When I first came here, back in 1988, I found the stress on nationhood startling, especially as it manifests itself in schools. Given the unlikeliness of Singapore being a nation at all the fuss made about being Singaporean was understandable but generally tiresome. I mean it’s a fairly interesting experiment to carve a sense of nationhood out of almost nothing, but it seems curiously besides the point in a world in which national borders are becoming ever more doubtful. But it seems to keep the younger kids amused, though there’s a dangerous degree of cynicism amongst teenagers and young adults about the whole enterprise. For myself, I can live with it all but I think I have less sympathy now with nationalisms of any shade than I have ever felt before. I suppose I occasionally feel some pride in being English when I hear Jerusalem sung, but that’s because it feels good to be born in a country that has adopted such a weird and wonderfully eccentric piece as somehow representing the nation. And there’s always Blake himself to be proud of, the quintessentially English poet. Shakespeare doesn’t count as he has always been beyond nationality.
Here at Maison KL, safely far away from the strains of Stand Up For Singapore, I’ve been treating myself to a bit of Bach at home (the Brandenburg concertos) and a lot of the Temptations in the car (driving out to the post office at Ampang Point this afternoon to pay some bills). Noi has already got the place clean and Devan has been round to poison any termites that might dare to lunch on our (plentiful) wood. I’ve said it before, and I daresay I’ll say it again – with a full sense that I’m incredibly lucky to be able to say it at all: life is good, very.
1 comment:
Don't you think that it is precisely because of the 'unlikeliness of Singapore being a nation at all' and that we have 'almost nothing' to carve that sense of nationhood out of, that they (we?) have to go into overdrive to manufacture it? There is that gnawing anxiety precisely because of that Lack of national cohesion or social glue or that warm fuzzy feeling or whatever you want to call it.
It is of course so ironic that the state is demolishing old buildings (National Stadium, National Library etc) and building new things (Marina Bay, casinos, giant ferris wheel copied from London etc) in their efforts to make Singapore better, more exciting, more attractive. And many of us who grew up with those buildings and memories in our social landscape die a little bit when more of them are scheduled to be torn down.
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