Global Times

WORKING TOGETHER

Hong Kong’s achievemen­ts highlighte­d at new exhibition at National Museum of China

- By Xu Liuliu

On Tuesday, Li Chunming took his 3- year- old daughter Li Zishun to the National Museum of China to see an exhibition outlining all the achievemen­ts the city of Hong Kong has achieved since it returned to China in 1997.

This was the fi rst time the young girl had even heard the city’s name, but after walking through the exhibition – especially a section dedicated to the city’s two amusement parks Hong Kong Disneyland and Hong Kong Ocean Park – the girl pulled her father down to her and whispered, “I want to go to Hong Kong.”

“I visited Hong Kong several years ago and enjoyed traveling around the city. Seeing these achievemen­ts, I’m thinking about going back… with my daughter of course,” said the 32- yearold businessma­n who lives in East China’s Shandong Province.

Hearts linked together

The HKSAR 20th Anniversar­y Exhibition opened to the public on Tuesday. The opening was a big success, especially with the help of a high- profi le visit by President Xi Jinping and Leung Chun- ying, chief executive of HKSAR, to the exhibition on Monday.

“A bird’s view of the exhibition hall reveals that it is made of several concentric circles, representi­ng the idea that Hong Kong and the motherland are one,” Mandy Wong, assistant director of the HKSAR offi ce in Beijing, told the Global Times on Tuesday. “We are working together to realize the Chinese Dream.”

The Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region government spent two years preparing the exhibition so it could “fully introduce Hong Kong’s developmen­t and progress over the past 20 years, as well as its bright future.”

“Hong Kong is the place where East meets West, tradition meets modernity. With this in mind, we have used traditiona­l ways to present this exhibition such as displaying items, photograph­s and videos, as well as including more modern presentati­on methods such as having interactiv­e and multimedia installati­ons,” Wong said.

The opening section of the exhibition is an example of one of these interactiv­e installati­ons. The exhibit “collects” the hearts of visitors to show how much people love Hong Kong. By touching their palm to a sensor, visitors can “give their heart” to Hong Kong. A nearby screen then shows how many people have donated their hearts so far.

“The hearts of people in Hong Kong and in the mainland are closely linked together, which helps to make Hong Kong better and better,” Wong explained.

Cultural exchanges

With 10 sections and the theme of “Togetherne­ss,” the exhibition showcases how Hong Kong and the mainland have worked together in fi elds such as trade, fi nance, culture, sports and technology over the years.

“People in the mainland began to really get to know Hong Kong during the 1970s and 1980s, mostly through the city’s pop culture, from pop music, martial arts novels to fi lm,” Wong said, joking that her mainland friends often ask her if she can sing the theme song to the popular 1980 Hong Kong TV drama Shanghai Beach starring Chow Yun- fat.

In the section of the exhibition dedicated to culture, a large number of Hong Kong fi lm posters are on display as well as some of the costumes worn by famous actors, such as the outfi t actor Donni Yen wore in the 2008 movie An Empress and the Warriors.

The exhibition wasn’t limited to pop culture, traditiona­l culture, especially examples of the city’s intangible cul- tural heritage, are also on display.

Yue Opera is very popular throughout South China’s Guangdong Province, as well as Hong Kong and Macau. In 2006, it was listed as a national intangible cultural heritage in China, and in 2009 it was inscribed on UNESCO’s Representa­tive List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.

Eighty- seven- year- old actress Wu Junli is a fi gure that must be mentioned in any conversati­on about Yue Opera. Naturally, one of the costumes Wu wore during her performanc­es in the 1960s and 1970s is there for visitors to see.

Wu donated a total of 3,000 Yue Opera items including this outfi t to the Hong Kong Heritage Museum in 2004.

Among eight videos introducin­g Hong Kong’s cultural heritage is one about two guqin masters. The fi rst master is Cai Changzhou, a craftsman who makes the traditiona­l sevenstrin­ged musical instrument, while the other is Su Sidi, a guqin musician who enjoys a great reputation in both Hong Kong and the mainland.

“The culture of the guqin is a very personal type of art. Diff erent performers have diff erent tastes and styles,” Cai says in the video, explaining that many performers would make their own musical instrument­s instead of having someone else do it. “Only by doing it themselves could they create an instrument that was the right fi t for them.”

According to Wong, while cultural exchange before 1997 mainly consisted of Hong Kong culture being exported to the mainland, things are quite diff erent now.

“Now Hong Kong musicians head to the mainland to develop their careers and more and more fi lms are coproducti­ons between Hong Kong and the mainland,” she said.

Grasping opportunit­ies

According to a report from the Xinhua News Agency, when President Xi Jinping visited the exhibition, he called on Hong Kong to “grasp the opportunit­ies of the country’s developmen­t.”

Wong noted that the exhibition demonstrat­es how Hong Kong is poised to seize new opportunit­ies arising from China’s 13th Five- Year Plan ( 2016- 20) and the Belt and Road initiative.

Wong said she still remembers how the central government managed to help Hong Kong’s economy recover from the impact of SARS through a series of policies such as making it easier for mainlander­s to visit Hong Kong.

“Twenty years may not be quite a long time compared to the entirety of human history, but for Hong Kong and the motherland, every day of these past 20 years have counted,” she said.

“We know that by staying together with the motherland, Hong Kong will have a better tomorrow.”

The exhibition ends on July 16.

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 ?? Photos: Xu Liuliu/ GT ?? Top: A postcard with stamps commemorat­ing Hong Kong’s return to China on July 1, 1997. A traditiona­l costume worn by Yue Opera singer Wu Junli
Photos: Xu Liuliu/ GT Top: A postcard with stamps commemorat­ing Hong Kong’s return to China on July 1, 1997. A traditiona­l costume worn by Yue Opera singer Wu Junli

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