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On Sites of Cultural Interchange

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Page 1: On Sites of Cultural Interchange

4 PICTURES, 1 WORD

Page 2: On Sites of Cultural Interchange

_ PP_ _ _ _ E _ T H _ _ S _

Page 3: On Sites of Cultural Interchange

_ I N _ _ _ O _ E

Page 4: On Sites of Cultural Interchange

ON SITES OF CULTURAL INTERCHANGE BY TOH HSIEN MIN

The uncertainties of living out came up again over a casual dinner one Friday night. Rui, the Portuguese bloke who used to occupy the room i now do, came by for dinner with me and my housemate, as he was finally leaving Singapore for good. Among expats, as among new Yorkers, it‘s probably not unusual for the topic of rental property to come up. Somehow it did, and Rui slipped in a casual, ―as you know, this place is going to be demolished in two years‘ time anyway. What a shock! I had only been staying in one of the most extraordinary apartments in singapore for half a year,

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and to hear that it wouldn‘t be for very much longer... The thought was just too distressing. Even if, or maybe because, I hadn‘t found the flat; the flat found me. Rui had posted an notice on a social email list to announce that he was returning to Portugal, therefore his half-share in a rented colonial walk-up in the mount Sophia area was coming available. A month later, as I was due to visit my optician at peace centre, I thought it the easiest thing to just drop by and view the place, as much for a lark as anything else.

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Lives change in minutes. Mine broke from its trajectory when I saw the beautiful white façade, with the bold ―1930 ‖imprinted on the top. It could only have been a colonial apartment that could have had that effect on me; charm distils through age, but the colonial british architects also knew, perhaps better than our contemporary ones, how to build for the tropics. I noted the high ceilings that gave a sense of space and kept the apartment cool, old frosted glass windows set in beige-painted wood frames, and a collection of distinctively peninsular spiral staircases. Two huge bedrooms, one huge living room in a chinoiserie yellow, a functional kitchen, a balcony that lets light and air in, and a huge open rooftop completed the tour. I was hooked.

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Over the next months, I would discover complete other sides to Singapore. Selegie boasts an abundance of life. There are numerous good food places, such as the legendary rochor beancurd, a sushi bar that opens up to 4am on weekend nights, some 24-hour eating places, and plenty of choices for coffee (especially given my fussiness on that score). A traffic junction keeps everything in place. On the one side, there is the feel of a Chinese working-class area, with chinese DVD shops, aquariums, Chinese coffee shops, photocopying shops and a number of karaoke bars, spilling from Paradiz centre onto prinsep street. A few hundred yards east, the flavour changes completely. Little india starts at the next junction east, and indian temples, textile shops, grocers, curry houses and coffeeshops are numerous.

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On sundays, indian labourers throng the area, touching the walls at tekka market. North of the same junction, the sophia road extends through to the back of the istana, an enclave of expatriates living in a collection of colonial houses and modern condominiums.

So it was partly good news to read in the straits times, earlier this month, that the ura are proposing to conserve the area, including the building i now live in. I may still have to move out, as the scheduled work is – as I subsequently found out – not demolition but a renovation, but it‘s nice to know singapore continues to retain a little bit of its heritage.

QLRS Vol. 2 No. 4 Jul 2003

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COMPREHENSION CHECK: PUT A CHECK ( √ )ON THE LINE BEFORE EACH STATEMENT THAT IS TRUE. CORRECT THE ONES WHICH ARE NOT.

_____ 1. The editor has to move out of the place he is renting.

_____ 2. He likes the idea of moving out.

_____ 3. The place he is occupying is modern and has sophisticated facilities.

_____ 4. The apartment is not the only one to be renovated.

_____ 5. Different businesses will be established.

_____ 6. All old business establishments will be demolished.

_____ 7. Improved traffic is also one of the projects.

_____ 8. The establishments that will rise will be exclusively for Singaporeans.

_____ 9. There is a strong proposal to conserve the area.

_____10. The editor is happy about the change that will take place.

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HOW DO YOU REACT TO CHANGES? ARE YOU LIKE OUR SINGAPOREAN BROTHERS WHO ARE RESILIENT TO CHANGE? WHAT POSITIVE, NEGATIVE AND INTERESTING ISSUES CAN CHANGE BRING? DO THE THINKING TOOL PIN (POINT OUT POSITIVE, INTERESTING, AND NEGATIVE ISSUES.)

Positive —

Interesting:

What if...

Negative —

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PROCESS QUESTIONS:

1. What have you discovered from the chart?

2. Which positive issues can we adopt/practice in the country?

3. Which negative issues can be transformed into positive?

4. Which interesting issues can be both or be either positive or negative? Why

do you say so?

Page 12: On Sites of Cultural Interchange

GROUP YOURSELVES INTO 5 AND MAKE A DIALOG ABOUT THE FLOW OF YOUR CONVERSATION WHEN ASKING FOR DATA FROM A FRIEND, A FAMILY MEMBER, AND A BARANGAY OFFICIAL.

Barangay Official

Friend

Family Member