Under Singapore's tour, famous scenic spots are bound to rush to the scene as soon as possible. Among them, the one that touched me most was a small Oxcart Water Origin Museum, a three-storey small building exhibition hall in the bustling streets. It tells the story of the struggle of the generation of Chinese in South Asia more than a hundred years ago and the cultural inheritance of the generation of Singaporean Chinese from now on. If Universal Studios, Golden Sands and Binhai Bay show a Singapore that shines with money, what the original museum shows is the part of Singapore that is bound by the essence of diligence and thrift that has never been lacking in Chinese blood. No matter how international and transcendent it is, the most simple foundation of the part of the Chinese lifeline will never change. I can't say how beautiful and fun it is here, but it brings more shock and touching to the Chinese compatriots.