Local Company Modified Yusof Ishak to God of Fortune; Some Netizens Think It’s Offensive

Unless they were dishonorable people who did abhorrent things in their time, defacing historical figures is generally not a great idea.

This is the first lesson they teach you at Dumb Things You Shouldn’t Do as a Company 101.

Unfortunately, it seems like Goldpaper.sg was on sick leave that day.

Local Company Modified Yusof Ishak to God of Fortune

Goldpaper.sg, an online store selling prayer offerings and supplies, has incurred the wrath of netizens after it doctored the appearance of former Singapore president Yusof Ishak on one of its vouchers.

According to AsiaOne, the store’s employees were handing out vouchers at Waterway Point on Monday (Aug 10), dressed up as different mythical figures.

Image: Lianhe Wanbao

The vouchers were promotional material for the store’s seventh lunar month packages, and resembled a $10 bill.

They were a few differences, though.

For one, the ‘currency’ belonged to “Xingapore” instead of Singapore.

The store also placed its own logo on the side of the note instead of the lion head symbol, as well as beside the number “10”.

But eagle-eyed netizens, or rather any netizen with eyes, noticed that Yusof Ishak looked a little different.

Image: Facebook (Zulkarnain Sadali)

Yes, they had altered the image of the country’s first president to portray him as the Chinese God of Wealth.

Here’s what a God of Fortune typically looks like, just for comparison.

Image: 3lian.com

Yusof Ishak had a pencil-thin moustache before, but he now had a full beard as well as long sideburns.

Netizen Reaction

People, understandably, were offended.

One netizen who shared pictures of the voucher in a Facebook post called it “racially offensive”.

In response to one commenter who said that it was not a race issue, the original poster retorted:

“As a Malay person, I would like this to stop. I don’t care (about) the context because you are vandalising the face of a Malay president, period. You are allowing the Chinese-washing of a Malay person. Period.

“Unintended racism is still racism and can be implied racism. The best thing to happen was to have not let it happen in the first place.”

Many agreed with the original poster, with some calling for the store to be reported.

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