Tag: Singaporean identity

  • Reserved Presidential Elections: The Challenges And The Opportunities..

    Reserved Presidential Elections: The Challenges And The Opportunities..

    Mdm Halimah is now the President of Singapore. Elected on a technicality for the only one candidate meeting the set requirements for this year’s RPE. The Government has urged the people to move on and acknowledged the bitterness over elements leading up to the RPE. There are still lingering sentiments of unhappiness from the people. But overtime all this will die down as the reality of life in our sunny Island catches up.

    Below are a summary of issues for our reflections in moving forward.

    1. Race

    – Race was upfront and personal in this RPE. It was ugly at times but overall it was a good exercise for everyone to see the raw issues in public space. It is not as bad as we pictured.

    – Singapore has indeed grown up somewhat and from the spectrum of views and commentaries from all segments of society, we can see that it gave a fair variety, capturing feelings and thoughts representatives of quite a good number of us, Singaporeans.

    – The letting off steam period will soon pass and we will pick up the pieces so to speak and honestly we came off not as bad as we might have. A testimony of our collective growth and vigour. We differ strongly on views and adamantly stood our grounds but at the end of the day we all have to move on. The bruises are part and parcel of growing up as a nation.

    – Much can therefore be picked up and learned to continue the engagement from where this RPE have left us to reach the needed rapprochement across the stereotypes and divide. We should all see this as a welcome process of our maturing society.

    – I may be against the RPE but I do see the benefits that this truly unexpected move the Government took for reasons that is best left for now, as all sentiments have been expressed.

    – The Government has a vital role to address the soreness of the RPE but it has the vantage view of where we are truly at by taking a pretty back seat so far to its credit. But the next move it makes will be the game-changer. It can choose to ignore or capture the moment to offer us a fresh new deal which Singaporean clearly are keen to learn about.

    2. Politics

    – Putting aside the unfortunate vitriols of all kinds, there has been many more reasoned and intellectually worthy discourses from netizens. Several online forums platform do provide critical and constructive analysis offering good sound bases for further political explorations.

    – Citizen’s has shown genuine concerns on processes and changes to our constitution. The Government should consider the people’s desire for engagement in politics and have their questions answered, instead of sticking to rigid clinical executions ignoring the people.

    – This RPE stood right in the middle of the 5-year term of parliament and should have an impact in the next election. Depending on which way the Government again choose to lead, the opportunity for widening the political space is there for the taking.

    – Singapore politics clearly has so much room for improvement and the Government should cease the day and begin the process of political reform.

    3. Democracy

    – This word has too often been taken for granted and it is high time that society and citizens learn more about what democracy is about. The Government for reasons it chooses to keep to itself adopts a very measured and slow progress in teaching democracy to us. Now is the right time for the Government to embrace the spirit of strengthening our democracy.

    – For this, the Government can begin to reduce its excessive control on the media and public spaces for political discourse. It should not be overly sensitive and show more confidence which it actually has, as not all political discourse including opposition’s views are automatically detrimental to the Government.

    – In fact, it will benefit the Government by allowing more diverse ideas and plurality of political viewpoints. It has enough buffer to take a robust political engagement than it realises. However, it has to restrain its army of online supporters which often time discredit the Government more than any short term good it does. The online troops adopts a shallow approach in engaging netizens that contributes little in content and substance but focuses on sarcasm, emotions and fears. It is hampering our citizen’s political growth and education.

    4. Singaporean Identity

    – The Government has thrown race into the political machine that it has carefully avoided in the past. It has open up a can of worms but on the flip-side it actually forced a nationwide wakeup. It now has the golden chance to reconfigure the race discourse as it chooses to. It should do so together with the people.

    – The stakes are high but it is worth taking as the benefits truly outweighs its downside. This is about the Singaporean identity project that now requires a deeper soul searching exploration.

    – There has been many opinions about race but most are stale uninspiring tales of the political past. However there has been thought provoking but reasoned views calling for a relook at our ethnic divide.

    – Race realities are more fluid and the struggles over the definition of race for the RPE should suffice to tell us reform is a must, as indeed society has moved on and policies on race may be past its dues.

    – We are more united and race blind in form than we view from the emotional lenses of ourselves. It is an exciting window to be opened by the Government to offer us a review of what our multi-racialism today is truly all about.

    Finally, we can see the less savoury, somewhat polarised race divide that this RPE has caused. The Government by its decision for the RPE has calculated and has said clearly that it is prepared to take the risk. It must now listen to the voices of the people expressed in frustration not out of any hate, but an emotional pouring of love for this nation that we truly care about. The Government is truly poised to take the higher road and address this divide with the grace of leadership foresight or chooses to do otherwise. The nation awaits to see what it does.

     

    Source: Damanhuri Bin Abas

  • Postcard From China: In China, I’ve Never Felt More Singaporean

    Postcard From China: In China, I’ve Never Felt More Singaporean

    The Chinese are a proud people. Engage them in a conversation about Chinese identity and they’ll invariably point out a 5,000-year-old civilisation that is the only one to have survived the test of time. They’ll cite a long list of Chinese traditions and ancient arts as proof of this: tea ceremonies, calligraphy, penzai, silk embroidery, etc. They’ll tell you about family and roots, and the traditional values and morals that still influence much of Chinese behaviour and thought.

    Yet in the same breath, they’ll also boast about the futuristic skyline of Shanghai and glorify the metropolises that house megamalls and other ambitious developments. They’re eager—almost desperate—for you to see how much China has progressed in the last few decades. “Many laowais (foreigners) are shocked when they see China for the first time,” sniffed one of my Chinese friends rather dismissively. She added: “But what did they think China was? Old farming villages? We have as many tall buildings as they do.”

    The irony is that while the Chinese take their identity from old traditions and cultures, they seem to take greater pride in being viewed as modern and cosmopolitan. And at huge odds against what they perceive as being essential to their Chinese identity, the Chinese often covet what is foreign, from cars to electronics, imported foods and even people.

    On Taobao, a popular online shopping website, you can rent a foreigner for various purposes, whether it’s to model at a company event or simply to turn up at a nightclub. A business is more successful and a bar or club is cooler when there is a large proportion of foreign patrons. In this context, however, “foreign” is code for “only white people,” and it’s racist, of course. But the intention is less malicious than pragmatic and the rationale is simple: white people are easily identified as being foreign, and foreign anything makes everything better.

    Despite their “5,000 years of civilisation,” the Chinese remain terribly insecure about their identity, which a Chinese friend describes as a constant struggle between tradition and progress. This is made worse by the sting felt by many Chinese when their country and culture are misunderstood by the rest of the world. It’s something that Singapore experiences as well, and China’s insecurities mirror those felt by Singapore.

    I’ve never been a particularly patriotic Singaporean. I was never someone who’d display the flag when August drew near, or join the ballot for tickets to the National Day Parade. I never took much interest in the celebrations and rituals associated with nation building and national pride. Superficial and meaningless, I thought.

    To be honest, Singapore was like a pair of old jeans I’d worn all my life. It was the only pair I owned, and thus the only pair that knew me well enough to fit the expanding curves of my hips. Oh sure, it was grubby and a bit boring, and occasionally I lusted for fancier foreign brands. But this pair of jeans was the only one I had, and stylish or not, it was the only pair I put on every time.

    Like this old pair of jeans, I never gave Singapore much thought. I never had much urge to search for a deeper interpretation of what it meant to be Singaporean. Singapore was Singapore. It happened to be where I was born and nothing more.

    But then two years ago, I moved to China—Suzhou to be specific—and for the first time, had to live in a place I didn’t belong. Even on the surface, there were things I had to get used to, such as having to communicate in Chinese, a language I learnt in school but in which I was only vaguely conversant. On a deeper level, the Chinese people behaved in ways that I sometimes found quite hard to fathom. Their aspirations may have been familiar, but their means and motivations were quite different.

    Yet I am ethnic Chinese, and look and speak the part. Locals assumed I was one of them, and unlike my German husband who is clearly foreign, I was never treated with the same kids’ gloves. Taxi drivers chuckled at my husband’s attempts to speak in Mandarin, but they barked impatiently at me when I mispronounced the name of my destination. Store vendors flashed toothy grins at my husband and offered free samplings of seasonal local produce. I, of course, was summarily dismissed and ignored.

    Within the expat community, the same confusion produced similar results. People would nod and smile at me, but they pointedly avoided making conversation because they assumed I didn’t speak English. A work contact concluded that I was mainland Chinese from the surname on my email address. He replied: “Your English is very, very good. Well done!” As a mainland Chinese person who’d learnt English as a second language, I might have taken this as a compliment. However, as a Singaporean whose first language was English, and who made a living writing and editing in this language, it was painfully patronising.

    There were other things that annoyed me. People assumed I knew China intimately by sheer virtue of our shared ethnicity. I was often asked to explain China’s idiosyncrasies; sometimes, I was even consulted for road directions. It seemed as if no one truly believed that China was as foreign to me as it was to them. I don’t think it was accurate to say they didn’t know that Singapore and China were separate either. They knew, but on a subconscious level, they simply couldn’t process and understand it.

    My move to China had rendered me a non-entity; I was neither Chinese nor foreign, and for that fact, I’d simply failed to exist. And all of a sudden, my Singaporean identity became more important to me than it had ever been before.

    It made me terribly insecure. Because as much as I wanted to shout it out to the people around, it was hard to explain the idea of a Singaporean. Only 50 years young, we have no obvious cultural symbols. We are a diverse people crammed into a small space. There is no homogeneity and no long history. We are Asian, yet our thinking and perspectives are arguably more “Western” than the rest of our neighbours.

    It frustrated me that I couldn’t articulate succinctly enough what it meant to be Singaporean. A simple question on whether we ate with chopsticks back home in Singapore sent me into a long spiel about our cuisines, our mix of cultures, and our colourful and varied cooking methods. I saw my friend’s eyes glaze over. He’d expected no more than a one-sentence answer, yet I’d turned it into a minor thesis of sorts.

    But the Singapore identity is so multilayered and complex that it is virtually impossible to explain in a few words. This complexity makes it hard to understand, and being hard to understand makes us insecure. Why else would we react to Anton Casey and Ello Ed Mundsel Bello the way we did? Our screaming fits and tantrums say much more about us than a few unpleasant comments made by a couple of disgruntled foreigners.

    It took moving away from Singapore to get me thinking about identity issues and how my country of birth has shaped the person that I am. In trying to explain who we are, I still feel the sting of insecurity and the frustration of being misunderstood. The Americans have “freedom,” the British have Shakespeare. The French and the Germans have croissants and brotchen, but the world has yet to discover kaya toast and eggs. And even if they did, I’m willing to bet our neighbours are likely to contest the claims that these belong to us alone.

    One can argue that we now have the Marina Bay Sands and Gardens by the Bay as famous landmarks to call our own. But my heart tells me that this is not authentic. Because the Singapore I know is about the kopitiamauntie who slops soup into my noodle bowl and says, “careful ah very hot later you burn yourself.” It’s about the taxi uncle who’ll shoo me into his air-conditioned taxi when I try to help him heave my luggage into the boot because “outside very hot. You now sweat already go inside the plane very jialat one.”

    Happy Birthday, Singapore. On your 50th anniversary, I wish you courage and confidence. Our search for a strong identity is one that will inevitably be fraught with insecurity and frustration. And our attempt to find ourselves will result in the shiny artefacts that now claim our city centre. But what makes you so much a part of me, Singapore, are the smaller, intangible things that make me think of home. And until I left, Singapore, I never realised how much you meant to me.

    The writer is a freelance writer and editor based in Suzhou, China. (Editor’s note: Apologies! We said wrongly at first that the writer was based in Shenzhen. She is based in Suzhou)

     

    Source: http://themiddleground.sg

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