Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
International

Aspiring Sikh Doc Sukhdeep Singh Wants To Change Attitudes Towards Ethnic Minorities In Hong Kong

Darpan News Desk IANS, 15 May, 2019 08:49 PM

    At a height of slightly over 6 feet, turbaned Sukhdeep Singh stands out from most Hongkongers and patients stare at him strangely, but when the aspiring Sikh doctor speaks to them in their own dialect, their faces light up.


    Singh, 23, is a final-year medical student at Chinese University. When he graduates next year, he will become one of the few doctors in the gleaming city to ever wear a turban.


    “Some people who assume I don’t understand Cantonese would comment on my turban in front of me, and on the MTR (Hong Kong’s public transport network), people would rather squeeze themselves into more crowded rows than take the empty seats next to me,” Singh told South China Morning Post.


    Born and raised in Hong Kong, Singh grew up surrounded by Cantonese speakers, including his own father, a civil servant. But he only realised the importance of speaking the language when he enrolled in medical school.

    “Patients look at me strangely, and that’s normal. But whenever I speak to them in their own dialect, their faces light up,” he said.


    “The sad reality is, when I’m wearing scrubs and a lab coat, I get treated differently. If I’m wearing normal clothes, no one would believe I am a medical student,” says Singh, who is one of about 12,000 Sikhs in the former British colony, now a special administrative region of China.


    While he has overcome communication barriers, Singh continues to be wary of the way patients perceive him, and keeps his beard tied and tucked in a low bun.


    “At home, it’s always free flowing, but at the hospital, I keep it up because you don’t want to scare sick patients even more. As a community, we still need to address these sensitive issues through education.”


    The Sikh Hongkonger wants to change attitudes towards ethnic minorities in the city.


    “Patients might develop a different perspective on people with turbans in Hong Kong when they see me, a turbaned doctor, and, hopefully, start to view other ethnic minorities differently,” he told the daily.


    Although he struggled with Cantonese vocabulary at first, Singh is now fluent in the language and able to write in Chinese.


    He is determined to eventually “speak like a local”, saying: “If I really am a Hongkonger, I should embrace every part of the culture.” In the coming year, he hopes to improve his Mandarin to serve more patients.”

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Indian-American Rajesh Subramaniam Named FedEx President

    Rajesh Subramaniam, an IIT-Bombay graduate from Thiruvananthapuram, has been with FedEx for more than 27 years.

    Indian-American Rajesh Subramaniam Named FedEx President

    Quebecer Confined In Cuba Says He's Been Convicted In Second Trial

    Toufik Benhamiche says in a statement that he was convicted in relation to the incident following a trial that took place on Dec. 10.

    Quebecer Confined In Cuba Says He's Been Convicted In Second Trial

    New Zealand-Based Woman Accuses Indian Husband Of Deceiving Her

    New Zealand-Based Woman Accuses Indian Husband Of Deceiving Her
    As I am unable to give out more money in shape of dowry, my husband is threatening of marrying someone else

    New Zealand-Based Woman Accuses Indian Husband Of Deceiving Her

    Pakistan Will Treat Minorities As Equals: Imran Khan’s Latest Jibe At India

    Pakistan Will Treat Minorities As Equals: Imran Khan’s Latest Jibe At India
    The controversy over the issue started when actor Naseeruddin Shah lamented the rise of mob violence in India over cow vigilantism and expressed fear over rising religious intolerance in the country.

    Pakistan Will Treat Minorities As Equals: Imran Khan’s Latest Jibe At India

    Yoga Gains Popularity In China, More Colleges To Come Up

    Yoga Gains Popularity In China, More Colleges To Come Up
    Nearly 100 yoga teaching and training centres would also be built to provide teacher training courses, yoga workshops and non-profit courses

    Yoga Gains Popularity In China, More Colleges To Come Up

    Hope For 1984 Victims, Say Lawyers After Sajjan Kumar Conviction

    Wheels of justice have started moving in the 1984 riots case, said the lawyers.

    Hope For 1984 Victims, Say Lawyers After Sajjan Kumar Conviction