Dear Mr. Tan
Here's my observation about the recent xenophobia that arose amongst Singaporeans in the wake of the Ferrari-taxi crash tragedy.
Back when I was a little kindergarten student in 1980, I learned that Singapore's population was 2.4 million. In fact, Singapore always had waves of immigration. Of course in the 19th century to mid-20th century, it was our Hokkien, Teochew and Cantonese forefathers from South China who came here to work as coolies. Then when Mainland China opened up, waves of Chinese came in during the 1990s, both professionals (teachers, accountants) and non-skilled workers. There was also a big wave of Hong Kongers who migrated to Singapore before the 1997 handover to China, in addition to constant waves of Malaysians and Indonesians throughout the 1980s, 1990s and 2000s.
All in all, it took about 25 years for the population to reach 4.2 million (increase of 1.8 million) by 2005. With the country's birth-rate so low, this was also largely the result of immigration...over 25 YEARS. Xenophobia was unheard of and totally alien to Singaporeans before 2006. I believe the majority of Singaporeans were fine and happy with our "foreign talent" injecting fresh skills, ideas and best practices into our professions and businesses.
THEN from 2006 to 2011, suddenly there is a 1 million increase in population. Suddenly Singapore's population grew from 4.2 million to 5.2 million people in 5 YEARS. NOW, there is xenophobia.
So what happened?
The old Biblical story of Exodus as depicted in The Ten Commandments movie classic is a case in point. When the Jews left Egypt, theirs weren't a pure Jewish community. A whole lot of Egyptians and slaves from other ethnic groups also left with them, forming a wandering disparate community of 2 million people (as estimated by Biblical scholars based on a census of 603,550 men mentioned in Exodus 38:24-29 – if you include women and children, the community population was likely to number around 2 million). There were plenty of teething problems, with the community rejecting their Jewish roots and wanting to worship a golden calf (maybe due to the influence of pagan beliefs from other ethnicities) in the beginning. OK, we all know what happened when Moses came down the mountain and became enraged at the sight of the notorious golden calf. Subsequently, this disparate nation of 2 million people had to wander around the wilderness for 40 YEARS before they reached the Promised Land of Israel.
Lesson: It took 40 years for all the different non-Jew ethnicities to integrate with the Jews and become truly one people. There are interpretations that the 40 years in the desert was a punishment for worshiping the golden calf, but God also had a very practical reason. It takes that long to forge one united nation out of this 2 million-strong cauldron of disparate ethnicities.
My take is that 5 years is way too short to expect the 2 million foreigners now living amongst us to integrate and be totally accepted by the people of Singapore.
When we have that many foreigners living amongst us, accounting for 40% of the population, there is few reasons for them to integrate. Enclaves, staying with one's community is a natural progression. Think Chinatown in other countries. Why should Singapore be different? To little, too late. Reap what has been sown.
ReplyDeleteRight ! Expecting these new immigrants to integrate is "fat hope" . It will be more of us True Blue Singaporeans losing our hard earned Singaporeaness -pardon my un-scholarly attempt to these overwhelming number of foreign invasion.
ReplyDeleteThe PAP has "sold-out" Singapore , to put it bluntly. That is the Hard Truth, which the ex-MM may find it hard to fathom.
It's a maths way to come to a conclusion, x+y=z, if that is so easy and simple, then the tragic incidence of the scientist's wife from China committing suicide won't happen, and Singapore is culturally a familiar Chinese society.
ReplyDeleteWhen the new immigrants are emotionally coerced into attending integration programmes, it's like forcing a duck and a chicken to communicate, it takes a long time to mesh people from different cultural backgrounds into one society.
Stop kidding ourselves, and stop treating people as mere digits in a Maths formula, humans are not robots to be manipulated either.
Many years ago, all generation of families was a foreign immigrant from all over the world. Once they felt comfortable they will choose to stay and select their citizenship or as PR
ReplyDeleteBe happy with what we have and work hard. Every success is coming from handwork and should not rely on donation and ask for subsidy always.
Please observe around the world and make the comparison, you can experience Singapore is beautiful country.
Yes it may be too fast that all the foreigners are coming in. But if they didn't exist what would happen? Would you still have all your amenities and buildings? The government only introduced a large number of foreigners in the recent years because it is essential to their economy. People is Singapores only resource and with the declining birth rate, the only thing the government can do is to bring in foreigners. Yes it may be a bit too rush but it really is essential for the economy and I think I'd rather live in a country with many foreigners than to live in a country whose economic status is extremely unstable.
ReplyDelete