A lot has been said about the riot in Singapore's Little India and the ensuing fallout.
Foreign workers, specifically from South Asia, have been either been painted as villain or victim.
We've been reminded by this video that the foreign worker is son, brother, friend, husband, father, person. Like us.
‘Behind the ’Bangla’
Anonymous and invisible, the Bangladeshi migrant worker is often merely a nameless face in crowded Singapore.
He is the construction or shipyard worker, the cleaner, the Bangla.
Could there be more to his story?
Three young Singaporeans travelled to Bangladesh to find out.
‘Behind the ’Bangla’
Anonymous and invisible, the Bangladeshi migrant worker is often merely a nameless face in crowded Singapore.
He is the construction or shipyard worker, the cleaner, the Bangla.
Could there be more to his story?
Three young Singaporeans travelled to Bangladesh to find out.
‘Behind the ’Bangla’
Anonymous and invisible, the Bangladeshi migrant worker is often merely a nameless face in crowded Singapore.
He is the construction or shipyard worker, the cleaner, the Bangla.
Could there be more to his story?
Three young Singaporeans travelled to Bangladesh to find out.
‘Behind the ’Bangla’
Anonymous and invisible, the Bangladeshi migrant worker is often merely a nameless face in crowded Singapore.
He is the construction or shipyard worker, the cleaner, the Bangla.
Could there be more to his story?
Three young Singaporeans travelled to Bangladesh to find out.
‘Behind the ’Bangla’
Anonymous and invisible, the Bangladeshi migrant worker is often merely a nameless face in crowded Singapore.
He is the construction or shipyard worker, the cleaner, the Bangla.
Could there be more to his story?
Three young Singaporeans travelled to Bangladesh to find out.
‘Behind the ’Bangla’
Anonymous and invisible, the Bangladeshi migrant worker is often merely a nameless face in crowded Singapore.
He is the construction or shipyard worker, the cleaner, the Bangla.
Could there be more to his story?
Three young Singaporeans travelled to Bangladesh to find out.
‘Behind the ’Bangla’
Anonymous and invisible, the Bangladeshi migrant worker is often merely a nameless face in crowded Singapore.
He is the construction or shipyard worker, the cleaner, the Bangla.
Could there be more to his story?
Three young Singaporeans travelled to Bangladesh to find out.
‘Behind the ’Bangla’
Anonymous and invisible, the Bangladeshi migrant worker is often merely a nameless face in crowded Singapore.
He is the construction or shipyard worker, the cleaner, the Bangla.
Could there be more to his story?
Three young Singaporeans travelled to Bangladesh to find out.
‘Behind the ’Bangla’
Anonymous and invisible, the Bangladeshi migrant worker is often merely a nameless face in crowded Singapore.
He is the construction or shipyard worker, the cleaner, the Bangla.
Could there be more to his story?
Three young Singaporeans travelled to Bangladesh to find out.
‘Behind the ’Bangla’
Anonymous and invisible, the Bangladeshi migrant worker is often merely a nameless face in crowded Singapore.
He is the construction or shipyard worker, the cleaner, the Bangla.
Could there be more to his story?
Three young Singaporeans travelled to Bangladesh to find out.
‘Behind the ’Bangla’
Anonymous and invisible, the Bangladeshi migrant worker is often merely a nameless face in crowded Singapore.
He is the construction or shipyard worker, the cleaner, the Bangla.
Could there be more to his story?
Three young Singaporeans travelled to Bangladesh to find out.
‘Behind the ’Bangla’
Anonymous and invisible, the Bangladeshi migrant worker is often merely a nameless face in crowded Singapore.
He is the construction or shipyard worker, the cleaner, the Bangla.
Could there be more to his story?
Three young Singaporeans travelled to Bangladesh to find out.
‘Behind the ’Bangla’
Anonymous and invisible, the Bangladeshi migrant worker is often merely a nameless face in crowded Singapore.
He is the construction or shipyard worker, the cleaner, the Bangla.
Could there be more to his story?
Three young Singaporeans travelled to Bangladesh to find out.
‘Behind the ’Bangla’
Anonymous and invisible, the Bangladeshi migrant worker is often merely a nameless face in crowded Singapore.
He is the construction or shipyard worker, the cleaner, the Bangla.
Could there be more to his story?
Three young Singaporeans travelled to Bangladesh to find out.
‘Behind the ’Bangla’
Anonymous and invisible, the Bangladeshi migrant worker is often merely a nameless face in crowded Singapore.
He is the construction or shipyard worker, the cleaner, the Bangla.
Could there be more to his story?
Three young Singaporeans travelled to Bangladesh to find out.
‘Behind the ’Bangla’
Anonymous and invisible, the Bangladeshi migrant worker is often merely a nameless face in crowded Singapore.
He is the construction or shipyard worker, the cleaner, the Bangla.
Could there be more to his story?
Three young Singaporeans travelled to Bangladesh to find out.
‘Behind the ’Bangla’
Anonymous and invisible, the Bangladeshi migrant worker is often merely a nameless face in crowded Singapore.
He is the construction or shipyard worker, the cleaner, the Bangla.
Could there be more to his story?
Three young Singaporeans travelled to Bangladesh to find out.
‘Behind the ’Bangla’
Anonymous and invisible, the Bangladeshi migrant worker is often merely a nameless face in crowded Singapore.
He is the construction or shipyard worker, the cleaner, the Bangla.
Could there be more to his story?
Three young Singaporeans travelled to Bangladesh to find out.
‘Behind the ’Bangla’
Anonymous and invisible, the Bangladeshi migrant worker is often merely a nameless face in crowded Singapore.
He is the construction or shipyard worker, the cleaner, the Bangla.
Could there be more to his story?
Three young Singaporeans travelled to Bangladesh to find out.
‘Behind the ’Bangla’
Anonymous and invisible, the Bangladeshi migrant worker is often merely a nameless face in crowded Singapore.
He is the construction or shipyard worker, the cleaner, the Bangla.
Could there be more to his story?
Three young Singaporeans travelled to Bangladesh to find out.
One of the trio, Bernice Wong, said the group "felt it was timely and necessary to expand the narrative" beyond "the deeply-entrenched image of them as low cost economic digits or cogs in our industrial machine."
"We went to unearth what is it that they are working so hard for? Why do they put up with the precarious realities of being a migrant worker here? What are they fighting for?"
The three found that while the economic impetus is a very compelling one, it is just one facet of the workers' identity.
Richly-textured
They came across the stories of an absent father of two young kids, a young man determined to go home to marry and build his own house, a valiant romantic who goes against social conventions and a missing eldest son who cares for his sick father.
"Through their stories, we realised how richly-textured their lives are," Bernice said.
Like us, they are fathers, sons, husbands, storytellers and dreamers too. On so many different levels and roles, they are like us. On a very fundamental level, we are all equals.
We tell their stories not to romanticise or valorise them. We share them because we have been inspired and lifted by them, and we feel that many more could be similarly encouraged as well.
However, it does not stop there. We hope that this would compel you to embark on your own pursuits, write your own stories, and one day pass them on to others too.
Beyond the Border, Behind the Men is an initiative interested in uncovering more about the many migrant labourers that dot the Singapore landscape. It pays tribute to these “builders” of the country, and those they leave behind. It celebrates their resilience and human spirit. Watch the short film.
One of the trio, Bernice Wong, said the group "felt it was timely and necessary to expand the narrative" beyond "the deeply-entrenched image of them as low cost economic digits or cogs in our industrial machine."
"We went to unearth what is it that they are working so hard for? Why do they put up with the precarious realities of being a migrant worker here? What are they fighting for?"
The three found that while the economic impetus is a very compelling one, it is just one facet of the workers' identity.
Richly-textured
They came across the stories of an absent father of two young kids, a young man determined to go home to marry and build his own house, a valiant romantic who goes against social conventions and a missing eldest son who cares for his sick father.
"Through their stories, we realised how richly-textured their lives are," Bernice said.
Like us, they are fathers, sons, husbands, storytellers and dreamers too. On so many different levels and roles, they are like us. On a very fundamental level, we are all equals.
We tell their stories not to romanticise or valorise them. We share them because we have been inspired and lifted by them, and we feel that many more could be similarly encouraged as well.
However, it does not stop there. We hope that this would compel you to embark on your own pursuits, write your own stories, and one day pass them on to others too.
Beyond the Border, Behind the Men is an initiative interested in uncovering more about the many migrant labourers that dot the Singapore landscape. It pays tribute to these “builders” of the country, and those they leave behind. It celebrates their resilience and human spirit. Watch the short film.
One of the trio, Bernice Wong, said the group "felt it was timely and necessary to expand the narrative" beyond "the deeply-entrenched image of them as low cost economic digits or cogs in our industrial machine."
"We went to unearth what is it that they are working so hard for? Why do they put up with the precarious realities of being a migrant worker here? What are they fighting for?"
The three found that while the economic impetus is a very compelling one, it is just one facet of the workers' identity.
Richly-textured
They came across the stories of an absent father of two young kids, a young man determined to go home to marry and build his own house, a valiant romantic who goes against social conventions and a missing eldest son who cares for his sick father.
"Through their stories, we realised how richly-textured their lives are," Bernice said.
Like us, they are fathers, sons, husbands, storytellers and dreamers too. On so many different levels and roles, they are like us. On a very fundamental level, we are all equals.
We tell their stories not to romanticise or valorise them. We share them because we have been inspired and lifted by them, and we feel that many more could be similarly encouraged as well.
However, it does not stop there. We hope that this would compel you to embark on your own pursuits, write your own stories, and one day pass them on to others too.
Beyond the Border, Behind the Men is an initiative interested in uncovering more about the many migrant labourers that dot the Singapore landscape. It pays tribute to these “builders” of the country, and those they leave behind. It celebrates their resilience and human spirit. Watch the short film.
One of the trio, Bernice Wong, said the group "felt it was timely and necessary to expand the narrative" beyond "the deeply-entrenched image of them as low cost economic digits or cogs in our industrial machine."
"We went to unearth what is it that they are working so hard for? Why do they put up with the precarious realities of being a migrant worker here? What are they fighting for?"
The three found that while the economic impetus is a very compelling one, it is just one facet of the workers' identity.
Richly-textured
They came across the stories of an absent father of two young kids, a young man determined to go home to marry and build his own house, a valiant romantic who goes against social conventions and a missing eldest son who cares for his sick father.
"Through their stories, we realised how richly-textured their lives are," Bernice said.
Like us, they are fathers, sons, husbands, storytellers and dreamers too. On so many different levels and roles, they are like us. On a very fundamental level, we are all equals.
We tell their stories not to romanticise or valorise them. We share them because we have been inspired and lifted by them, and we feel that many more could be similarly encouraged as well.
However, it does not stop there. We hope that this would compel you to embark on your own pursuits, write your own stories, and one day pass them on to others too.
Beyond the Border, Behind the Men is an initiative interested in uncovering more about the many migrant labourers that dot the Singapore landscape. It pays tribute to these “builders” of the country, and those they leave behind. It celebrates their resilience and human spirit. Watch the short film.
One of the trio, Bernice Wong, said the group "felt it was timely and necessary to expand the narrative" beyond "the deeply-entrenched image of them as low cost economic digits or cogs in our industrial machine."
"We went to unearth what is it that they are working so hard for? Why do they put up with the precarious realities of being a migrant worker here? What are they fighting for?"
The three found that while the economic impetus is a very compelling one, it is just one facet of the workers' identity.
Richly-textured
They came across the stories of an absent father of two young kids, a young man determined to go home to marry and build his own house, a valiant romantic who goes against social conventions and a missing eldest son who cares for his sick father.
"Through their stories, we realised how richly-textured their lives are," Bernice said.
Like us, they are fathers, sons, husbands, storytellers and dreamers too. On so many different levels and roles, they are like us. On a very fundamental level, we are all equals.
We tell their stories not to romanticise or valorise them. We share them because we have been inspired and lifted by them, and we feel that many more could be similarly encouraged as well.
However, it does not stop there. We hope that this would compel you to embark on your own pursuits, write your own stories, and one day pass them on to others too.
Beyond the Border, Behind the Men is an initiative interested in uncovering more about the many migrant labourers that dot the Singapore landscape. It pays tribute to these “builders” of the country, and those they leave behind. It celebrates their resilience and human spirit. Watch the short film.
One of the trio, Bernice Wong, said the group "felt it was timely and necessary to expand the narrative" beyond "the deeply-entrenched image of them as low cost economic digits or cogs in our industrial machine."
"We went to unearth what is it that they are working so hard for? Why do they put up with the precarious realities of being a migrant worker here? What are they fighting for?"
The three found that while the economic impetus is a very compelling one, it is just one facet of the workers' identity.
Richly-textured
They came across the stories of an absent father of two young kids, a young man determined to go home to marry and build his own house, a valiant romantic who goes against social conventions and a missing eldest son who cares for his sick father.
"Through their stories, we realised how richly-textured their lives are," Bernice said.
Like us, they are fathers, sons, husbands, storytellers and dreamers too. On so many different levels and roles, they are like us. On a very fundamental level, we are all equals.
We tell their stories not to romanticise or valorise them. We share them because we have been inspired and lifted by them, and we feel that many more could be similarly encouraged as well.
However, it does not stop there. We hope that this would compel you to embark on your own pursuits, write your own stories, and one day pass them on to others too.
Beyond the Border, Behind the Men is an initiative interested in uncovering more about the many migrant labourers that dot the Singapore landscape. It pays tribute to these “builders” of the country, and those they leave behind. It celebrates their resilience and human spirit. Watch the short film.
One of the trio, Bernice Wong, said the group "felt it was timely and necessary to expand the narrative" beyond "the deeply-entrenched image of them as low cost economic digits or cogs in our industrial machine."
"We went to unearth what is it that they are working so hard for? Why do they put up with the precarious realities of being a migrant worker here? What are they fighting for?"
The three found that while the economic impetus is a very compelling one, it is just one facet of the workers' identity.
Richly-textured
They came across the stories of an absent father of two young kids, a young man determined to go home to marry and build his own house, a valiant romantic who goes against social conventions and a missing eldest son who cares for his sick father.
"Through their stories, we realised how richly-textured their lives are," Bernice said.
Like us, they are fathers, sons, husbands, storytellers and dreamers too. On so many different levels and roles, they are like us. On a very fundamental level, we are all equals.
We tell their stories not to romanticise or valorise them. We share them because we have been inspired and lifted by them, and we feel that many more could be similarly encouraged as well.
However, it does not stop there. We hope that this would compel you to embark on your own pursuits, write your own stories, and one day pass them on to others too.
Beyond the Border, Behind the Men is an initiative interested in uncovering more about the many migrant labourers that dot the Singapore landscape. It pays tribute to these “builders” of the country, and those they leave behind. It celebrates their resilience and human spirit. Watch the short film.
One of the trio, Bernice Wong, said the group "felt it was timely and necessary to expand the narrative" beyond "the deeply-entrenched image of them as low cost economic digits or cogs in our industrial machine."
"We went to unearth what is it that they are working so hard for? Why do they put up with the precarious realities of being a migrant worker here? What are they fighting for?"
The three found that while the economic impetus is a very compelling one, it is just one facet of the workers' identity.
Richly-textured
They came across the stories of an absent father of two young kids, a young man determined to go home to marry and build his own house, a valiant romantic who goes against social conventions and a missing eldest son who cares for his sick father.
"Through their stories, we realised how richly-textured their lives are," Bernice said.
Like us, they are fathers, sons, husbands, storytellers and dreamers too. On so many different levels and roles, they are like us. On a very fundamental level, we are all equals.
We tell their stories not to romanticise or valorise them. We share them because we have been inspired and lifted by them, and we feel that many more could be similarly encouraged as well.
However, it does not stop there. We hope that this would compel you to embark on your own pursuits, write your own stories, and one day pass them on to others too.
Beyond the Border, Behind the Men is an initiative interested in uncovering more about the many migrant labourers that dot the Singapore landscape. It pays tribute to these “builders” of the country, and those they leave behind. It celebrates their resilience and human spirit. Watch the short film.
One of the trio, Bernice Wong, said the group "felt it was timely and necessary to expand the narrative" beyond "the deeply-entrenched image of them as low cost economic digits or cogs in our industrial machine."
"We went to unearth what is it that they are working so hard for? Why do they put up with the precarious realities of being a migrant worker here? What are they fighting for?"
The three found that while the economic impetus is a very compelling one, it is just one facet of the workers' identity.
Richly-textured
They came across the stories of an absent father of two young kids, a young man determined to go home to marry and build his own house, a valiant romantic who goes against social conventions and a missing eldest son who cares for his sick father.
"Through their stories, we realised how richly-textured their lives are," Bernice said.
Like us, they are fathers, sons, husbands, storytellers and dreamers too. On so many different levels and roles, they are like us. On a very fundamental level, we are all equals.
We tell their stories not to romanticise or valorise them. We share them because we have been inspired and lifted by them, and we feel that many more could be similarly encouraged as well.
However, it does not stop there. We hope that this would compel you to embark on your own pursuits, write your own stories, and one day pass them on to others too.
Beyond the Border, Behind the Men is an initiative interested in uncovering more about the many migrant labourers that dot the Singapore landscape. It pays tribute to these “builders” of the country, and those they leave behind. It celebrates their resilience and human spirit. Watch the short film.
One of the trio, Bernice Wong, said the group "felt it was timely and necessary to expand the narrative" beyond "the deeply-entrenched image of them as low cost economic digits or cogs in our industrial machine."
"We went to unearth what is it that they are working so hard for? Why do they put up with the precarious realities of being a migrant worker here? What are they fighting for?"
The three found that while the economic impetus is a very compelling one, it is just one facet of the workers' identity.
Richly-textured
They came across the stories of an absent father of two young kids, a young man determined to go home to marry and build his own house, a valiant romantic who goes against social conventions and a missing eldest son who cares for his sick father.
"Through their stories, we realised how richly-textured their lives are," Bernice said.
Like us, they are fathers, sons, husbands, storytellers and dreamers too. On so many different levels and roles, they are like us. On a very fundamental level, we are all equals.
We tell their stories not to romanticise or valorise them. We share them because we have been inspired and lifted by them, and we feel that many more could be similarly encouraged as well.
However, it does not stop there. We hope that this would compel you to embark on your own pursuits, write your own stories, and one day pass them on to others too.
Beyond the Border, Behind the Men is an initiative interested in uncovering more about the many migrant labourers that dot the Singapore landscape. It pays tribute to these “builders” of the country, and those they leave behind. It celebrates their resilience and human spirit. Watch the short film.
One of the trio, Bernice Wong, said the group "felt it was timely and necessary to expand the narrative" beyond "the deeply-entrenched image of them as low cost economic digits or cogs in our industrial machine."
"We went to unearth what is it that they are working so hard for? Why do they put up with the precarious realities of being a migrant worker here? What are they fighting for?"
The three found that while the economic impetus is a very compelling one, it is just one facet of the workers' identity.
Richly-textured
They came across the stories of an absent father of two young kids, a young man determined to go home to marry and build his own house, a valiant romantic who goes against social conventions and a missing eldest son who cares for his sick father.
"Through their stories, we realised how richly-textured their lives are," Bernice said.
Like us, they are fathers, sons, husbands, storytellers and dreamers too. On so many different levels and roles, they are like us. On a very fundamental level, we are all equals.
We tell their stories not to romanticise or valorise them. We share them because we have been inspired and lifted by them, and we feel that many more could be similarly encouraged as well.
However, it does not stop there. We hope that this would compel you to embark on your own pursuits, write your own stories, and one day pass them on to others too.
Beyond the Border, Behind the Men is an initiative interested in uncovering more about the many migrant labourers that dot the Singapore landscape. It pays tribute to these “builders” of the country, and those they leave behind. It celebrates their resilience and human spirit. Watch the short film.
One of the trio, Bernice Wong, said the group "felt it was timely and necessary to expand the narrative" beyond "the deeply-entrenched image of them as low cost economic digits or cogs in our industrial machine."
"We went to unearth what is it that they are working so hard for? Why do they put up with the precarious realities of being a migrant worker here? What are they fighting for?"
The three found that while the economic impetus is a very compelling one, it is just one facet of the workers' identity.
Richly-textured
They came across the stories of an absent father of two young kids, a young man determined to go home to marry and build his own house, a valiant romantic who goes against social conventions and a missing eldest son who cares for his sick father.
"Through their stories, we realised how richly-textured their lives are," Bernice said.
Like us, they are fathers, sons, husbands, storytellers and dreamers too. On so many different levels and roles, they are like us. On a very fundamental level, we are all equals.
We tell their stories not to romanticise or valorise them. We share them because we have been inspired and lifted by them, and we feel that many more could be similarly encouraged as well.
However, it does not stop there. We hope that this would compel you to embark on your own pursuits, write your own stories, and one day pass them on to others too.
Beyond the Border, Behind the Men is an initiative interested in uncovering more about the many migrant labourers that dot the Singapore landscape. It pays tribute to these “builders” of the country, and those they leave behind. It celebrates their resilience and human spirit. Watch the short film.
One of the trio, Bernice Wong, said the group "felt it was timely and necessary to expand the narrative" beyond "the deeply-entrenched image of them as low cost economic digits or cogs in our industrial machine."
"We went to unearth what is it that they are working so hard for? Why do they put up with the precarious realities of being a migrant worker here? What are they fighting for?"
The three found that while the economic impetus is a very compelling one, it is just one facet of the workers' identity.
Richly-textured
They came across the stories of an absent father of two young kids, a young man determined to go home to marry and build his own house, a valiant romantic who goes against social conventions and a missing eldest son who cares for his sick father.
"Through their stories, we realised how richly-textured their lives are," Bernice said.
Like us, they are fathers, sons, husbands, storytellers and dreamers too. On so many different levels and roles, they are like us. On a very fundamental level, we are all equals.
We tell their stories not to romanticise or valorise them. We share them because we have been inspired and lifted by them, and we feel that many more could be similarly encouraged as well.
However, it does not stop there. We hope that this would compel you to embark on your own pursuits, write your own stories, and one day pass them on to others too.
Beyond the Border, Behind the Men is an initiative interested in uncovering more about the many migrant labourers that dot the Singapore landscape. It pays tribute to these “builders” of the country, and those they leave behind. It celebrates their resilience and human spirit. Watch the short film.
One of the trio, Bernice Wong, said the group "felt it was timely and necessary to expand the narrative" beyond "the deeply-entrenched image of them as low cost economic digits or cogs in our industrial machine."
"We went to unearth what is it that they are working so hard for? Why do they put up with the precarious realities of being a migrant worker here? What are they fighting for?"
The three found that while the economic impetus is a very compelling one, it is just one facet of the workers' identity.
Richly-textured
They came across the stories of an absent father of two young kids, a young man determined to go home to marry and build his own house, a valiant romantic who goes against social conventions and a missing eldest son who cares for his sick father.
"Through their stories, we realised how richly-textured their lives are," Bernice said.
Like us, they are fathers, sons, husbands, storytellers and dreamers too. On so many different levels and roles, they are like us. On a very fundamental level, we are all equals.
We tell their stories not to romanticise or valorise them. We share them because we have been inspired and lifted by them, and we feel that many more could be similarly encouraged as well.
However, it does not stop there. We hope that this would compel you to embark on your own pursuits, write your own stories, and one day pass them on to others too.
Beyond the Border, Behind the Men is an initiative interested in uncovering more about the many migrant labourers that dot the Singapore landscape. It pays tribute to these “builders” of the country, and those they leave behind. It celebrates their resilience and human spirit. Watch the short film.
One of the trio, Bernice Wong, said the group "felt it was timely and necessary to expand the narrative" beyond "the deeply-entrenched image of them as low cost economic digits or cogs in our industrial machine."
"We went to unearth what is it that they are working so hard for? Why do they put up with the precarious realities of being a migrant worker here? What are they fighting for?"
The three found that while the economic impetus is a very compelling one, it is just one facet of the workers' identity.
Richly-textured
They came across the stories of an absent father of two young kids, a young man determined to go home to marry and build his own house, a valiant romantic who goes against social conventions and a missing eldest son who cares for his sick father.
"Through their stories, we realised how richly-textured their lives are," Bernice said.
Like us, they are fathers, sons, husbands, storytellers and dreamers too. On so many different levels and roles, they are like us. On a very fundamental level, we are all equals.
We tell their stories not to romanticise or valorise them. We share them because we have been inspired and lifted by them, and we feel that many more could be similarly encouraged as well.
However, it does not stop there. We hope that this would compel you to embark on your own pursuits, write your own stories, and one day pass them on to others too.
Beyond the Border, Behind the Men is an initiative interested in uncovering more about the many migrant labourers that dot the Singapore landscape. It pays tribute to these “builders” of the country, and those they leave behind. It celebrates their resilience and human spirit. Watch the short film.
One of the trio, Bernice Wong, said the group "felt it was timely and necessary to expand the narrative" beyond "the deeply-entrenched image of them as low cost economic digits or cogs in our industrial machine."
"We went to unearth what is it that they are working so hard for? Why do they put up with the precarious realities of being a migrant worker here? What are they fighting for?"
The three found that while the economic impetus is a very compelling one, it is just one facet of the workers' identity.
Richly-textured
They came across the stories of an absent father of two young kids, a young man determined to go home to marry and build his own house, a valiant romantic who goes against social conventions and a missing eldest son who cares for his sick father.
"Through their stories, we realised how richly-textured their lives are," Bernice said.
Like us, they are fathers, sons, husbands, storytellers and dreamers too. On so many different levels and roles, they are like us. On a very fundamental level, we are all equals.
We tell their stories not to romanticise or valorise them. We share them because we have been inspired and lifted by them, and we feel that many more could be similarly encouraged as well.
However, it does not stop there. We hope that this would compel you to embark on your own pursuits, write your own stories, and one day pass them on to others too.
Beyond the Border, Behind the Men is an initiative interested in uncovering more about the many migrant labourers that dot the Singapore landscape. It pays tribute to these “builders” of the country, and those they leave behind. It celebrates their resilience and human spirit. Watch the short film.
One of the trio, Bernice Wong, said the group "felt it was timely and necessary to expand the narrative" beyond "the deeply-entrenched image of them as low cost economic digits or cogs in our industrial machine."
"We went to unearth what is it that they are working so hard for? Why do they put up with the precarious realities of being a migrant worker here? What are they fighting for?"
The three found that while the economic impetus is a very compelling one, it is just one facet of the workers' identity.
Richly-textured
They came across the stories of an absent father of two young kids, a young man determined to go home to marry and build his own house, a valiant romantic who goes against social conventions and a missing eldest son who cares for his sick father.
"Through their stories, we realised how richly-textured their lives are," Bernice said.
Like us, they are fathers, sons, husbands, storytellers and dreamers too. On so many different levels and roles, they are like us. On a very fundamental level, we are all equals.
We tell their stories not to romanticise or valorise them. We share them because we have been inspired and lifted by them, and we feel that many more could be similarly encouraged as well.
However, it does not stop there. We hope that this would compel you to embark on your own pursuits, write your own stories, and one day pass them on to others too.
Beyond the Border, Behind the Men is an initiative interested in uncovering more about the many migrant labourers that dot the Singapore landscape. It pays tribute to these “builders” of the country, and those they leave behind. It celebrates their resilience and human spirit. Watch the short film.
One of the trio, Bernice Wong, said the group "felt it was timely and necessary to expand the narrative" beyond "the deeply-entrenched image of them as low cost economic digits or cogs in our industrial machine."
"We went to unearth what is it that they are working so hard for? Why do they put up with the precarious realities of being a migrant worker here? What are they fighting for?"
The three found that while the economic impetus is a very compelling one, it is just one facet of the workers' identity.
Richly-textured
They came across the stories of an absent father of two young kids, a young man determined to go home to marry and build his own house, a valiant romantic who goes against social conventions and a missing eldest son who cares for his sick father.
"Through their stories, we realised how richly-textured their lives are," Bernice said.
Like us, they are fathers, sons, husbands, storytellers and dreamers too. On so many different levels and roles, they are like us. On a very fundamental level, we are all equals.
We tell their stories not to romanticise or valorise them. We share them because we have been inspired and lifted by them, and we feel that many more could be similarly encouraged as well.
However, it does not stop there. We hope that this would compel you to embark on your own pursuits, write your own stories, and one day pass them on to others too.
Beyond the Border, Behind the Men is an initiative interested in uncovering more about the many migrant labourers that dot the Singapore landscape. It pays tribute to these “builders” of the country, and those they leave behind. It celebrates their resilience and human spirit. Watch the short film.
One of the trio, Bernice Wong, said the group "felt it was timely and necessary to expand the narrative" beyond "the deeply-entrenched image of them as low cost economic digits or cogs in our industrial machine."
"We went to unearth what is it that they are working so hard for? Why do they put up with the precarious realities of being a migrant worker here? What are they fighting for?"
The three found that while the economic impetus is a very compelling one, it is just one facet of the workers' identity.
Richly-textured
They came across the stories of an absent father of two young kids, a young man determined to go home to marry and build his own house, a valiant romantic who goes against social conventions and a missing eldest son who cares for his sick father.
"Through their stories, we realised how richly-textured their lives are," Bernice said.
Like us, they are fathers, sons, husbands, storytellers and dreamers too. On so many different levels and roles, they are like us. On a very fundamental level, we are all equals.
We tell their stories not to romanticise or valorise them. We share them because we have been inspired and lifted by them, and we feel that many more could be similarly encouraged as well.
However, it does not stop there. We hope that this would compel you to embark on your own pursuits, write your own stories, and one day pass them on to others too.
Beyond the Border, Behind the Men is an initiative interested in uncovering more about the many migrant labourers that dot the Singapore landscape. It pays tribute to these “builders” of the country, and those they leave behind. It celebrates their resilience and human spirit. Watch the short film.
One of the trio, Bernice Wong, said the group "felt it was timely and necessary to expand the narrative" beyond "the deeply-entrenched image of them as low cost economic digits or cogs in our industrial machine."
"We went to unearth what is it that they are working so hard for? Why do they put up with the precarious realities of being a migrant worker here? What are they fighting for?"
The three found that while the economic impetus is a very compelling one, it is just one facet of the workers' identity.
Richly-textured
They came across the stories of an absent father of two young kids, a young man determined to go home to marry and build his own house, a valiant romantic who goes against social conventions and a missing eldest son who cares for his sick father.
"Through their stories, we realised how richly-textured their lives are," Bernice said.
Like us, they are fathers, sons, husbands, storytellers and dreamers too. On so many different levels and roles, they are like us. On a very fundamental level, we are all equals.
We tell their stories not to romanticise or valorise them. We share them because we have been inspired and lifted by them, and we feel that many more could be similarly encouraged as well.
However, it does not stop there. We hope that this would compel you to embark on your own pursuits, write your own stories, and one day pass them on to others too.
Beyond the Border, Behind the Men is an initiative interested in uncovering more about the many migrant labourers that dot the Singapore landscape. It pays tribute to these “builders” of the country, and those they leave behind. It celebrates their resilience and human spirit. Watch the short film.
Original text:
Pass a construction site in Singapore and more often than not, you'll see a group of Bangladeshi men hard at work. More than 110,000 migrant workers from Bangladesh live in Singapore, trying to earn enough money to fulfil their dreams. And although they've made significant contributions to buliding the country, few care to know much more about them.
Three young Singaporeans created 'Beyond the Border, Behind the Men,' a project that explores why these men come here, and whether their lives are really so different from our own.
Music by Johnny Ripper