Title
Year
Author
Engaging religion with pragmatism: the Singapore state's management of social issues and religious
Engaging religion with pragmatism: the Singapore state's management of social issues and religious
2017
Mohammad Alami Musa
Collection | Religion |
---|---|
Author/Creator |
Mohammad Alami Musa |
Title |
Engaging religion with pragmatism: the Singapore state's management of social issues and religious |
Publication Date | 2017 |
Publisher | Singapor : S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, Nanyang Technological University |
Call Number | UA10 Rwp 305 2017 |
Subject |
Religion and state -- Singapore Multiculturalism -- Singapore Singapore -- Religion Singapore -- Politics and government -- 1965-1990 Singapore -- Social conditions |
Page | iii, 21 |
Language | English |
URI |
https://www.rsis.edu.sg/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/WP305.pdf |
Content Type | Book |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
openAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
Description |
The Singapore state’s relationship with religion has been one of pragmatism, rooted in the realities of the country’s multi-racial and multi-religious society. This was clearly evident in the 1980s when Singapore was confronted with many challenging issues of morality and the practice of religion. On the one hand, the secular state viewed religion as a positive force in society and adopted a policy of neutrality and non-interference in matters of religion. On the other hand, it did not hesitate to intervene in the realm of religion when public order, security and economic survival were threatened. This is consistent with the view that to survive against the odds Singapore needs a strong, centralised government that subordinates all institutions, spiritual and temporal. The state’s intervention in the religious domain in the 1980s should be understood in the context of the government’s primary interest to ensure that society possessed the values that were necessary for economic progress and development. When increased religiosity and religious activism threatened social stability and encroached into the political space to challenge state sovereignty, the state moved to assert its authority to ensure that the practice of religion did not jeopardise the permanent interests of society (i.e. public order and long-term economic prosperity). The state’s exercise of authority could be justified by the social contract that citizens had presumably entered. The state’s assertion of authority was manifested in the late 1980s, which witnessed decisive action by the government to clarify the parameters of religion’s role in society. It led to the institutionalisation of principles of governance in managing religious life within a plural, secular Singapore. The state’s pragmatic approach in managing its relations with religion persists till today, giving space to religion generally but asserting its authority when the need to preserve social peace arises. |
English as an Islamic cosmopolitan vernacular: English-language Sufi devotional literature in Singapore
English as an Islamic cosmopolitan vernacular: English-language Sufi devotional literature in Singapore
2017
Lin, Hongxuan
Collection | Religion |
---|---|
Author/Creator |
Lin, Hongxuan |
Title |
English as an Islamic cosmopolitan vernacular: English-language Sufi devotional literature in Singapore |
Source Title | Southeast Asian Studies |
Publication Date | 2017 |
Subject |
Sufi literature -- Singapore -- History and criticism English language -- Singapore |
Page | 447-484 |
Language | English |
URI |
http://libproxy1.nus.edu.sg/login?url=http://dx.doi.org/10.20495/seas.6.3_447 |
Content Type | Journal Article |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
openAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
Volume | 6 |
Issue | 3 |
Description |
The key question this paper addresses is why Sufi devotional literature has been published and consumed in English, and the implications of this phenomenon. The material examined here focuses on literature that is consumed in Singapore: available in bookstores, in institutional archives, online, distributed at Sufi events, and in the private possession of practicing Sufis. I argue that English is used as both a Singaporean vernacular and a cosmopolitan lingua franca, allowing Sufis across the world to communicate with one another. I also argue that the adoption of English is necessarily tied to the rise of digital media and the perception of English as a "modern" marker of prestige and sobriety. This paper is organized in three parts. First, it traces the evolution of a reading public for Sufi devotional literature in Muslim Southeast Asia. Second, it investigates how and why producers of such literature have expressed themselves in English. Third, it analyzes how English operates in conjunction with Arabic in Sufi literature consumed in Singapore. I conclude that Sufi print culture's adoption of English is a response to both the opportunities and the challenges of the present, constituting a reflection of Sufis' pedagogical needs as well as an active appropriation of a loaded language. |
Enlightenment on display: the origins, motivations, and functions of hagiographic Buddhist museums in Singapore
Enlightenment on display: the origins, motivations, and functions of hagiographic Buddhist museums in Singapore
Collection | Religion |
---|---|
Editor |
Goh, Sai Aik |
Title |
Enlightenment on display: the origins, motivations, and functions of hagiographic Buddhist museums in Singapore |
Source Title | Southeast Asian Studies |
Publication Date | 2022 |
DOI |
https://libproxy1.nus.edu.sg/login?url=https://dx.doi.org/10.20495/seas.11.1_79 |
Subject |
Buddhism -- Museums -- Singapore Buddhism -- Singapore |
Page | 79-114 |
Language | English |
Content Type | Journal Article |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
restrictedAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
Volume | 11 |
Issue | 1 |
Ensuring environment, social & financial sustainability during a pandemic: the story of a Singapore mosque
Ensuring environment, social & financial sustainability during a pandemic: the story of a Singapore mosque
2021
Siti Zunairah binte Abdul Malee
Mohd Abd Wahab Fatoni bin Mohd Balwi
Collection | Religion |
---|---|
Author/Creator |
Siti Zunairah binte Abdul Malee Mohd Abd Wahab Fatoni bin Mohd Balwi |
Title |
Ensuring environment, social & financial sustainability during a pandemic: the story of a Singapore mosque |
Source Title | Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs |
Publication Date | 2021 |
DOI |
https://libproxy1.nus.edu.sg/login?url=https://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13602004.2022.2034683 |
Subject |
Mosques -- Singapore COVID-19 Pandemic, 2020- -- Economic aspects -- Singapore COVID-19 Pandemic, 2020- -- Social aspects -- Singapore |
Page | 703-718 |
Language | English |
Content Type | Journal Article |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
restrictedAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
Volume | 41 |
Issue | 4 |
Abstract |
Singapore is a cosmopolitan city-nation in Southeast Asia which has a Muslim minority population. Mosques in Singapore play a crucial role in various aspects of the local Muslims’ life and have great potential in ensuring the welfare of the surrounding society. Therefore, it is of utmost importance for the mosque management to continue uplifting and to sustain its multi-functionality in this era of modernization. This study focuses on three main aspects of sustainability, which are environment and facilities, social as well as financial and economic. The research aims to explore approaches taken by a mosque to ensure its sustainability in the foreseeable future. Interviews were carried out among the mosque management committee members. © 2022 Institute of Muslim Minority Affairs. |
Expressions of faith in Hindu processional festivals: case studies from Singapore and Malaysia
Expressions of faith in Hindu processional festivals: case studies from Singapore and Malaysia
2015
Krishnan, Gauri Parimoo
Collection | Religion |
---|---|
Author/Creator |
Krishnan, Gauri Parimoo |
Editor |
Bhattacharya, Jayati Kripalani, Coonoor |
Title |
Expressions of faith in Hindu processional festivals: case studies from Singapore and Malaysia |
Source Title | Indian and Chinese immigrant communities: comparative perspectives |
Publication Date | 2015 |
Publisher | London; New York: Anthem Press |
Call Number | DS432.5 Ind 2015 |
Subject |
Fasts and feasts -- Hinduism Fast and feasts -- Singapore Fasts and feasts -- Malaysia Hinduism -- Singapore -- Rituals Hinduism -- Malaysia -- Rituals Festivals -- Singapore Festivals -- Malaysia Piety |
Page | 137-152 |
Language | English |
URI | |
Content Type | Book Chapter |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
restrictedAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
Abstract |
Religion and its practice is an expression of diasporic behaviour, and its multicultural relevance at both the social and political levels is truly the best tool to study any community or country with a huge migrant population. In the case of Singapore and Malaysia through the colonial days, their multicultural population historically has demonstrated religious tolerance, which has enabled the Hindu community to practice its religious festivals even to this day. This paper will focus on the survival, evolution and modifications these festivals, and in particular their public expression through festival processions, have undergone compared to how they were practiced in their place of origin in India. Processions are subject to innovations and their purpose can also change. This paper examines the cultural and social aspects of the practice and examines the expression of devotion to Murukan among Indian and Chinese devotees as observed during processions and ritual practices for the celebration of the kavadi festival Thaipusam in Singapore, Malacca and Penang, as well as to Mariamman during Theemithi in Singapore. Thaipusam, celebrated in the month of Thai in the Hindu calendar (occurring January–February in the Gregorian calendar), is a thanksgiving festival dedicated to the Hindu god Murukan involving asceticism and control over ones senses, while Theemithi is a ritual street theatre performance culminating in walking on burning coal. This study analyses the way piety is expressed among worshippers observing these festivals and what inspires this piety. Many of the practices around Murukan worship are connected to the Indian diaspora that brought ritual worship to British Malaya in the nineteenth century. Many were plantation workers who brought their folk practices from the villages of Tamil Nadu and practised them in Singapore and parts of Malaysia. When and how the expression of faith went beyond the kampong and the Indian fold and started attracting other races, especially the Chinese, requires more in-depth research. |
Festival, community and identity: the Nine Emperor Gods Festival in Singapore
Festival, community and identity: the Nine Emperor Gods Festival in Singapore
Collection | Religion |
---|---|
Author/Creator |
Koh, Keng We |
Editor |
Kwa, Chong Guan Ke, Mulin |
Title |
Festival, community and identity: the Nine Emperor Gods Festival in Singapore |
Source Title | A General History of the Chinese in Singapore |
Publication Date | 2019 |
Publisher | Singapore: Singapore Federation of Chinese Clan Associations: World Scientific |
DOI |
https://libproxy1.nus.edu.sg/login?url=https://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789813277649_0024 |
Call Number | DS610.25.C5 Gen 2019 |
Subject |
Chinese -- Religious life -- Singapore Taoism -- Singapore Singapore -- Religious life and customs |
Page | 517-537 |
Language | English |
Content Type | Book Chapter |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
restrictedAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
Abstract |
Festivals constitute an important dimension of Chinese cultural, socio-political, and economic life. |
Folk religion among the Chinese in Singapore and Malaysia
Folk religion among the Chinese in Singapore and Malaysia
Collection | Religion |
---|---|
Author/Creator |
Tjandra, Lukas |
Title |
Folk religion among the Chinese in Singapore and Malaysia |
Publication Date | 1990 |
Publisher | Ann Arbor, MI : University Microfilms International |
DOI | |
Call Number | BL25*UMI 1 |
Subject |
Chinese -- Singapore -- Religion Chinese -- Malaysia -- Religion Mythology, Chinese -- Singapore Mythology, Chinese -- Malaysia |
Page | 236 |
Language | English |
Content Type | Dissertation/Thesis |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
openAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
Description |
Thesis (D.Miss.) -- Fuller Theological Seminary, 1988 |
Fractured lives, newfound freedoms? the dialectics of religious seekership among Chinese migrants in Singapore
Fractured lives, newfound freedoms? the dialectics of religious seekership among Chinese migrants in Singapore
2019
Woods, Orlando
Kong, Lily
Collection | Religion |
---|---|
Author/Creator |
Woods, Orlando Kong, Lily |
Title |
Fractured lives, newfound freedoms? the dialectics of religious seekership among Chinese migrants in Singapore |
Source Title | Asian Studies Review |
Publication Date | 2019 |
DOI |
http://libproxy1.nus.edu.sg/login?url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10357823.2019.1674778 |
Call Number | DS1 ASR |
Subject |
Christian converts -- Singapore Immigrants -- Religious life -- Singapore Foreign workers, Chinese -- Religious life -- Singapore China -- Emigration and immigration -- Religious aspects -- Christianity |
Page | 1-19 |
Language | English |
Content Type | Journal Article |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
openAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
Volume | 10 |
Description |
This article explores the negotiations involved in the process of Chinese migrants converting to Christianity in Singapore. For many Chinese people, migration involves being exposed to religion for the first time, and for some, it involves them converting to Christianity. |
Growing churches Singapore style: ministry in an urban context
Growing churches Singapore style: ministry in an urban context
Collection | Religion |
---|---|
Author/Creator |
Hinton, Keith W. |
Title |
Growing churches Singapore style: ministry in an urban context |
Publication Date | 1985 |
Publisher | Singapore : Overseas Missionary Fellowship |
Call Number | BR1200.2 Hin |
Subject |
Christianity -- Singapore Church growth -- Singapore |
Page | 23 |
Language | English |
Content Type | Book |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
openAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
Hinduism in Singapore: a sociological and ethnographic perspective
Hinduism in Singapore: a sociological and ethnographic perspective
Collection | Religion |
---|---|
Author/Creator |
Sinha, Vineeta |
Title |
Hinduism in Singapore: a sociological and ethnographic perspective |
Publication Date | 1988 |
Call Number | HM15 *1988 2 |
Subject |
Hinduism -- Singapore Hindus -- Singapore -- Social life and customs East Indians -- Singapore -- Social life and customs |
Page | 252 |
Language | English |
Content Type | Dissertation/Thesis |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
openAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
Description |
Thesis (M. Soc. Sci.) -- Dept. of Sociology, National University of Singapore |
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