Saturday 31 October 2009

0279 HKSAR Name of the Day

Mono Chan (Dr), lecturer, Department Of Management And Marketing, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong

About Novel HKSAR Names
Name Category: Creation

Friday 30 October 2009

0278 HKSAR Name of the Day

Georgeanna Mok Hoiki, student, University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong

About Novel HKSAR Names
Name Category: Creation; Substitution

Thursday 29 October 2009

0277 HKSAR Name of the Day

Hardy S C Wong (Mr), senior technician, Department of Biology and Chemistry, City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong

About Novel HKSAR Names
Name Category: Rare

Stand Out Face

The inimitable Ulaca has an interesting post about Olympic swimming champion Rebecca Adlington. Something about her looks being like "someone who's looking at themselves in the back of a spoon".

What’s wrong with telling things like they are? When I first saw Ms Adlington winning at the Beijing Olympics last year, my first thought was that her face looked pretty alien and therefore reminded me of a Star Trek alien called Odo.

I thought she had the appearance of a “face behind a latex mask”.










[Rebecca Adlington with OBE and Star Trek: Deep Space 9 security chief Odo with Quark]

Related Posts
Tsing Tao Beer Spans the Galaxy

Captain, There Be Whales Here!

About HK Doppelgangers

HK Doppelganger 2

Wednesday 28 October 2009

0276 HKSAR Name of the Day

Lorett Lau (Dr), assistant professor, Department Of Management And Marketing, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong

About Novel HKSAR Names
Name Category: Creation; Deletion

Tuesday 27 October 2009

0275 HKSAR Name of the Day

Aloysius Ng Hon Bon, student, University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong

About Novel HKSAR Names
Name Category: Rare

Monday 26 October 2009

0274 HKSAR Name of the Day

Wenny Y K Tsang (Ms), senior technician, Department of Biology and Chemistry, City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong

About Novel HKSAR Names
Name Category: Creation; Substitution

Sunday 25 October 2009

0273 HKSAR Name of the Day

Sherriff T K Luk (Dr), associate professor, Department Of Management And Marketing, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong

About Novel HKSAR Names
Name Category: Creation; Insertion; Self-important

Saturday 24 October 2009

0272 HKSAR Name of the Day

Keanu Leung Chiu I, student, University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong

About Novel HKSAR Names
Name Category: Rare

Friday 23 October 2009

0271 HKSAR Name of the Day

Benz C P Chan (Mr), senior technician, Department of Biology and Chemistry, City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong

About Novel HKSAR Names
Name Category: Creation; Brand-based; Insertion

Thursday 22 October 2009

0270 HKSAR Name of the Day

Gladdie Chu Fung-yee, executive officer of Diabetes Hongkong, Hong Kong

About Novel HKSAR Names
Name Category: Creation; Insertion

OUHK’s Sandwich Filler is Alpha Alpha Not Alfalfa

Anyone else notice the long-running blunder and recent correction of the TV advertisement about the “Open for Learning” programs at the Open University of Hong Kong?

The copywriter was probably British and/or had zero knowledge of American literature (e.g Steinbeck) when it was decided to script in: “I want Alpha Alpha in my sandwich”. Hmmm, what do Greek letters taste like? Perhaps enrolling at OUHK will enlighten?

Wednesday 21 October 2009

0269 HKSAR Name of the Day

Zandra Mok Yee-tuen, former TV news reporter, now PA to the Secretary for Labour and Welfare, HKSAR Government, Hong Kong

About Novel HKSAR Names
Name Category: Rare

Tuesday 20 October 2009

0268 HKSAR Name of the Day

Lattianna Wong Wang-kei (male), 23, diagnosed with autism when he was 2 or 3 years old, student at the Chinese University of Hong Kong's School of Continuing and Professional Studies, Hong Kong

About Novel HKSAR Names
Name Category: Creation

Carson Yawn Very Chinese

Better times will surely come to Birmingham City FC, so it was probably a very bad idea for Carson Yeung to bring along the wife, mistress, girlfriend or perhaps sister to watch his first match as the new owner of the Blues. From the looks of things, she did not appreciate being made to sit and watch the match between Birmingham and Arsenal.















[Carson Yeung and guest unimpressed and bored, respectively]



Cultural Note

When Chinese people laugh, especially Chinese girls and also many Asian women, the social norm is for them to cover their mouths with one of their hands. But when Chinese people yawn (or burp), they usually don’t bother covering their mouths. It’s quite distasteful.
Why is this? Why the inconsistency?
Perhaps bloggers from the highly irreverent Dark Side will provide their unique take on this sometime?

Monday 19 October 2009

0267 HKSAR Name of the Day

Starry Lee Wai-king, economic services deputy spokeswoman, Democratic Alliance for the Betterment and Progress of Hong Kong (DAB) Party, Hong Kong

About Novel HKSAR Names
Name Category: Creation; Translocation

Sunday 18 October 2009

0266 HKSAR Name of the Day

Manbo Man Bo-lin, director of nursing services, Hong Kong Sanatorium and Hospital
[Why not Manbolin or Bolin?]

About Novel HKSAR Names
Name Category: Creation; Phonetic

Suzanne Vega and Luka Revisited and Redefined

A recent comment on this blog made me rethink and reconsider Suzanne Vega’s 1987 hit song Luka. The comment, by the inexhaustible blogger Spike, brought to light what many of us already know: how the same song can mean different things to different people in different situations and in different times.

To Spike (and to some of my friends who I recently polled), the song Luka is about a girl, who is abused.

To me, I’ve always known that Luka is a boy’s name (because of a childhood friend) and therefore, coupled with the fact that the 1987 music video clearly had a boy in it, the very suggestion that Suzanne Vega’s song was about a girl never occurred to me … until Spike’s comment 22 years down the road. I always had it in my mind that Vega’s song Luka is about an abused boy.

The evidence strongly supports the song Luka to be about a boy (i.e. Luka is officially a boy’s name, and Vega’s 1987 music video implied it was about a boy). Also, here are some alleged facts about the song.
However, I can now understand why other people may regard Luka to be a girl’s name; especially since they hear Suzanne Vega singing the song apparently in the first person.


On revisiting the lyrics, a strong case can be made that this song may also be about “wife beating or abuse of women”.
First, it is sung in the first person (a female voice).
Second, it is an altogether familiar scenario for abused wives, or domestic violence in general.

Perhaps if the song's title were to be changed to an unambiguous female name, it could be re-released to raise awareness about “wife beating or abuse of women” with the proceeds going to relevant charities or support groups? I wonder if Suzanne Vega would ever consider that? Perhaps previously she has? Just a thought.

How about Laura / Lisa / Linda / Lucy?
(Sorry for the apparent insensitivity or political incorrectness, but which name sounds more like a female who you may have heard of who might be abused? I know it all depends on individual experiences, but certain names have certain meanings or invoke specific memories to different people. Plus, this HKSAR blog does have a particular “interest” with names.)

Related Posts
0216 HKSAR Name of the Day
It Don’t Matter If You’re Black or White




Here are the lyrics to Luka:

My name is Luka
I live on the second floor
I live upstairs from you
Yes I think you've seen me before

If you hear something late at night
Some kind of trouble, some kind of fight
Just don't ask me what it was
Just don't ask me what it was
Just don't ask me what it was

I think it's because I'm clumsy
I try not to talk too loud
Maybe it's because I'm crazy
I try not to act too proud

They only hit until you cry
And after that you don't ask why
You just don't argue anymore
You just don't argue anymore
You just don't argue anymore

Yes I think I'm okay
I walked into the door again
Well, if you ask that's what I'll say
And it's not your business anyway
I guess I'd like to be alone
With nothing broken, nothing thrown

Just don't ask me how I am
Just don't ask me how I am
Just don't ask me how I am

Saturday 17 October 2009

0265 HKSAR Name of the Day

Enders Ng Kwok-wai, professor, Medical Faculty, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong

About Novel HKSAR Names
Name Category: Creation; Substitution

Friday 16 October 2009

0264 HKSAR Name of the Day

Merinda Chow Yin-Chu, Deputy Judge, District Court, Hong Kong

About Novel HKSAR Names
Name Category: Creation; Substitution

#35 Hong Kong Hocus Pocus

It's a heartache
Swathi Maa leads a workshop on how to avoid heartbreak and depression, ahead of a healing and meditation session. Workshop, HK$700 (US$90); healing, HK$350 (US$45), both at New Age Shop, 7 Old Bailey St, SoHo.

[NOTE: If one fails the 'preventive' workshop, at least there is the 'curative' session available to further waste one's time, money and brain cells.]

About Hong Kong Hocus Pocus

Thursday 15 October 2009

0263 HKSAR Name of the Day

Esme Sung (Ms), executive assistant, Graduate School Of Business, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong

About Novel HKSAR Names
Name Category: Rare

Breaking New Wind Together

Sorry, but that was my immediate thought when I first learned Hong Kong Chief Executive Donald Tsang’s 2009-2010 Policy Address was called “Breaking New Ground Together”.

Wouldn't "Reclaiming New Ground Together" be more appropriate for Hong Kong?

Anyways time, and further analysis, will tell whether this policy address is full of hot air or not!

Wednesday 14 October 2009

0262 HKSAR Name of the Day

Liana Wu Ho-yan (Ms), Research Assistant, Department of Public and Social Administration, City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong

About Novel HKSAR Names
Name Category: Rare

Tuesday 13 October 2009

0261 HKSAR Name of the Day

Leona Lam (Ms), executive assistant, Graduate School Of Business, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong

About Novel HKSAR Names
Name Category: Rare

#34 Hong Kong Hocus Pocus

Bigger and better
Renee Claire leads a magnified healing workshop. New Age Shop, 7 Old Bailey St, SoHo, HK$1,900 (US$244).

About Hong Kong Hocus Pocus

Monday 12 October 2009

0260 HKSAR Name of the Day

Hektor Yan King-tak, Research Fellow, Department of Public and Social Administration, City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong

About Novel HKSAR Names
Name Category: Creation; Substitution

Sunday 11 October 2009

0259 HKSAR Name of the Day

Fenny Wong (Ms), clerical officer, Graduate School Of Business, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong [See 0286 HKSAR Name of the Day]

About Novel HKSAR Names
Name Category: Creation; Substitution

Saturday 10 October 2009

0258 HKSAR Name of the Day

Mirin Cheng (Ms), Faculty Office Of Education, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong

About Novel HKSAR Names
Name Category: Creation; Substitution

Former Policeman and Barrister Becomes an Executive of Birmingham City FC

What can Birmingham City FC, under the new Carson Yeung reign, possibly want with Peter Pannu, a former senior anti-triad police officer and barrister?

A lot, it seems. Considering the shady crooked business world of football, it pays to have someone with experience in mixing with the most corrupt, most criminal, most evil, most nasty, most unethical and most unsavoury characters around. An added bonus is Pannu has experience mixing with triads too.

[Peter Pannu has experience with undercover law enforcement as well as legal affairs in previous careers]

Carson Yeung Ka-shing is apparently making astute appointments at Birmingham City FC. It will be interesting to observe how Birmingham City FC will develop as a team in the Premiership and as a marketing strategy in Greater China.


Buyer of UK soccer club stands by choice of cleared officer (SCMP; subscription required)

Barclay Crawford
Oct 09, 2009

Grandtop International Holdings has stood by the appointment of former Hong Kong police officer Peter Pannu to a leading management position in its HK$731 million takeover of English Premier League soccer club Birmingham City.

Pannu was cleared of corruption, assault and criminal intimidation charges during his career.

A company spokesman said the former senior anti-triad officer and barrister had the legal knowledge and appropriate management experience to serve the club.

Pannu has said he will be vice-chairman of finance and executive matters, while chief operating officer Sammy Yu Wai-ying will be responsible for the soccer-playing side of the business.

In January 1993, Pannu was charged along with a colleague with accepting HK$20,000 from Sun Yee On triad boss Andely Chan Yiu-hing. Pannu was alleged to have accepted the bribe to protect the gangster, known as the "Tiger of Wan Chai", from a police operation against him.

Pannu's trial was halted more than three years later because of a missing witness and because Chan had by then been murdered. Pannu was also cleared of assault and criminal intimidation charges.

The court said missing witnesses could have helped Pannu's case and without them he could not receive a fair trial.

Former Hong Kong police detective David Fernyhough, who now heads the Hong Kong office of corporate-risk investigation firm Hill and Associates, said investigations into Pannu stemmed from a far wider investigation into the Sun Yee On's lucrative stranglehold on the entertainment industry in Tsim Sha Tsui East in the early 1990s.

During the years he was suspended from the force on full pay, Pannu completed a law degree.

A spokeswoman for the Hong Kong Bar Association said Pannu was admitted as a barrister of the High Court of Hong Kong in 1997. He resigned from the police force in 2000 and finished practising as a barrister in the middle of last month.

The Grandtop spokesman said the company had no comment on previous connections between Grandtop and Carson Yeung Ka-shing, the former hairstylist turned businessman who has been the public face of the takeover.

Referring to Pannu, he said: "We have taken advantage of his knowledge and experience ... at this stage, Peter has no formal status within the club or exact position."

#33 Hong Kong Hocus Pocus

Same old song
Kirtan chanting with Lawrence and Nina. New Age Shop, 7 Old Bailey St, SoHo, donation (i.e. synonym for “tithing”).

About Hong Kong Hocus Pocus

Friday 9 October 2009

0257 HKSAR Name of the Day

Ebony Ling Yee Nam (Miss), student, University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong

About Novel HKSAR Names
Name Category: Rare

Thursday 8 October 2009

0256 HKSAR Name of the Day

Nobel Hun Sau-tai (Ms), clerical officer, School of Accounting and Finance, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong

About Novel HKSAR Names
Name Category: Creation; Self-important

Wednesday 7 October 2009

0255 HKSAR Name of the Day

Frenda Cheung (Mrs), assistant professor, Department of Management and Marketing, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong [also see 0254 HKSAR Name of the Day]

About Novel HKSAR Names
Name Category: Creation

#32 Hong Kong Hocus Pocus

We've only just begun
Elisabeth Jensen leads a beginners' Isis Lotus healing workshop. Bishop Lei Hotel, 4 Robinson Rd, Mid-Levels, HK$2,900 (US$372).

About Hong Kong Hocus Pocus

Tuesday 6 October 2009

0254 HKSAR Name of the Day

Frenda So (Mr), private tutor, Hong Kong
Spotted by Spike from Hongkie Town [also see 0255 HKSAR Name of the Day]

About Novel HKSAR Names
Name Category: Creation

Carson Yeung Failed Hairstylist

Judging by his haircut, it's little wonder Carson Yeung turned his back on being a hairstylist and became a typical Hong Kong tycoon instead. His company controls English Premier League club Birmingham City Football Club.

Kinda makes one wonder why his successful company is called Grandtop International Holdings!

[Carson Yeung was a hairstylist in a previous career.]


Budding tycoon sets sights on big league (SCMP; subscription required)
Former hairstylist has goals for Birmingham City
Neil Gough and Ben Kwok
Oct 05, 2009

Ten years ago, Carson Yeung Ka-shing was a struggling Kowloon hairstylist fending off lawsuits from credit card companies.

But as he arrived last week to meet the press in a conference room at the swanky Island Shangri-La hotel, dressed to the nines in a tailored white suit and a white shirt accented with silver buttons and a collar bar, Yeung, 49, looked every bit the budding billionaire.

Indeed, as his HK$731 million takeover of English Premier League football club Birmingham City nears completion, the once low-profile Yeung appears to have been catapulted firmly into the limelight.

Speculation and rumour about Yeung's background and plans for Birmingham City have abounded since his firm, Grandtop International Holdings, first bought a 29.9 per cent stake in the football club two years ago.

Until now he has held his cards close to his chest, and repeatedly declined to be interviewed for this article. However, a closer examination of Yeung's track record, Birmingham City's business prospects and previous statements by Grandtop executives yields a picture of an ambitious if expensive gamble on China's appetite for football and a test of Yeung's own talent as an entrepreneur.

Not much is known about Yeung's background before he entered the professional football business. Hong Kong companies registry filings dating back to 1991 show him living in a Tsuen Wan flat and list his occupation as a hairstylist. For several years in the 1990s, Yeung operated a hair salon in Tsim Sha Tsui East's Royal Garden Hotel, according to corporate filings and press reports.

Following the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis, however, Yeung appears to have run into financial trouble. In late 1998 and early 1999, several credit card companies and banks, including American Express and Hang Seng Bank (SEHK: 0011, announcements, news) , filed lawsuits seeking to enforce their claims against a modest Mid-Levels flat Yeung bought for HK$5.35 million in 1996, according to Land Registry filings.

The lawsuits appear to have been either settled out of court or dismissed since no judgments were entered into the judiciary's database.

Fast forward 10 years and Yeung today shows every sign of being a wealthy man with an increasingly diversified portfolio of investments. In addition to Grandtop's bid for Birmingham City, Yeung emerged last year as a white knight investor in ailing SMI Publishing Group.

SMI, which publishes the Chinese-language Sing Pao Daily News, was having trouble paying rent and salaries until Yeung stepped in with a HK$60 million bailout loan in April last year that gave him an option to acquire up to a 62 per cent stake in the group.

Yeung, who according to press reports now lives on the Peak and is transported around town in a Maybach, is also listed in companies registry filings as a director of Universal Energy Resources Holdings, Universal Management Consultancy, Universal Properties Group Holdings and Super Promise International. However, little or no additional information is available about these privately held firms.

Asked at last week's press conference about his business interests and background, Yeung said he had several successful investments on the mainland in areas including property, resources, coal mining, gold and water supply.

"Our businesses have gone very well in China," he said. "I'm a work-hard man [sic]."

Part of Yeung's rapid rise from struggling salon stylist to media-to-mining industrialist can be explained by a keen participation in the local stock market.

In 2004, his dealings attracted a reprimand from the Securities and Futures Commission for failing to disclose a holding in Cedar Base Electronic (Group), now known as China Water Affairs Group.

The securities watchdog found that he held 25 per cent of Cedar Base on June 1, 2001, and on four other occasions had interests consisting of more than 20 per cent of the firm.

He pleaded guilty and was fined HK$43,000 and ordered to pay the SFC's investigation costs.

Yeung has also been linked to investments in small-cap Macau casino firms. Sources said he made a significant profit dealing in shares of A-Max Holdings, which bought a 49.9 per cent stake in Macau's Greek Mythology casino in March 2006.

In 2007, he also bought and sold a stake of more than 5 per cent in Kanstar Environmental Paper Products in the space of three months and later that same year he bought and sold a stake of more than 5 per cent stake in Macau casino operator Golden Resorts Group, controlled by Pollyanna Chu Yuet-wah.

Chu's Kingston Securities and Kingston Corporate Finance acted as the underwriter and financial adviser to Grandtop on its deal to raise funds for the purchase of Birmingham City.

Last year's purchase of the stake in troubled SMI appears to have been a break from Yeung's previous investments, several of which followed relatively quick buy-hold-sell patterns.

SMI's shares, which are listed on the Growth Enterprise Market, have been suspended from trading since 2005. The company booked a loss of HK$14.29 million in the final quarter of last year and has delayed reporting results since.

But the acquisition yielded other non-financial returns: Yeung's takeover bid for Birmingham City received prominent coverage in Sing Pao, including a series of glowing articles following last week's press conference that took up the first four pages of the newspaper.

One long-time Sing Pao staffer said Yeung was a frequent sight around the paper's Shau Kei Wan offices and was a "pretty hands-on guy".

Yeung sometimes sits in on editorial meetings and tells senior staff the kind of things that he likes to see in the paper, but overall he is regarded as a good boss by most of the employees. "At least he pays us on time," said the staffer.

It is not clear how Birmingham City will fit into Yeung's burgeoning empire. He is no newcomer to the football scene, having served as chairman of Hong Kong's Rangers football club from 2005 to early 2007.

But a Premier League club is a business of a different calibre entirely, and Grandtop executives have hinted at several potential plans for growing the business and tapping new revenue streams.

Birmingham City booked £49.84 million (HK$612.02 million) in revenue last year and reported a net profit of £2.59 million. However, in the six months to February, the club swung to a net loss of £2.79 million on turnover of £15.61 million.

Like most big football clubs, Birmingham City's business is supported by three main revenue streams: ticket sales, television broadcasting income and sponsorships and merchandising.

Last year, ticket sales accounted for about 42 per cent of total revenue, broadcasting accounted for 38 per cent, and sponsorships and merchandising made up only 20 per cent.

That division of revenue is much more heavily weighted towards the sponsorship and merchandising side at leading clubs such as Manchester United.

Grandtop executives say they aim to bolster Birmingham City's performance in this area, mainly by tapping into the mainland's growing appetite for the "beautiful game".

Signing new players is a stated goal, and observers wonder if some top Chinese players might soon be donning Blues' jerseys.

"With the concept of Greater China in mind, I think that next year significant profit will be brought to the group, and we are not just talking about football," Grandtop chief executive Vico Hui said last month.

"I'm sure that the income from entertainment and other segments will be very significant and I will give you good news next year."

Moreover, Birmingham City's healthy balance sheet and physical presence in England's second-largest city may offer other profit potential - perhaps as a property play.

"First, this football club is free of debt," Yeung said last week after being asked why he pursued the acquisition. "Secondly, the football club owns its own stadium, so in the future we can incorporate some commercial elements."

Still, the details of how Yeung plans to go about selling Birmingham City to the Chinese market remain largely unknown except to him and his top executives.

And for now, no one is giving away anything more than vague clues.

"Regarding the plans for Greater China, it's too early to confirm every little bit now," chief operating officer Sammy Yu said last month.

"Manchester United, Chelsea, Liverpool - all these successful teams have given us a very good example. We will learn from them. We are not geniuses but we will learn."

Monday 5 October 2009

0253 HKSAR Name of the Day

Rossa Chiu Wai Kwun, doctor, Hong Kong

About Novel HKSAR Names
Name Category: Creation; Insertion

#31 Hong Kong Hocus Pocus

Chakra it out
Aimie Mok leads a chakra healing workshop. New Age Shop, 7 Old Bailey St, SoHo, HK$180 (US$23).

About Hong Kong Hocus Pocus

Sunday 4 October 2009

0252 HKSAR Name of the Day

Gerami Cheng King Hoi, solicitor, Hong Kong

About Novel HKSAR Names
Name Category: Creation; Translocation

Saturday 3 October 2009

0251 HKSAR Name of the Day

Nonnie Hui Fong Yuen Yi, surveyor (since 1984), Hong Kong

About Novel HKSAR Names
Name Category: Creation; Insertion

Hong Kong ExCo Convenor Says Even He Can Tell When Wine Is Spoiled. WTF?

Price is everything to Hong Kong’s elite. CY Leung (touted by some as a future candidate for Chief Executive) tries to sound humble by saying that even he, a rich privileged Hong Kong businessman who wanders around public housing estates and who no doubt enjoys the odd expensive bottle of wine, can tell when cheap plonk is not worth having. And that’s without even tasting it. Impressive. He has truly amazing powers! Perhaps just the Right Stuff that is needed for a future Chief Executive of Hong Kong!?


Reference
Bargain wine was spoiled (SCMP Letters)
Oct 02, 2009

Harry's cartoon on September 28 carries the following lines: "Apparently, there are 1.23 million Hong Kong people in poverty". "I dread to think what wine they're drinking".

I came across an HK$18 bottle of red wine in a Tin Shui Wai public housing estate.

This was before the duty on wine was abolished. Even I could tell that it was spoiled.

C .Y. Leung, convenor, non-official member of the Executive Council

#30 Hong Kong Hocus Pocus

Shock and aura
Karim leads a workshop on learning to see auras. New Age Shop, 7 Old Bailey St, SoHo, HK$350 (US$45).

About Hong Kong Hocus Pocus

Friday 2 October 2009

0250 HKSAR Name of the Day

Eleutherius Ho Yui Pok, accountant, Hong Kong

About Novel HKSAR Names
Name Category: Creation

Chris Patten on China Patriotism

By his standards Chris Patten, the former and last Governor of Hong Kong, wrote a rather poor article to acknowledge China’s 60th Anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic of China (and, of course, the Chinese Communist Party).

For instance, he mentions an “individual’s personal story” to supposedly represent the dark side of Mao Zedong that has been “airbrushed”, as it were, by the communist leadership.
Instead of relying on anecdote, what would be more interesting is obtaining the actual number of Chinese people who were educated overseas and who then returned to China in the 1950s and 1960s. What were the trials, tribulations and outcomes of such Chinese people and their families as they returned to China? Just how many died during Mao’s many purges and just how many survived like Deng Xiaoping and the mother of the Chinese journalist mentioned by Patten? A meaningful comparison would be to compare the trials, tribulations and outcomes of similar Chinese people and their families who chose not to return to China and instead remained overseas.

Anecdotes are OK up to a point, but real numbers are needed for evidence. For instance, The Holocaust has plenty of anecdotal stories but ultimately it is backed up by real numbers. Just how many bourgeois and intellectuals died during Mao's purges?

I expected a far more robust and insightful piece from Chris Patten. At the very least, Patten could have attempted to counter Tung Chee-hwa’s puppet-like pandering of the Chinese Communist Party. Such an article would have been more enlightening, entertaining and enjoyable.

It was also disappointing that Chris Patten used the SCMP to promote his essay. The SCMP is privileged in being able to rely on its reputation as the leading English-language publication in Hong Kong. However, unfortunately the current quality of the SCMP is much more “arthritic” than it was when Patten was the Governor of Hong Kong.


Reference
Mao and then (SCMP; subscription required)
Sixty years after the founding of the People's Republic, verdicts on its flawed founder differ wildly

Chris Patten
Oct 01, 2009

Every country is shaped by its history, but countries fabricate and rewrite their histories, too. The story of how we became who we are needs to accommodate our sense of tribal solidarity and accomplishment. Our triumphs and virtues are exaggerated; our villains externalised; our failings covered up. All this makes the study of history potentially insurrectionary, but hugely valuable. Good historians encourage us to be honest about ourselves. They destroy our self-delusions.

This is especially true of our flawed heroes, as we see today with the Chinese Communist Party's treatment of Mao Zedong . Sixty years ago this month, Mao stood on the rostrum of Tiananmen, the Gate of Heavenly Peace in Beijing, and declared the founding of the People's Republic. That moment marked the end of years of war and terrible hardship; the revolution had been won through blood, sacrifice, heroism, the mistakes of enemies and the manipulative assistance of Stalin, who purported to be a friend. The decades of rapacious warlords, greedy imperialists and Japanese invaders were over; China could stand up - though much misery still lay ahead as Mao's tyranny put down its roots.

Verdicts on Mao differ wildly. For hardline Communists, he was a hero three times over - historical, patriotic and world-class. For the brave and charismatic dissident Wei Jingsheng, Mao "cast virtually the whole of China into a state of violence, duplicity and poverty".

The Communist Party's official verdict, undoubtedly the product of fierce ideological disputes, is that he was a great Marxist and revolutionary, whose "gross mistakes" during the Cultural Revolution were outweighed by his contribution to China. "His merits," it argues, "are primary and his errors secondary."

China's Communist Party will not tolerate any questioning of this assessment. Mao's establishment of authority over China, his injection of patriotic pride into a land that had been appallingly sundered and humiliated by external and internal forces for a century and a half, and his romantic legend as a global revolutionary leader - all contribute to the moral and political legitimacy for which China's leaders search. What they cannot gain through democratic elections they acquire through the history of the revolution and today's economic triumphs.

But the dark side of Mao cannot be totally expunged. Too many people remember what happened. It is an intimate part of their family stories.

There was the Great Leap Forward, which led to mass starvation and perhaps as many as 38 million deaths. Then the madness of the Cultural Revolution, when millions suffered terribly, many died, and many more behaved disgracefully as Mao sought to destroy those who had rescued China from his earlier follies. Jung Chang's famous biography of Mao, published in 2005, recounts those awful events in the sort of bleak detail that makes communist propagandists nervous - and some academic sinologists critical that Mao's achievements go too little recognised.

Mao is certainly a more interesting figure than were many tyrants - a poet, an intellectual, a student of history as well as a serial philanderer, who, according to his doctor, Li Zhisui, liked to swim in water, not bathe in it. I know of no better, more fascinating "warts and all" portrait of any political leader than Li's book, The Private Life of Chairman Mao.

I remember being told a story about China that gives credence to the communist leadership's generous verdict on Mao. The mother of a Chinese journalist (now living outside the country) had been one of those who returned after 1949 to her homeland with her husband and family from a comfortable life at an American university. They regarded returning as their patriotic duty.

The family sacrificed everything. They were hit by round after round of Mao's tyrannical campaigns against "rightists", beginning with the silencing of critics after the Hundred Flowers Movement in 1957. The family lived in penury. The father died from ill-treatment during the Cultural Revolution.

But the mother never complained. She believed that her family's sacrifices were justified by the liberation and rise of China. Towards the end of her life, this mood changed. She saw in the 1990s the beginning of China's economic ascent - the early years of spectacular growth. She witnessed the return of the greed and corruption that she believed had destroyed the Kuomintang in the 1930s and 1940s. Why, she asked herself, had her family suffered so much if it was only to prepare the way for this?

Yet it is China's economic renaissance - some of whose effects so disturbed this patriotic old woman - which has been the most remarkable event in recent world history. The economic turnaround began under the leadership of Deng Xiaoping, who had survived Mao's purges to follow in his footsteps and become the architect of China's rise as a world power. The hundreds of millions of Chinese who have been lifted out of poverty as a result of Deng's reforms will in time regard him as a greater hero than Mao.

But, whatever Mao's terrible failings, during his years of absolute power there was a sense of common purpose and solidarity that went with shared hardship. Maoism was a curious and unique mixture of class warfare and socialist levelling, all enunciated by a man who believed that individuals - or at least Mao himself - could shape history rather than be formed by its tides and currents.

This creed has clearly not survived its creator. Pragmatism with a Leninist face is the order of the day. The glories of getting rich have overwhelmed the deprivations of patriotic self-sacrifice. Mao made China proud. Deng made it prosperous.

What happens next? For all our sakes, I hope that the future does not derail China's economic progress, though it will be a surprise if it does not challenge its arthritic and adamantine political system.

Chris Patten, the last British governor of Hong Kong and a former EU commissioner for external affairs, is chancellor of the University of Oxford. Copyright: Project Syndicate

Thursday 1 October 2009

0249 HKSAR Name of the Day

Bonba Chiu Sik Ho, doctor, Hong Kong

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Name Category: Creation

#29 Hong Kong Hocus Pocus

May the force be with you
Renee Claire leads a workshop on the Pleiadian light force matrix initiation. New Age Shop, 7 Old Bailey St, SoHo, HK$300 (US$38).

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