By Jessie Pang and Joyce Zhou HONG KONG (Reuters) - Bryan Ong has made it his mission to preserve items that tell the story of Hong Kong's British colonial past even as Beijing increasingly shapes life in the city that is firmly back in the fold of the mainland.
By Jessie Pang and Joyce Zhou
HONG KONG (Reuters) – Bryan Ong has made it his mission to preserve items that tell the story of Hong Kong’s British colonial past even as Beijing increasingly shapes life in the city that is firmly back in the fold of the mainland.
Ong, 42, has been collecting colonial memorabilia since he was a child and last year opened The Museum Victoria City to put his treasures on display, detached from growing acrimony between China and Britain, fuelled in part by the colonial legacy.
“Whether it’s good or bad, it’s part of Hong Kong history,” Ong said.
His two-storey museum displays military medals, badges, royal portraits, stamps, banknotes, newspaper clippings and colonial government leaflets. It doubles as a souvenir shop.
Ong’s grandmother gave him a medal of a Hong Kong-based British Gurkha soldier as a gift when he was a child, inspiring his fascination with the city’s history.
A partially burnt British flag recovered from a War World Two battle in Hong Kong, when Japanese forces captured the city, is among the museum’s most precious items.
Hong Kong’s colonial era ended on July 1, 1997, after 156 years, marking for China the return of an integral part of its territory separated from the motherland for too long by the designs of colonialists.
After pro-democracy protests in 2019, China moved to crack down on dissent and assert its authority over the city in ways that Britain has said contravened its handover agreement that runs until 2047, drawing angry rebukes from Beijing.
China imposed a national security law on the city in 2020 followed by reforms to remove from public posts anyone seen as disloyal. Education, the media and other sectors have been increasingly under pressure to show patriotism and support for China’s leadership.
Ong said he was not worried about the fast-changing political environment.
“I am a Hong Kong lad. Not British,” Ong said, adding he did not think his museum would irk the authorities.
“We will try our very best to preserve the good oldies of Hong Kong,” Ong said. “Keep calm and carry on.”
(Reporting by Jessie Pang and Joyce Zhou; Editing by Marius Zaharia and Robert Birsel)
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