Dubai Telegraph - Hong Kong novelists seek freedom in exile after democracy crackdown

EUR -
AED 4.334666
AFN 77.900095
ALL 96.685479
AMD 448.694275
ANG 2.112836
AOA 1082.337912
ARS 1713.79929
AUD 1.694419
AWG 2.124545
AZN 2.005766
BAM 1.954033
BBD 2.387541
BDT 144.978905
BGN 1.982165
BHD 0.445065
BIF 3526.345066
BMD 1.180303
BND 1.506906
BOB 8.220567
BRL 6.210516
BSD 1.185428
BTN 108.401979
BWP 15.613589
BYN 3.394331
BYR 23133.933487
BZD 2.384044
CAD 1.613958
CDF 2543.552008
CHF 0.918972
CLF 0.025872
CLP 1021.553077
CNY 8.198976
CNH 8.187477
COP 4263.253457
CRC 588.626555
CUC 1.180303
CUP 31.278022
CVE 110.165385
CZK 24.3032
DJF 211.089126
DKK 7.468307
DOP 74.930651
DZD 153.353162
EGP 55.572902
ERN 17.704541
ETB 184.925926
FJD 2.604456
FKP 0.861331
GBP 0.863167
GEL 3.180899
GGP 0.861331
GHS 12.998247
GIP 0.861331
GMD 86.741709
GNF 10409.789325
GTQ 9.095775
GYD 248.005745
HKD 9.219445
HNL 31.316093
HRK 7.535293
HTG 155.479942
HUF 380.936215
IDR 19803.119186
ILS 3.65993
IMP 0.861331
INR 106.529816
IQD 1552.889245
IRR 49720.252642
ISK 145.200468
JEP 0.861331
JMD 186.265181
JOD 0.836862
JPY 183.585472
KES 152.908055
KGS 103.218032
KHR 4776.383798
KMF 493.366547
KPW 1062.272456
KRW 1712.289129
KWD 0.36253
KYD 0.987803
KZT 598.623775
LAK 25492.948383
LBP 106151.713903
LKR 367.086512
LRD 219.891167
LSL 18.978739
LTL 3.485127
LVL 0.713953
LYD 7.489228
MAD 10.809925
MDL 20.068853
MGA 5290.183051
MKD 61.644021
MMK 2478.619753
MNT 4207.336901
MOP 9.536237
MRU 47.107923
MUR 53.880544
MVR 18.235445
MWK 2056.982346
MXN 20.515491
MYR 4.657524
MZN 75.244069
NAD 18.978899
NGN 1653.65118
NIO 43.654368
NOK 11.443584
NPR 173.578342
NZD 1.962897
OMR 0.453826
PAB 1.185428
PEN 3.99259
PGK 5.083409
PHP 69.496818
PKR 332.067813
PLN 4.221913
PYG 7881.872934
QAR 4.333382
RON 5.095842
RSD 117.441308
RUB 90.236055
RWF 1734.368902
SAR 4.426205
SBD 9.510999
SCR 17.774333
SDG 709.949829
SEK 10.564636
SGD 1.500655
SHP 0.885533
SLE 28.88796
SLL 24750.357209
SOS 678.009658
SRD 44.881036
STD 24429.883467
STN 24.497151
SVC 10.372577
SYP 13053.646429
SZL 18.983988
THB 37.181532
TJS 11.071589
TMT 4.142863
TND 3.420008
TOP 2.841885
TRY 51.318734
TTD 8.025811
TWD 37.254961
TZS 3054.718851
UAH 51.08951
UGX 4234.171314
USD 1.180303
UYU 45.988416
UZS 14491.89592
VES 436.466011
VND 30683.149741
VUV 140.640991
WST 3.199542
XAF 655.875164
XAG 0.014374
XAU 0.000247
XCD 3.189827
XCG 2.136359
XDR 0.815674
XOF 655.364397
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.354641
ZAR 18.912758
ZMK 10624.131341
ZMW 23.262965
ZWL 380.056997
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSD

    0.0300

    24.08

    +0.12%

  • BCC

    0.9400

    81.75

    +1.15%

  • NGG

    -0.6600

    84.61

    -0.78%

  • JRI

    0.0700

    13.15

    +0.53%

  • CMSC

    -0.0100

    23.75

    -0.04%

  • RELX

    -0.2700

    35.53

    -0.76%

  • RIO

    1.4900

    92.52

    +1.61%

  • RYCEF

    0.7000

    16.7

    +4.19%

  • VOD

    0.2600

    14.91

    +1.74%

  • BCE

    -0.0300

    25.83

    -0.12%

  • GSK

    0.8700

    52.47

    +1.66%

  • BP

    -0.1800

    37.7

    -0.48%

  • AZN

    1.3100

    188.41

    +0.7%

  • BTI

    0.3100

    60.99

    +0.51%

Hong Kong novelists seek freedom in exile after democracy crackdown
Hong Kong novelists seek freedom in exile after democracy crackdown / Photo: Philip FONG - AFP/File

Hong Kong novelists seek freedom in exile after democracy crackdown

When Hong Kong author Kay So left her home city in 2020, she had in her luggage two short stories she had written about the huge, at times violent democracy protests that upended the city in 2019.

Text size:

It was then three months after Beijing imposed a sweeping national security law on the financial hub to quell political dissent after the protests were quashed.

So knew it would be improbable for her writing project to grow into a book in Hong Kong, so she moved to self-ruled Taiwan to study creative writing.

"I don't want to do creative work in a place... where I have to self-censor. The freedom to write is an important freedom," the 30-year-old told AFP on the phone from Taiwan, where she now lives.

She has since completed a collection of eight short stories written in Chinese that draw inspiration from the protests, entitled "Gazing Into a Fire".

It was published in Taiwan in May -- a month before the fifth anniversary of when a million Hong Kongers took to the streets to oppose a bill to extradite criminal suspects to China's opaque system.

The former British colony -- handed back to China in 1997 -- saw the march morph into a larger movement for more autonomy from Beijing for seven heady months before authorities crushed it.

More than 10,000 people were arrested and over 2,900 prosecuted for participating in the protests.

Since then, protests and anti-government opposition -- which used to make Hong Kong distinct from other Chinese cities -- have all but disappeared, while democracy activists have either been jailed, moved away or muted.

But the movement appears to live on in the pages of several fiction titles published in recent years by Hong Kong authors -- many of them choosing to live and write abroad.

So said her book was dedicated to the democracy movement of 2019, which she called "the most compelling and influential episode" in her life.

"Many people are still serving time in prison or waiting for trial," she said.

"I would like to speak to people who still care... so they would know right here there is a writer who also still cares."

- 'Can't let go' -

Under the Beijing-made security law, media outlets regarded as critical to the government have been prosecuted as "seditious publications", while some independent bookstores -- seen as a leftover bastion of liberal circles -- have faced increased government inspections.

Hong Kong also enacted a second law in March that includes a widened definition of "sedition", which foreign governments like the United States say will curb further freedoms in the city -- effectively silencing an already muted opposition bloc.

But the Hong Kong painted in the pages of So's stories remains in a state of roiling agitation.

A mother tries to send her jailed son his favourite dish; a student struggles with her professor over politics; a daughter writes a letter to her late father accused of being an anti-government suicide bomber.

"I found that I was trapped, I had to keep writing about the movement," So said.

Award-winning novelist Leung Lee-chi, also based in Taiwan, professed the same urgency.

"I can't let go of Hong Kong," she told AFP.

Leung has produced a trilogy since she moved to the island in 2021 -- "Everyday Movement" about those caught in the protests, "Survivor's Notes" exploring what led to the movement, and the latest on the post-protest diaspora titled "The Melancholy of Trees".

"After a political turmoil, literature can help us rediscover ourselves in the sweeping waves," Leung said.

- 'Sustaining the freedom' -

Those who have chosen to continue working creatively in the city must look for "space within its framework", said a Hong Kong-based novelist.

"That's what I believe literature should do," he said, requesting anonymity to avoid repercussions as he has published stories about the 2019 protests.

The memory of the protests remains "a constantly inflamed wound" for many Hong Kongers, he said.

"There is basically no space, no soil for people to discuss, to narrate, to express... but it's not non-existent," he said.

Pointing to the pending court cases against democracy activists and recent arrests under Hong Kong's security laws, he said writing has become his way to connect with people and maintain the spirit of freedom.

"If we persist in... exercising it in our daily life, we are inheriting and sustaining the freedom."

H.Nadeem--DT