Museum On Tiananmen Crackdown Reopens
The organisers of the annual June Fourth events to commemorate the Tiananmen Square massacre on Sunday reopened a museum for people to learn more about the crackdown on pro-democracy protesters in 1989 and to pay tribute to the victims.
For the second year in a row, police refused to give permission for the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements of China to hold a candlelight vigil, and a march, citing pandemic concerns.
The alliance called on the public to make reservations online to visit, as part of their Covid prevention measures.
Some members of the public were quick to book their visits for the first day of the exhibition, as they spoke of fears that it could be the last time they could see it.
"I booked it immediately because I worry that, you never know, the exhibition may be closed again for other reasons," said a woman named Helen.
"The significance is that we still can talk about it, June Fourth in Hong Kong, but I worry that, you know, because this year we cannot really have our memorial thing in Victoria Park this year, so I worry that this exhibition cannot stay in Hong Kong."
A woman, surnamed Li, brought her two high school children to the venue in Mong Kok, noting that she had previously taken her teenage son and daughter to a candlelight vigil in Victoria Park.
"The Chinese government really killed so many students, those innocent students, we want my children to know that this really happened, this is history...Even though time flies, we won't forget about this. Don't fool us, even though it's 30 years, they try to make people lose their memory about this because of time," she said, adding that the exhibition was important so people could learn from history.
A university researcher from the mainland said he found out about the exhibition when looking for museums before leaving Hong Kong, and he decided to pay a visit.
"This is an opportunity that I can get more information about history, real history...You know for a person he or she will also be curious about something in history...if I do not come here, then later it'll be quite difficult for me to learn this period of history," said the man, who gave his name as Chen.
The museum opened its doors again at a sensitive time, with some pro-Beijing figures claiming slogans chanted at past June Fourth events would now be outlawed by the national security law.
But Mak Hoi-wah, a standing committee member of the Alliance, said he saw nothing wrong with the museum.
"As Chinese, we have to learn about our history, historical developments," he said.
"Of course, some people may think that it's not acceptable in China, therefore it's not acceptable in Hong Kong. I think it's not the way, Hong Kong people, even under the national security law, we're not breaking any law, we're not doing any harm to the society and I don't see any reason why the Hong Kong Alliance or our museum should be suppressed."
One visitor, Valerie, who came with her three children, said she preferred to keep up her hope that there could still be public commemorations of the 1989 massacre, but she said she was prepared that the exhibition and the vigil may never return.
"I think that we will always remember. I think we can do it from home, I think we can do it from anywhere," she said.
Is Hong Kongs Default Life Insurance Choice A Wealth Drain?
Hong Kong is a city that takes financial security seriously, boasting one of the highest insurance penetration rates in... Read more
RedotPay Secures $107M Series B, Total Funding Hits $194M
RedotPay, a global stablecoin-based payment fintech, has closed a US$107 million Series B round, bringing its total cap... Read more
91% Of Hong Kong Merchants Lose Revenue To Payment Friction
Aspire has released its Hong Kong Ecommerce Pulse Check 2025, highlighting that while mid-sized ecommerce merchants rem... Read more
Do Kwon Faces Possible Trial In Korea After US Conviction
Do Kwon, the crypto tycoon behind the 2022 collapse of TerraUSD and Luna, caused an estimated US$40 billion in investor... Read more
Startale, SBI Holdings To Develop Japans Regulated Yen Stablecoin
Startale Group and SBI Holdings have signed a MoU to jointly develop and launch a fully regulated Japanese yen-denomina... Read more
KakaoBank Expands In Indonesia Through Superbank Partnership
KakaoBank, South Korea’s largest internet-only bank, is accelerating its global expansion through a deepened partners... Read more