The following is my answer to a Quora question: “Are
the Eurasians in Singapore becoming less recognised?”
The very nature of being Eurasian is that our identity
is eventually diluted into oblivion through constant cross-cultural marriages. The very concept of a Eurasian is a hybrid of
European and Asian influences. There is
nothing inherently bad about that. I am of Portuguese, Dutch, English and Chinese mix. We pride ourselves on being Kristang, but
there are less than a thousand of us in Singapore who speak my mother tongue,
the Portuguese dialect of Cristao. After
me, I doubt my children would be able to speak it. My great-grandmother spoke Dutch. After she passed away, none of us do.
Our cuisine is now called “fusion”, but many of the
old recipes have either been forgotten, or changed to such an extent that
people forget that it is Eurasian. In
some dishes, only the name remains. We
no longer wear our cultural dress, and what the Eurasian contingent wears at
the National Day Parade is a caricature of it, for a performance.
Our old songs, and dances are largely forgotten, and
can be found as tourist curiosities. Our
literature is found in museums. My
great-grandfather was a famous Portuguese opera singer. We do not even know the songs he sang, or the
operas he performed.
The irony here is that while the Eurasian community
clamours for recognition, we have essentially forgotten what we were ourselves.
We are losing our languages, our
cuisine, our dress, our everything. Being Eurasian is merely a label, without much
of that reality.
When it comes to any conversation on making a
definitive contribution at the national stage, we have a community that is
known for its entertainers. Perhaps half
the people on radio are Eurasian. We are
the performers, the singers, the models, the pageant winners, the television
personalities, and perhaps, the lawyers with an affair. What we do not have enough of, are the
thinkers, the writers, the policy makers, the captains of industry, the people
of real substance. In that sense, we
deserve to fade into oblivion.
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