, advertising, inventory management, book-keeping and human resource…”

    Why should the job applicant need to speak and write in both English and Mandarin?

    It said this is to facilitate the liaising with “Mandarin speaking associates”.

    Sheng Shiong Advert 1

    But take a look at the requirements for this job:

    Sheng Shiong Advert 2

    Who are these “associates” Sheng Siong is referring to?

    The position is for a buyer. If you are talking about the need to communicate with suppliers, don’t all Singapore suppliers speak English or Singlish? If it’s a foreign-owned supplier in Singapore, doesn’t the company need to hire Singaporeans too?

    Unless you are telling me that you are sourcing all your supplies from China and you deal only with PRC suppliers from China, I can’t see why this position requires the candidate to be able to speak and write in Mandarin too.

    Next, is Sheng Siong also referring the “associates” to colleagues working inside Sheng Siong?

    I know that there are many PRCs working inside Sheng Siong. Is Sheng Siong saying that the candidate needs to know Mandarin so as to be able to communicate with the PRC staff inside Sheng Siong? If this is the reason, then I think the argument for the need of Mandarin speaking candidates is even worse! In the first place, shouldn’t Sheng Siong be recruiting “foreign talents” who can speak English? What kind of talents are Sheng Siong recruiting? Do tell us.

    Unless Sheng Siong can come up with a damn good justification, this job ad is clearly discriminatory!

    Sheng Siong, please don’t behave like PAP and think that Singaporeans are stupid these days, thinking that Singaporeans can believe in all kinds of crap reasons thrown at us.

    We wait for your explanation on the matter.

    Thank you.

    Tipper

     

    Source: www.therealsingapore.com

  • Straits Times Forum Writer Urges Locals To Learn The Malay Language

    Straits Times Forum Writer Urges Locals To Learn The Malay Language

    WHILE I was on an exchange programme at the Lycee Francais de Singapour in Ang Mo Kio, I realised that most of the students learnt at least three languages.

    In fact, many people around the world are now trilingual in English, Mandarin and a language used by their neighbouring country.

    Singaporeans, however, study only two languages in school – English and our mother tongue.

    With Malay being a common language used by our neighbours such as Malaysia and Indonesia, and with many Singaporeans travelling to these countries for short trips, perhaps it would be useful to offer lessons in conversational Malay to students.

    In my school, everyone had to learn conversational Malay for two years. During that time, we had the chance to taste Malay cuisine and experience eating using our hands.

    Learning another language is useful as, in doing so, we can better understand its culture, something that is important in a multiracial society like Singapore.

    Whether we use it in the future or not, it is always better to be able to know the gist of the language, so we can apply it if necessary.

    Jong Ching Yee (Ms)

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Singaporeans Less Open to Inter-Racial Dating

    Singaporeans Less Open to Inter-Racial Dating

    SINGAPORE – Despite interracial marriages being on the rise here, most Singaporeans still prefer dating within their own race, data from a major dating agency here has shown.

    Last year, 20.9 per cent of marriages registered here involved couples of different races, up from 20.7 per cent in 2012.

    But of the almost 1,000 Singaporean members of dating agency Lunch Actually, 92.5 per cent would rather not date people of other ethnicities.

    This is a higher proportion than 89.6 per cent of the agency’s members in Hong Kong, and 76.6 per cent of those in Malaysia.

    Altogether, the data analysed was from close to 3,000 of the agency’s members in the three territories. It takes into consideration the clients’ first preferences for their ideal partner.

    Lunch Actually CEO Violet Lim, 34, theorises the results may be because most of the agency’s Singaporean clientele are Chinese.

    “Social conditioning and family expectations may lead to them to prefer to date other Chinese people first,” she said. “It’s not necessarily that they’re not open to dating other races, but the people who join our dating agency are generally looking to settle down and have to think about factors such as finding somebody their family might approve of.

    “It’s important to realise there is a difference between a person’s first dating preferences and the person they actually end up being compatible with.”

    Of the 996 clients surveyed in Singapore, 488 women and 462 men were Chinese.

    The data was analysed by data analytics company Qlik using its app called Qlik Sense. Qlik then worked with Lunch Actually to combine the app with the agency’s data into a new app, which generates graphs and charts that show such dating trends. This new app, The Ideal Partner, can be downloaded for free from http://www.qlik.com/datingtrends.

    Other results produced by the new app also showed more “traditional preferences” among the singles surveyed in all three territories, Ms Lim said.

    For instance, men across all age ranges showed a preference for women in their 20s. While younger women preferred men aged 30 to 35, older women aged 45 to 50 seemed more inclined towards younger men aged 25 to 35.

    Close to 80 per cent of the men surveyed did not want to date divorcees, and 93.8 per cent preferred not to date people who already have children. Women were more open on this front, with 33.5 per cent willing to date divorcees and 12.9 per cent willing to date those with children.

    Ms Lim hopes to use the data to understand her clientele better and to help them manage their expectations.

    “People are wired to look for certain things in their ideal partners,” she said. “If we share this data with them, they might realise some expectations are unrealistic and consider being more open about who they are willing to go out with.”

    The next step will be to analyse how closely the clients’ visions of their ideal partners correspond to the people they are matched with.

    Qlik Sense can be adapted to analyse other sets of data. Qlik Asia’s vice president Terry Smagh, 38, said: “The ability to take data such as these survey statistics from Lunch Actually and drop it into Qlik Sense for visual analysis is something that many businesses, including small and medium enterprises in singapore, will find valuable.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Xenophobic Singaporeans and What We Can Do About It

    Xenophobic Singaporeans and What We Can Do About It

    Xenophobia is on the rise in Singapore. After a wealthy Chinese expatriate crashed his Ferrari into a taxi and killed the driver and passenger in May 2012, and Indian migrant workers rioted in response to the death of a fellow employee in 2013, racist comments have become increasingly prevalent on online social-networking platforms. 80% of participants in an online 2012 Yahoo! poll agreed that “Singaporeans are turning xenophobic.” But something strange is also going on: even though xenophobia seems to have increased, 6 out of 10 Singaporeans still agree or strongly agree that the country is free from both racial and religious tension.

    Is there a contradiction here? What’s happened, and where are we going?

    Paul Chu examines this question in his dissertation, titled “Migration and the Politics of Multiculturalism in Singapore“.

    What’s Going On?

    The Chinese-Malay-Indian-Other model has framed our understanding of race since the colonial era, when the Jackson Plan of 1822 first segregated Singaporeans by ethnicity. But the huge wave of immigration has stretched the model, and it isn’t flexible enough to cope.

    1. The CMIO model is struggling to cope with recent challenges

    The Singapore state is what academics call “corporatist”. This means that a strong elite sets social norms and has firm political authority to achieve harmony. The CMIO model was the chosen norm. It has maintained racial harmony in three ways:

    1.De-politicizing ethnicity
    2.influencing people to turn ethnic-based loyalty into a civic-based one
    3.promoting the principle of equality across all ethnic groups

    While the model has worked for a long time, it is facing a challenge unlike any it has seen before because of the unprecedented levels of migration since 2005. The graph below shows this rapid increase in the migrant population:

    2. Singaporean society does not understand race like the CMIO model

    One major reason why CMIO racial categorization cannot cope with migrants is that it conflates race, ethnicity and culture. Society, on the other hand, seems to distinguish between the three ideas.

    For example, a 2013 IPS-OnePeople.sg survey of over 4000 Singaporeans showed that while 93.8% of non-Chinese respondents were comfortable with a Singaporean-Chinese boss, this figure dropped by nearly 20 percentage points if he was Mainland-Chinese. We see this also with other races. In the curry feud in 2011, a Singaporean-Chinese woman defended a Singaporean-Indian family, and was “incensed with a People’s Republic of China family telling my fellowmen not to cook curry”, suggesting a redefinition of “us” and “them” that was along cultural rather than racial lines.

    3. Relying on the government to solve the problem is part of the problem

    The corporatist model that underlies CMIO also creates a larger problem: it has made citizens rely too much on the government to determine racial identity. When citizens are resentful about immigrants, they look to the state to solve the problem. But given that Singaporeans are increasingly skeptical about central authority, they also reject the state’s solutions. Ultimately, this leads to greater dissatisfaction with both the state and immigrants, thereby completing a vicious downward spiral as shown below:

    Spiral

    What can we do?

    1. Recognize that race is not the only identity marker.

    Integration will not happen just because migrants share the same race as Singaporeans. Racial categories such as “Chinese” or “Indian” are complicated by class and nationality. While the government has officially dialed down overt race-based categorizations, the narrative of the CMIO model still influences society’s understanding of race. Instead, we should encourage a broad understanding of our national identity as Singaporeans, yet also recognize our migrant roots so that even new migrants can integrate.

    2. Be more transparent.

    We as Singaporeans need to take charge of integrating foreigners. Increasing transparency around discussions about migration and ethnicity will make it easier for us to do so. For example, if citizens were able to access public information about the non-residents living around them, or knew more about the procedures behind PR and citizen selection, we would be more likely to own the problem than to see this as an issue that the government must solve.

    3. Realize that citizenship is not just about economics.

    The state needs to show that they appreciate the emotive aspect of citizenship, instead of justifying migration entirely on economic grounds and demanding compliance. The citizenship naturalization process should be more rigorous to ensure better integration.

    4. Strive for encounters, not just physical co-existence.

    Different cultures and races should not just exist side by side, each in their own bubble. That is a holdover from the colonial idea of segregation and with it the CMIO model. Instead, the goal should be to have different cultures and races interact constructively with one another.

     

    This article snapshot was prepared by the editorial team. It was based on a final year dissertation at the University of Cambridge written by Paul Chu, who received First Class Honours for his work and presented the paper at the IRiS-University of Birmingham International Conference 2014 on Superdiversity. For more insights and nuance, please see the full paper.

     

    Source: http://singaporepolicyjournal.com