01 February 2015
- RSIS
- Media Mentions
- Keeping the Past Alive
It is revealing that Singaporeans remember the opening of the two casinos here in 2010, the Sars outbreak in 2003, and the MRT breakdowns in 2011 far better than they do the 1963 security crackdown Operation Coldstore, the 1987 Marxist conspiracy and the 1974 Laju ferry hijacking by terrorists. The selective memory of people, evident in a survey conducted by the Institute of Policy Studies, shows what matters more to them.
It is not that the Singaporean is a historically shallow creature of circumstance concerned mostly with what touches his or her immediate material needs. Rather, it suggests that “it may be social memories of how local events… affected us as citizens that will loom large in the emerging rewriting of our history”, as noted by historian Kwa Chong Guan. The casinos, Sars and the disruption of MRT services impinged on everyday life for a vast majority of citizens to an extent that the other events did not, important though they were in themselves. Indeed, the casinos have become a part of the Singapore skyline as well, adding visual presence to social memory.
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Last updated on 03/02/2015