S'porean victim of racist assault at Choa Chu Kang: 'I still have a lot of fear'
Hindocha Nita Vishnubhai was allegedly kicked and called a racial slur while brisk walking one morning. She and her daughter talk to us about how the Covid-19 pandemic has worsened racist attitudes towards Indians in Singapore.
Lean Jinghui |
May 22, 2021, 05:01 PM
Singaporean private tutor Hindocha Nita Vishnubhai, 55, was
brisk walking along Chua Chu Kang Drive on the morning of May 7, when she was stopped by a man.
She did not know him, nor him, her.
The man confronted Nita, demanding that she pull her mask up.
Nita said that she had been exercising; that was why her mask was lowered.
However, the man then allegedly verbally abused her, used a racial slur and proceeded to kick her in the chest.
Abrasions on Nita's arm on the day of the attack.
The kick toppled Nita, causing her to suffer abrasions and cuts to her left arm.
Nita recounted to
Mothership that she was too shocked to react.
Photos of Nita's wound — crusted on the outside but exposing the raw flesh inside — coupled with the horrifying account of the senseless attack were later shared by Nita's daughter, Parveen Kaur, 28, on Instagram and it went viral.
Many ministers, including
PM Lee, came out to
condemn the racist attack. And on May 11, the assailant was
arrested for assault and using racial slurs against a Singaporean woman.
It's been two weeks since the incident, but both Parveen and Nita are still deeply shaken; during our video call, Nita broke down twice as her emotions overwhelmed her.
The aftermath of a racist attack
Things happened quickly after the incident went viral. Nita said that the police called her down the day the man was arrested.
An investigation officer asked her some questions then brought her to the scene of the assault at Choa Chu Kang.
But it was a seemingly small gesture that Nita still recalls with great clarity: The investigation officer, a Chinese woman, had chosen to sit beside her in the car when they were travelling to Choa Chu Kang.
She was touched.
"After the incident, I felt very sad that I'm ostracised, [an] outcast. I know people fear Indians, and people don't want to come near Indians," Nita said, before pausing to fight back tears.
Referring to the footpath that she takes to work, she added, “Now I fear, I don’t want to walk [on] that side, I walk [on the] opposite side instead.”
Aside from switching her walking route, Nita is now more vigilant about her surroundings, like having eyes on the back of her head, she said.
Her family always assures her that there's no need to be scared, said Nita. Singapore is a fair country and that assault was a one-off incident.
As Singaporean as it gets
Nita arrived in Singapore in 1989.
And in the three decades that she has called this place home, she served as an Army regular for nine years, lectured at a college, and even gave birth here.
But, even though Nita is now a Singaporean, she is frequently confronted with the clear distinction that some Singaporeans make between being a citizen and being a "true blue Singaporean".
People regularly ask her, rather pointedly, where she comes from, perhaps as a response to her accented English.
Nita said as she teared up again:
And so when she was assaulted at Choa Chu Kang Drive, Nita's first thought was not to seek justice for herself, but to ask, “Why I
kena like this", and count her blessings that she only suffered a kick to the chest and not something much worse like a fatal strike to her neck.
Parveen, who only found out about the attack the day after during their Mother’s Day dinner, said that she felt very disheartened and angry on her mother’s behalf.
Nita does not think Singapore is a racist country. However, she feels that some individuals can be very careless with their remarks or are, in her words, "race-insensitive".
Pictures taken by Parveen when mother and daughter met for dinner.
Racism exacerbated by Covid-19 pandemic
The attack on Nita was the most violent act of racism that she had ever encountered, but it isn't the only racist behaviour ever done to her.
Being Indians in Singapore, both mother and daughter said that they have been on the receiving end of various insensitive behaviour, in other words, micro-aggression.
Drawing on a past experience, Parveen said that she once received body soap from her best friend for her eighteenth birthday.
Attached was a note which had been meant as a joke: "Because you're Indian".
More physical examples of micro-aggression came from Nita, who explained that the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic and the surge in cases in India have only made these incidents more pronounced.
People would visibly adjust their masks upon spotting her. In the train, commuters would avoid sitting next to her or even get up if she takes the seat next to them.
Parveen has also been questioned on many occasions if she or her family had gone anywhere, or if they had met Indians who had been to India.
She understands that these might be genuine questions that arise from a place of fear, but she is irked by how it feels like racial profiling.
Compassion & kindness: A Singaporean reaction to the assault
There's some good that came out of this senseless assault.
Parveen and Nita share that they are overwhelmed by the support that they have received from friends, family and even strangers after the incident went viral.
Nita has received over 500 messages from students, friends, colleagues, and bosses — people whom she had worked with in the last 20-30 years.
Some of her students even texted her immediately upon hearing about the attack to ask if she was okay as they were worried for her.
And while the attack on her mother has left her shaken, Parveen is grateful for the friends who rallied around her and for the people who shared her post and talked about it.
Their actions had amplified her mother's story and made her feel seen and heard.
"It gave me a lot of solace that I was not being too sensitive," said Parveen.
The man who kicked Nita has not been charged; when
Mothership contacted the Police, we were informed that investigations are still ongoing. However, Nita said that she has forgiven him:
All images courtesy of Parveen Kaur and Hindocha Nita Vishnubhai