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Why Singapore Needs Brave Conversations on Race and Religion
The Straits Times
|July 21, 2025
When we go beyond tolerance to a deeper understanding of each other's faiths and fears, we may find we are more alike than different.
In the quiet of a school library, a Secondary 4 student lowered her voice and said, "Until today, I never knew a joke I've always made could hurt someone." She was part of a facilitated dialogue session exploring race, religion, and integration in Singapore. Her comment, though simple, was profound – it captured what so many in Singapore still need to realise: our multicultural harmony cannot thrive on silence, superficial celebrations, or slogans alone. It must be nourished by honest, and often uncomfortable, conversations.
In a world increasingly fractured by extremism, cultural misunderstandings, and political polarisation, Singapore has long prided itself on being a model of cohesion. But in truth, even here, quiet prejudices, casual racism, and deeply ingrained stereotypes persist. And we rarely talk about them – at least not meaningfully.
In May 2025, The Whitehatters, a Singapore-based non-governmental organisation (NGO), ran a series of workshops on race, religion and integration across several local secondary schools and, notably, at an international school as well. These were not one-off talks or assemblies, but immersive, facilitated conversations that invited students to reflect on their beliefs, hear one another's lived experiences, and grapple with the grey areas of identity, belonging and community.
It wasn't The Whitehatters' first foray into this space. Known for designing safe, structured dialogues on tough topics, the NGO has long championed public conversations grounded in empathy and context. The May 2025 workshops were part of a broader and ongoing effort to equip young people with the tools to talk about, and live out, harmony beyond headlines.
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