Protests

Ethnic integration policies and the Han costume

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Rose Luqiu Luwei is an executive editor at Hong Kong's Phoenix TV, and the founder of the liberal leaning blog-host similar to Bullog my1510.cn.

She recently wrote a blog about Hong Kong's new policy to prevent racism within its multi-ethnic community of Southeast Asians and Indians.

Leung Man-tao (梁文道), blogger, book writer and well-known host of Phoenix TV, wrote for Southern Weekend in April 2008 on the issue of race in China. Both are translated below:

Racism in Hong Kong

by Rose Luqiu Luwei / my1510

At the fastest, Hong Kong’s “Racism policy” will be in effect his month, but I don’t know too much about the contents of this policy. I do know that calling someone “Ah Cha” (Indians), “Bing Mei” (Filipino maids) and “Hei Gui” will be offensive, and these could become official complaints. Also, employers cannot use race as a reason to refuse employment to ethnic minorities.

From the view of political correctness, protecting ethnic minorities and the rights of the weak groups in society by setting laws shows the progress of “civilized” society, but the erecting of laws is a serious thing, especially when the starting point for erecting that law is good. But if they aren't careful with the guidelines, then it could be dangerous and complicate the issue. The law to resist racism in Hong Kong has been in the pipes for nine years, and although last year it was passed, it is still debated now.

According to the Special Zone government’s figures from June 2006, there are 342,198 ethnic minorities living in Hong Kong, which is 5% of Hong Kong’s total population. 32.9% of whom are Filipino, 25.7% Indonesian, 10.6 white, 6% Indian, 5.3% mixed race, 4.7% Nepalese, 3.9% Japanese, 3.5% Thai, 3.2% Pakistani, 2.3% other Asians, 1.4% Korea, 0.6% other.

In Hong Kong the ethnic minorities are long-term residents, only 6,028 (1.8%) are migratory. The number of ethnic minorities in Hong Kong in 2001 was 343,950, which is a similar figure as 2006.

As for their education level, at age 3 to 5, 83.9% went to school, between the age of 17 and 18 the percentage is 74.3% and between 19 and 24 it’s 6.7%. But the figures for the entire Hong Kong population is, respectively, 89.1%, 82.8% and 37.3%.

You can see that the ethnic minorities who go to university are six times more than the rest of Hong Kong.

Two thirds of ethnic minorities feel that they are judged in Hong Kong. For example, going to a shop or to the hospital, people are impolite to them, and it is because of this that there is now a law: so that there are no acts of racism when government or private organizations are recruiting, where education and classes are concerned, the selling of goods. Training, private and public medical service must have translators present, otherwise they can be charged with racism.

However, the racism has to be very obvious, for example saying that you won’t do business with a certain group or not giving someone the job because they’re not Chinese. If you walked into an elevator and the other person stepped backwards - this might be because they're not used to being close to anyone, no matter who stepped into the lift. Same with finding work, the employer might say that it is because of your qualifications, so it would be hard to know if it were because of your race. In the same way, many employers are worried that they will be accused of racism, so they won’t employee ethnic minorities, period.

Treating racism is something that every country has to face. Except in Hong Kong the starting point of the policy is not to promote race equality, but to stop mutual harm. Some people have suggested that they learn from Singapore and their Ethnic Integration Policy. Singapore uses administrative procedures to regulate: Malaysians, Chinese and Indians cannot live separately creating “Chinatown-like” places. There are rules stating a quota for race percentages in each building, if a certain group's presence is above what is stated by the law, then they can’t rent it out to people of this race anymore. Under these measures, different races can share facilities together, and after some time this can't avoid interaction and communication.

But, no matter what the measures, different people will have different reactions and responses. For example, when in France they announced that Muslim girls must not wear head-scarfs in public schools because it would get rid of the idea of the majority and minority ethnic groups, and get the students to all feel equal, groups of Muslims refused to because they thought that this was a sign of racism.

In the past the ethnic minorities of Hong Kong worked and lived silently, but recently they have been taking to the streets. The Nepalese protested that another was shot to death, 5,000 Filipinos protested that Chip Tsao claimed Phillipines was a slave nation. But, their voices have always been secondary news to Hong Kong media, and a commentary was made that this reflected the value system of ordinary Hong Kong citizens and their predisposed discrimination of ethnic minorities and Filipino maids, and don’t think that their dissatisfaction and anger is important news.

Indeed, ignoring this is another sign of discrimination, but this expression cannot be punished by law. But the law is creating principled laws, for example demanding that the children of ethnic minorities are admitted into mainstream schools, but after they are admitted, how can they become one with the masses cannot be solved by law. Apart from society, ethnic minorities themselves have to try hard. If they think that they deserve everything, they will also isolate themselves.

In the process of establishing laws, many people think that the new immigrants from China mainland should also be counted. But the government thinks that new immigrants won’t necessarily think of themselves as ethnic minorities. Especially since there isn’t a specialized culture, so they haven’t been included. Talking about new immigrants, I believe there is more regional discrimination: this also exists within the mainland, and it’s also quite serious. As for the ethnic minorities there has been many beneficial policies towards them. But benefits means inequality. In fact, if real equality can be achieved, that would be enough.


Don't forget that China is also a multi-ethnic country

by Leung Man-tao

We tend to forget that China is also a multi-ethnic country, and imagine that the fifty-five ethnic minorities are only made-up of clothes, song and dance and food.

If the American president openly declared to the public that he cannot understand why Amish people wanted to continue their original, backwards way of living, what do you think would happen next? If a Bengali intellectual fluently talked about the conservative stupidity of Islam, what do you think would happen next? If a Finn netizen in a forum openly called for the Inuit to abandon their hunting lifestyles, and accept a more “civilized” way of living, what do you think will happen next? The interesting thing is, although this is all slightly unbelievable, it has actually manifested under different guises and forms in China, and it seems as if nothing happened next.

It has been forty years since Dr. Martin Luther King passed away; the civil rights movement of the US happened almost fifty years ago. In that people-shaking tide, one slogan became unforgettable for me: “White is a color, too.” This sentence was aimed at white people, and their blind vision of the races of the world. The world is split into two: in the mainstream there are white people, and all the other colored races can be simply gathered into the “colored people” category, as if white wasn’t a color. As if white people are a neutral race that does not fall under any color palette. This sentence called to attention that white people are also a race with special traits, white people are in the end a race too; compared to the dialect of the African-American, the style of speech of the whites do not make the standard, it’s only the method of another race.

During the “Two Sessions” there were always ethnic minorities wearing “ethnic costumes,” the question is, why don’t the large majority of Han wear a “Han costume?” Apart from dress and song and dance, what do ethnic minorities mean to the majority of Han Chinese people?

In a short time, many people predicted that in the 21st century, nationalism and politics dominated by race will automatically disappear. But if we look at the whole globe, not only isn't there a slight easing of politics dominated by race, but it has become even stronger. How should the problems between race be treated? Revisiting the civil rights movement in the US, one of its biggest contribution is gradually turning the US from a “big furnace” into a multi-colored “mosaic”; from stressing that every race integrate into the mainstream white society, and turning into emphasis of the equal co-existence of different races. With this change as the backdrop, the great clamor for “multi-culturalism” of the last thirty years was formed.

Perhaps Canada is the place that has the most complete “multi-culturalism,” having declared French as the official language for Quebec, which is also taught in middle schools. Even though the theory of multiculturalism compared to its practice are different and they encountered difficulty, but those who agree with Quebec’s independence are becoming fewer by the day, and they really provide some inspiration for us. The inspiration is for the mainstream race to recognize that we too are a race. And not think that only minority races have unique social practices; compared to them, the social practice of the mainstream ethnic groups are also special, and not a “colorless” objective standard.

How many Han people know what year it is in the Tibetan calendar and the Muslim calender? When an ethnic minority middle school student use “Mandarin” and recite the dynasty names of Tang, Song, Yuan, Ming and Qing, how many Han Chinese know where to put the Tufan dynasty in this “official” list?

The so-called race policy is not only about working with ethnic minorities, giving them more benefits and rights, but should also take the Han race, which makes up the majority, as a race too, and ask each race to mutually respect one another. As a Han Chinese, multi-culturalism taught me to be more modest and examine myself, and to keep an open-mind to learn, and see the cultures of other races as the invaluable heritage of my own. The People’s Republic of China does not belong to the Han, and the basis for our unity is civilianhood, more than race or blood.

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There are currently 6 Comments for Ethnic integration policies and the Han costume .

Comments on Ethnic integration policies and the Han costume

Funny Leung Man-tao should nominate Canada as particularly multi-cultural... I'm afraid it shows a kind of cultural isolation I've experienced in China, like the only countries worthy of even knowing about are the US, Canada and bits of Europe.

What about the most obvious one: South Africa!? Of course when I told people in China I'm from South Africa, I often got the question: Yes, but WHICH COUNTRY in South Africa?

Anyway, we have 11 official languages, just as many seperate cultures, including long-established European, and more recent African and Asian immigrants, blah blah.

My point is, if you want to look at race and multiculturalism in a global context you are severy ignorant if South Africa doesn't pop into your head.

Er, having said that: otherwise all valid points, and indeed education is the key.

I live in an Amish area in the US. If the US president said something like this the Amish would, most likely, do absolutely nothing. The non-Amish people in the area however would probably complain for them. The non-Amish people who live in areas along side Amish usually respect them and, will at times, "stick up" for them. How's that for harmony?

Ridiculous apologism seemingly only to put the vast Han majority on the same level as minorities who are discriminated against. If this was America and someone wrote those articles with "White" in the places of "Han Chinese", there would be huge backlash from our minorities.

My compliments to Alice Xin Liu for a thoughtful and well-written article. I have lived in several countries around the world during my life time, always a member of a minority group including in my home country. Wherever I lived, I was always a member of a minority ethnic group, or religion, or belonged to a different class; all which subjected me to different forms of discrimination such as racism and tribalism.

I can understand the sense of ambush the Uigurs feel in Xinjian, been overtaken by the migrant Han, who have been drawn to the province by economic opportunities. As a Han colleague once told me, his people are not attached to one particular place. They tend to have a "mercenary" attitude towards life. As such they will migrate to any place that provides economic opportunities. Invariably, this was the reason many Han migrated to Xinjian, to manpower its furious pace of economic development. to the culturally relaxed and religiously adherent Uigurs, the pace of development may have been too fast, thereby threatening their religious and cultural life, thus feeling a sense of resentment towards the Han, who enjoyed the lion's share of material benefited from the development.

It is such raw sentiment that triggers violent civil wars in heterogenous societies that last for decasdes. The show of massive force by the Chinese government, coupled by poste haste return of Hu Jintao to China from the G8 summit is a clear indication of its appreciation for such sentiment and its threat to national security.

@Gemal Hummad
Keep in mind that proportionally speaking, there are far more Uigurs moving to into "Han" areas than Hans moving into Uighur areas. When I grew up in Hunan in the 80's, there at least 2 Uighur kids in my grade and Uighur roast lamb vendors line the streets. Before the reputation of thieves and robbers took hold in the late 90's, they are more or less know as shrewd business man in southern China not the culturally relaxed bunchy you're describing.

@The main article
Interesting analysis, the questions posed in the end ruins the article. Serious how many Han even know what year is it in "Chinese" calendar? I didn't know it's 46XX something, until I came to the US and saw it on an NBC local news report... All Han people knows more or less is the western Georgian Calendar plus if they cultured enough, the heaven-earth stem years or if they live in Taiwan, the Republican Years.

As for Tufan (actually pronounced Tubo in "middle chinese"), they mention quite extensively in middle and high school history classes. As a contemporary of Tang, it is noted first for a now tiresome story princess marriage, then for an "era of political turbulence and intense social and cultural change and integration" which is euphemism meaning war and conflicts that make 30 Years War look like skirmish of rather nice people. (Check out histories of Sixteen Kingdoms and Late Tang dynasty for details) However, Tubo was never powerful enough or influential to be made into official of Dynasties, which does include non-Han dynasties that's contemporary of an "legitimate son of heaven" dynasty. (Jin Dynasty of Jurchens People and Liao Dynasty of Khitan people come to mind)

On that note, the education in Hong Kong is far more Han centric than it is on the Mainland. For example, Yue Fei is prominent featured in HK history as a rather heroic figure, but in mainland China, at least during my time in school, he was ignore for his "controversial" role in the "intense social and cultural change and integration" process.

One of the main reasons the Han are in Xinjiang is because the Government made them move in the 60's and 70's to guard against the Soviet threat. My wife's father and mother are amoung those in the Red Army forced to relocate from the Szechuan area to the border near Yining. The Uigurs and Kazaks that live in the area are usually polite but do keep themselves apart in daily life. This keeps any close ties amoung the school-children from continuing into adulthood.

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