The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Macau sees future in its Portuguese past

- By Laura Mannering

HONG KONG: Sitting in his university office in Macau, professor Lei Heong Iok opens what he calls his “treasure” — a dog-eared Portuguese dictionary, its velvet cover worn and frayed.

Lei’s decades-long love for the language has turned him into a campaigner for its survival in the southern Chinese enclave, a former Portuguese colony now best-known for casino resorts.

Learning Portuguese fell out of fashion in Macau after it was handed back to China in 1999, becoming a semi-autonomous territory loyal to Beijing and growing into the world’s biggest gambling destinatio­n.

Although Portuguese remainedan­officialla­nguageand street signage is still bilingual, many in the predominan­tly Cantonese-speaking territory switched their study focus to Mandarin, spoken in mainland China.

But Portuguese is back in vogue as China forges business ties with lusophone nations such as Brazil, Angola and Mozambique and casts Macau as a key link because of its cultural ties and history.

Students in the enclave see studying Portuguese as a shrewd career move.

Lei—whowasborn­inmainland China, learned Portuguese in Macau in the 1970s and has been president of the Macau Polytechni­c Institute for almost 20 years — says the resurgence in interest vindicates the years he spent in the post-handover wilderness, travelling all over China trying to attract students to study the language and insisting Macau should value its unique past.

“I said we should keep Macau as a different flower, with different characteri­stics from other flowers in the Chinese garden,” he told AFP. “Today it’s a reality.” China’s interest in Portuguese­speaking nations is part of a wider push for global influence as well as a search for new export markets and energy reserves.

Macau hosts a conference every three years where ministers from China and Portuguese-speaking countries gather to discuss business and trade ties.

The territory’s government has also pledged to make it a hub for Portuguese learning — last year the University of Macau opened a new teaching centre aimed at nurturing bilingual profession­als.

Numbers on MPI’s ChinesePor­tuguese translatio­n course fell as low as 10 following the handover.

There are now more than 270 students from Macau and mainland China taking the fouryearde­gree,withgradua­tesgoing on to work in government, banks and businesses at home as well as finding jobs in Portuguese­speaking countries.

“Portuguese is a very pretty language,” course student Ana Tu, 21, from Beijing, told AFP.

“There are also a lot of companies doing business with Portuguese-speaking countries, so if I learn Portuguese I can help them to communicat­e with each other.”

Classmate Marcelino Luis do Rosario Sousa, 22, says he is going back to his roots — born in Macau, his father is Portuguese but Sousa grew up speaking only Cantonese.

After discoverin­g a passion for thelanguag­einseconda­ryschool, he hopes to work as an interprete­r for the Macau government when he graduates.

“(Studying Portuguese) definitely will improve my career prospects. The salary is good. But the major reason is I have curiosity in studying Portuguese. I’d love to work in a job I’m interested in.”

Many visitors spend their trip to Macau holed up at a gaming table, but its colonial heritage is also a tourist draw.

Historic ruins, churches, cosy tavernas and cobbled streets are an echo of its history and the ubiquitous bakeries selling Portuguese­style custard tarts do a roaring trade.

Chef Santos Pinto runs one of the best-known Portuguese restaurant­s in town, ‘O Santos’. Its walls are covered in Portuguese football memorabili­a and pictures of famous guests, including Mick Jagger. On a weekday lunchtime, the restaurant buzzes with regulars and tourists, welcomed by Pinto, wearing a white apron and operating the cash register.

Before the handover, the vast majority of the clientele were Portuguese, he says. But with an exodus after 1999, they are now mainly Chinese, Korean and Japanese.

Despite the changes he has seen, Pinto believes Portuguese culture will always be a fundamenta­l element of Macau and that residents value the territory’s unique history.

“They like the fact that Macau is different: it’s Chinese with Portuguese culture,” he told AFP.

He is pleased that a growing number of Macanese and mainland Chinese are learning Portuguese and believes they see the enclave as a door to the lusophone world.

For his part, he aims to preserve a slice of Portugal in Macau.

“I only do Portuguese food,” he says.

“I do not know how to do any other. Also I do not want to do any other! Because I think that the Portuguese culture should be maintained here.” — AFP

They like the fact that Macau is different: it’s Chinese with Portuguese culture. – Santos Pinto, chef

 ??  ?? Chinese students attend a Portuguese class at the Macau Polytechni­c Institute in Macau. — AFP photos
Chinese students attend a Portuguese class at the Macau Polytechni­c Institute in Macau. — AFP photos
 ??  ?? Pedestrian­s at Senado Square, past views of the 16th-century Portuguese complex ‘Santa Casa da Misericórd­ia de Macau’ (left) and the Grand Lisboa casino resort.
Pedestrian­s at Senado Square, past views of the 16th-century Portuguese complex ‘Santa Casa da Misericórd­ia de Macau’ (left) and the Grand Lisboa casino resort.
 ??  ?? Professor Lei Heong Iok holds what he calls “his treasure”, a Portuguese dictionary, in his office at the Macau Polytechni­c Institute.
Professor Lei Heong Iok holds what he calls “his treasure”, a Portuguese dictionary, in his office at the Macau Polytechni­c Institute.
 ??  ?? Tourists at the southern stone facade of the ruins of St. Paul’s Church, a 17th-century Portuguese complex in Santo Antonio in Macau.
Tourists at the southern stone facade of the ruins of St. Paul’s Church, a 17th-century Portuguese complex in Santo Antonio in Macau.

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