The Star Malaysia

Minority languages on the rise in Singapore

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SIngapore: Kevin Martens Wong reels off sentences in Kristang, which is among several minority languages in Singapore enjoying a new lease of life after a decades-long drive to encourage the use of English and Mandarin.

“Teng bong, ozi nus prendeh sorti-sorti di tempu,” the linguist told his eager students in the 500-yearold mish-mash of Portuguese and Malay – a greeting, and informatio­n that the class would be about the weather.

A former British colonial trading post that has long been a melting pot of different cultures, Singapore has an ethnically diverse population whose ancestors mostly came from across Asia, principall­y China, India and the Malay archipelag­o.

On independen­ce in 1965, Singaporea­ns spoke an array of tongues.

English was common, but many used Chinese dialects, such as Hokkien, as well as Tamil from India, Malay and a smattering of more obscure languages.

But authoritar­ian founding prime minister Lee Kuan Yew believed change was necessary to ensure a secure future for the tiny city-state, which separated from neighbouri­ng Malaysia following a brief and stormy union.

He made the study of English compulsory in schools as he positioned the country as a global com- merce and finance hub, as well as one other “mother tongue”.

For local ethnic Chinese, who today make up the majority of Singapore’s population, it was usually Mandarin, as Lee had an eye on China’s rise as a world power, while it was Tamil or Malay for other citizens.

The policy initially ran into opposition from ethnic Chinese, most of whom trace their ancestry to southern China. Lee, who ruled Singapore for over three decades and died in 2015, described in his memoirs how he had to force the issue.

“To emphasise the importance of Mandarin, I stopped making speeches in Hokkien,” wrote Lee, who was ethnic Chinese, while most TV and radio broadcasts in Chinese dialects were also stopped.

Those restrictio­ns still stand except in special cases, such as radio news broadcasts in Chinese dialects for senior citizens who struggle with Mandarin.

 ?? AFP ?? Preserving a heritage: Wong conducting a Kristang language class at the national library board in Singapore. —
AFP Preserving a heritage: Wong conducting a Kristang language class at the national library board in Singapore. —

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