I once had a strange encounter with a Singaporean (Chinese ethnicity) taxi driver. After I had taken the taxi and told him where I wanted to go, he started talking to me (which a lot of taxi drivers usually do. Nothing particular there) Then we saw a truck loaded with Indian workers. He then asked me if I was from India. I told him I wasn’t. And he started telling me about how worried he was about the Indian workers in Singapore.
He said that they roam around in the streets and under HDBs at night and it was dangerous to let his children out. He also told me that they were dirty and smelly. And that they should learn to speak English because Singaporeans do not understand when they speak. I did not want to contradict him (since he was the one driving me home…) but I was horrified by the disgust he had of the workers.
Then when I got home and thought about it, I realized that it was not so much that he had disgust for them than a great incomprehension of their difference from him.
For the Indian workers, hanging out in the streets at night is something acceptable to do, and even a habit back in their country. They do not pose much threat. It is just fear of the unknown that drove the taxi driver to think that it is unsafe because of the Indian workers.
As for being dirty and smelly, it is a mere prejudice. The workers usually work very hard all day and in terrible conditions. I am sure that if anyone, of any race, worked as they do, they would look and smell the same.
And personally I think that Indian workers make as much effort to speak English as some of the Chinese Singaporeans.
Disclaimer: I do not mean that all Singaporeans think this way. I know some very good Singaporeans and I know it is only a small portion of the population. I also know that the prejudices that people have towards Indian workers are not all unjustified. But the troublemakers are also only a small portion of the Indian worker population.
I also found a video on youtube recently (click here to watch) which is quite relevant to intercultural behavior. It’s a situation in the MRT where a woman yells at some Indian workers. But I could not decipher what she was saying, so I did not comment on it.