Guidelines for Singaporeans when Consuming Online Religious Content
Ministry of Culture, Community and YouthSpeakers
Summary
This question concerns Dr Wan Rizal’s inquiry regarding whether religious bodies will provide guidelines for navigating online religious content to ensure alignment with Singapore's secular and multi-racial landscape. Minister Edwin Tong Chun Fai stated that religious organizations currently provide guidance emphasizing discernment and the rejection of hate-filled or extremist content. He highlighted initiatives like MUIS’s Asatizah Recognition Scheme and the Inter-Religious Organisation’s digital platforms that contextualize faith for Singapore’s society. The Government maintains a whole-of-society approach to safeguard social harmony and works with groups like Inter-Racial and Religious Confidence Circles to foster inter-faith dialogue. Proactive measures continue to be taken to ensure misinformation does not take root while strengthening mutual trust across all religions and races.
Transcript
12 Dr Wan Rizal asked the Minister for Culture, Community and Youth as more globally produced religious content are made available online during this COVID-19 period, whether religious bodies in Singapore will consider providing guidelines for Singaporeans to navigate and consume online religious content that are in line with Singapore's secular and multi-religious-racial landscape.
Mr Edwin Tong Chun Fai: Many of our religious organisations provide their followers guidance when seeking out religious content online. They emphasise the need for viewers of such content to be discerning and sensitive, and to unequivocally reject content laced with hate and that causes enmity with others. In addition, ROs also put out original, online content that promotes inter-faith understanding and is contextualised to our multi-religious society in Singapore. This is important to counter extremist and exclusivist views that can sometimes be found online.
(a) For example, MUIS strongly encourages the Muslim community to seek religious guidance only from religious teachers accredited under the Asatizah Recognition Scheme. MUIS also launched SalamSG TV last year as an online platform for Islamic content and religious guidance for Muslims in Singapore.
(b) The Catholic Archdiocese consistently emphasize the need to maintain religious harmony and respect towards other religion and races, and highlight to their young the potential pitfalls of consuming unverified online sources of information related to the faith.
(c) The Inter-Religious Organisation regularly works directly with faith groups to strengthen their digital presence and promote inter-religious knowledge. It also launched a digital initiative in 2019 called We The People of Singapore that provides a platform for Singaporeans to talk about each other’s religion to gain a deeper understanding.
Government will continue to ensure that extremist content which is inimical to our common space and social harmony does not proliferate online. But, with the internet being what it is, it would not be possible to eradicate all such content, we will have to adopt a whole-of-society approach to helping Singaporeans navigate a vast body of online religious content, while working with the ROs, so that we can safeguard and promote religious harmony in Singapore, and ensure that hate speech and misinformation does not take root here.
We will also continue to work with our religious organisations, schools and community groups to proactively build trust and mutual understanding among Singaporeans, across religions and races. For instance, our Inter-Racial and Religious Confidence Circles (IRCC) work closely with religious and grassroots organisations to foster interaction across different religious and ethnic communities, and promote inter-faith dialogue and collaboration. We can and will work together to build a more cohesive society.