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What a rapper’s sentence says about racism in Singapore

The case has highlighted the difficulty and discomfort with which Singapore talks about race — and why it needs to be far more honest about prejudice in a country that prides itself on racial harmony

September 11, 2023 / 11:02 IST
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Race has always been a pivotal part of Singapore, whether the government likes us talking about it or not. (Source: Bloomberg)

The first time I heard a racist slur directed at me, I was 18 years old, and traveling to a university lecture on a bus in the Midlands in the UK.  Having just arrived from Indonesia, I was still trying to figure out pounds from pennies. As I fumbled around for the change, the bus driver shouted: “Why don’t you just go home you P***,” which in equal parts upset and confused me. I am not Pakistani, and home was Jakarta, so I had no idea what he meant.

Everyone who has experienced it remembers that kind of in-your-face racism. As a minority in a foreign country, when you look and sound different to those around you, it’s an unfortunate rite of passage. It’s unacceptable, but — you tell yourself — excusable. It is not your country, you don't belong there, it is not your home.

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But imagine when it is.

That feeling of being outsiders in their own nation, minorities with no “safeguards,” is what Indian Singaporean rapper Subhas Nair and his sister Preetipls say led to the creation of their rap video in 2019. It was “born from a place of frustration and pain,” they said in an apology published on Preetipls’s Facebook page, and was in response to an ad campaign in Singapore that they saw as being tone-deaf to how it portrayed minorities.