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Opinion | How coronavirus has opened our eyes to the power of the invisible

  • Covid-19 has forced the previously invisible out into the open, like the essential services workers and Singapore’s migrant workers that we never noticed before
  • More humbling revelations will come as the virus takes its course, and we should acknowledge and harness the power in the invisible

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A cleaner sprays disinfectant outside an office in central London. As the coronavirus pandemic takes hold, the previously “invisible’’ cleaners, garbage collectors, sanitation officers and health care workers now occupy centre-stage. Photo: EPA-EFE

I started thinking about invisibility years ago, after watching a brilliant movie called Dirty Pretty Things by British director Stephen Frears.

It was set in a dingy London hotel and its main characters were immigrants – a porter, an undertaker, a prostitute, a doorman, a night manager, a political exile.

Basically, people who live on the fringes of society, as well as our consciousness.

Through the movie’s lens, I saw a London that was so familiar, yet alien at the same time. The buildings and streets I had seen many times before. But I had never “seen” the people the movie had put front and centre.

A municipal cleaner sweeps a deserted train platform as commuters stay home because of the coronavirus outbreak. Photo: Bloomberg
A municipal cleaner sweeps a deserted train platform as commuters stay home because of the coronavirus outbreak. Photo: Bloomberg

I had brushed past them, looked through them, and ignored them. To me, they were of no consequence. They were unimportant. They were invisible.

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