Jeet Thayil Reflects on Singapore
Jeet Thayil on a draconian city-state with pockets of wildness.
I grew up in Hong Kong in the ’70s, and though I traveled in the region, Singapore was not a possible destination. My father, T.J.S. George, was the founding editor of Asiaweek, a Hong Kong–based newsmagazine. He wrote the first critical study of Singapore’s brilliant and authoritarian prime minister. The book, Lee Kuan Yew’s Singapore, was not banned—Lee knew a ban would be self-defeating—but it might as well have been: no bookseller stocked it, not until much later, when students began to circulate photocopies. My family had been advised not to visit Singapore, not even in transit, because we might be taken from the plane and detained.
Singapore’s red-light district, Geylang. (Pablo Sanchez / Reuters-Landov)
There was a respectable precedent for family paranoia. Half a dozen years earlier, in India, a former chief minister of Bihar had arrested my father for writing impertinent editorials in The Searchlight, the newspaper my father edited. The imprisonment had been brief, a little over two weeks, and the resulting international furor made my father’s career, but the experience had left my family with a residual wariness of power.
Singapore was an expression of one man’s will to power. It was exemplary and totalitarian: media had been effectively nationalized, foreign correspondents expelled, and a letter to the editor critical of the government would bring the Special Branch to your door; opposition parties did not exist; heavy fines were imposed for chewing gum or dropping a cigarette butt on the street; long-haired male visitors could be denied entry (one of the men so turned away was Sir Cliff Richard, that most wholesome of pop singers). I built a composite picture in my mind of a regimented society that had reversed the Dostoevskian dictum: nothing was permitted because everything was true.
In the intervening years, I visited Singapore in transit only. I marveled at the haven Changi Airport offered in comparison with Heathrow or JFK. I admired the quality of the food at the restaurants, the showers and sleep pods, the free Wi-Fi, the movies, the butterfly park, and, most of all, the koi ponds with their orchids and falling water. Watching the large bewhiskered fish was akin to meditation. When I finally visited the city itself earlier this year, I found a society modeled on its first prime minister’s notion of the model citizen, but also, unexpectedly, a society with well-defined, if not absolutely thriving, pockets of decadence, which I’ll get to.
Along with public health and civic amenities, Singapore takes multiculturalism very seriously. There are four official languages: English, Chinese, Malay, and Tamil. There are Chinese, Buddhist, and Hindu temples, as well as mosques, a Little India, a Chinatown, and street names that carry Britain’s colonial history. There are heavy rainstorms throughout the year, but few floods, because the city’s system of underground culverts and drains is astonishingly effective. Compared with Mumbai or Delhi, cities derailed each year by monsoon and malaria, this simple fact is a cause for admiration. In the new Singapore, reforms have at last been initiated, and there has been a loosening of government controls, but some things stay the same: even today, people lower their voices when they talk about Lee Kuan Yew.
Orchard Road runs halfway across the breadth of Singapore, and on it are a dozen buildings with Orchard in their names. Of these, Orchard Towers, situated at the very top of Orchard Road, is a landmark, a vertical red-light area of massage parlors, cheap eateries, shops, bars, and clubs. Men lounge around the stairwells looking at the women, who are everywhere. A half hour away is Geylang, the city’s best-known red-light district, set up by the British in the 19th century. I was taken there on my first night in the city. As we walked up and down the lorongs, or side streets, I noticed that each block had a diverse variation of women: Malay, Filipino, Thai, Chinese, Indian.
Alongside the brothels were other places of business, including some of Singapore’s most popular restaurants. On Lorong 9 was Beef Kway Teow, a corner coffee shop named after its signature dish, tender beef in thick gravy over rice noodles. Also on offer were frogs’ legs. The frogs, sourced from a nearby shop that breeds American bullfrogs, are dispatched with a quick whack against a wall. The food arrived in large platters, and we ate on tables set out on the sidewalk. I ordered kopi o, black coffee, and bought a pack of face tissues from a one-armed man. You leave the tissues on your table to show it’s taken. We watched the women go by. There were drug deals going down, and a drunken fistfight was about to erupt. Tourists from every nation milled on the streets. It could have been a louche corner in any city in the world.
Jeet Thayil’s debut novel Narcopolis was shortlisted for the 2012 Man Booker Prize.
About The City
"Cities each have a kind of light," August Kleinzahler once wrote. Here, great authors evoke the light—and darkness—they find in the world’s cities.
Latest From
Travel Beast
Boston Feels the Pain
Paul Theroux looks at his hometown after the marathon bombing and finds the mood of the city transformed.
Members Only
Travelling with the A-List
Crusader for History
Meet America’s Indiana Jones
TRAVEL
Nobu Nation
787 Fail
Boeing Won’t Budge
The Best Fireworks Ever. Period.
Leave it to Dubai to host a New Year's Eve that was cooler than yours. Watch the sky around the Burj Khalifa, the tallest building in the world, explode with splendor.
Latest From
Book Beast
Gatsby in Chengdu
What can F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novel tell us about present-day China? Matt Lombardi teaches the American classic in the city of Chengdu.
Constructive Criticism
Reviewing the Reviewers
Fiction
Fact-Checking ‘Inferno’
Happy Birthday
The Essential Balzac
Daniel Dennett
The Brainteaser
Latest
Hot Reads
-
This Week’s Hot Reads
This week, from a childhood interrupted by war in Sri Lanka to the glory days of food... More
-
This Week’s Hot Reads
This week, stories of human endurance and persistence, whether in the courtroom or behind... More
-
This Week’s Hot Reads
From a young girl’s real-life diary of her time in a concentration camp, to John le... More
Latest
Book Bag
-
Paul Theroux’s Inner Journey
The best travel writing is about the voyage into the space within.... More
-
10 Advice Books for Graduates
As students leave school and enter their next stage in life, what books can they turn to... More
-
Nathaniel Philbrick’s Book Bag
The National Book Award-winning chronicler of maritime and American stories picks his... More
Latest
How I Write
-
Burt Bacharach: How I Write
The great American songwriter, responsible for 73 Top 40 hits on the U.S.... More
-
Susan Cain: How I Write
Introverts of the world unite!... More
-
Patrick Flanery: How I Write
Why is the author of the novel ‘Absolution,’ set in a contemporary South Africa dealing... More
Latest
The Big Idea
-
Big Idea: Our Global Cost
How do we measure and predict the human cost of climate change? Andrew T.... More
-
Paul Farmer: The Big Idea
The charismatic doctor and social activist, known for his work in Haiti and co-founding... More
-
Temple Grandin: My Big Idea
The animal-science pioneer and autistic activist looks inside her own brain to learn... More
Latest
Longreads
-
The Week’s Best Reads
From the epic fraud behind the popular drug Lipitor to higher education’s new internet... More
-
The Week’s Best Reads
From the White House’s intense internal debate on Syria to a Spanish village that won the... More
-
The Week’s Best Reads
From the harrowing memoirs of a Guantánamo detainee to a year without the Internet, The... More
Latest
American Dreams
-
Lonelyhearts Be Free Tonight
In the midst of the Great Depression, Nathanael West took real letters from desperate... More
-
Dead on the Dance Floor
As the Jazz Age entered full swing in 1923, the bestselling novel in America was by... More
-
Insane in the Plains
In the early 1900s people in the prairie states started going insane, literally.... More




Comments