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Warm welcome for likes of cultural giant Louis Cha ‘Jin Yong’ unlikely in today’s Hong Kong, observers fear

  • During the 1950s and 60s, ‘coming from the mainland’ did not have any derogatory connotations, historian says

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Professor Jao Tsung-i, pictured with Zhuang Lizhen of Ningbo’s Tian Yi Ge Museum, continued his studies in Hong Kong after fleeing mainland China. Photo: David Wong

Martial arts novelist Louis Cha Leung-yung’s death on Tuesday has meant the loss of another cultural giant who had settled in Hong Kong during the peak of political turbulence in mainland China and came to be fully embraced by the city.

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Because of the divisive political atmosphere in today’s Hong Kong, observers said, if Cha, distinguished sinologist Professor Jao Tsung-i and feng shui master Choi Park-lai – who both died this year – had settled in the city in recent years, they could have found themselves falling victim to the hostility displayed towards mainlanders by some sections of society.

During the 1950s and 60s, “coming from the mainland” did not have any derogatory connotations, historian Professor Lau Chi-pang said.

Feng shui master Choi Park-lai died in July aged 96. His almanac is widely used by Chinese communities to set dates for important events. Photo: May Tse
Feng shui master Choi Park-lai died in July aged 96. His almanac is widely used by Chinese communities to set dates for important events. Photo: May Tse

“Instead, it was appreciative. We called those businessmen fleeing from the mainland entrepreneurs coming south. We had intellectuals coming south. And we had workers coming south. They all were welcomed as a contributing force to the growth of the city,” said Lau, a specialist in the history of Hong Kong and modern China.

Those days are gone. In recent years, instead, there had been “anti-locusts” campaigns in Hong Kong. The term “locusts” was commonly used by some localist activists to refer to mainlanders, who, they claimed, had come to Hong Kong to “eat up” the city’s resources.

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