Port city banking on nostalgia

2021-01-12 中國日報網

Hopes ride on building a spiritual haven for overseas Chinese in Shantou's historical quarter

"The streets there looked just like our own neighborhoods; they gave you a very familiar feeling, like going home," recalls Beh Jing Yi, a third-generation Malaysian-Chinese, of her visit to the port city of Shantou in 2016. The city is the commercial capital of the region of Chaoshan (潮汕 cháoshàn) in northeastern Guangdong province, formerly known as "Chao prefecture" (潮州 cháozhōu) or Teochew in the local dialect, and it was the first time Beh's family had returned to China since their ancestors had emigrated at the start of the last century.

"As long as you spoke Teochew you could go anywhere, and there were congee stands on the streets similar to the ones in Malaysia, but with more variety; it tasted like our grandmothers' food," she says.

 

Old-style buildings, qilou, can still be seen on the old streets in Shantou, Guangdong province. Provided to China Daily

Shantou's officials might be glad to get an endorsement like Beh's: At the end of last year, they embarked on a project to preserve the city's decayed historical quarter, known as "Little Park" (小公園 xiǎo gōngyuán), as a "spiritual home" for overseas Chinese of Teochew descent who might be tempted to visit the region and make investments that will boost its sluggish (for China) economy. As one of the colonial treaty ports established following the Second Opium War (1856-60), Shantou, then known as Swatow, was China's third-largest port after Shanghai and Guangzhou and the port of departure of the Teochew diaspora, a global community of about 10 million people including two former prime ministers of Thailand and Hong Kong's richest man, Li Ka-shing. In 1980, it became one China's five original special economic zones meant to lead China's economic transition by funnelling in foreign investment, including investment from the diasporic Chinese.

However, unlike fellow special economic zones such as Shenzhen or Xiamen, Shantou's economic promise never took off. The city was briefly famous in the 1980s and '90s for the waves of overseas Teochew tourists arriving to seek long-lost relatives or fuel their nostalgia, but since the early 2000s, interest has waned.

"The problem is that the older generation of emigrants are dying off; they came to visit family and walk around streets they remember from their childhood, but for the younger generation there's nothing but decrepit buildings," says a staff member surnamed Li at Little Park's Shantou Customs History Museum. While a report claimed that up to 20,000 overseas Chinese still visit the neighborhood every year, Shantou locals are skeptical.

"I haven't seen any in years," says a shopkeeper surnamed Zhuan, whose business is steps away from the Overseas Chinese Hotel.

"It's not an economically vibrant area, and we don't have tourist sites or well-developed transportation," Li explains, referring to the fact that the region had few rail links to cities outside the Guangdong-Fujian are a until 2013 and still has no direct trains to any city north of the Yangtze River (though it does have direct flights to places like Bangkok and Kuala Lumpur, where the diaspora has settled). "So we have to ask, what's an advantage that we do have?"

Little Park certainly fits the bill: With an area of two square kilometers, it is one of China's largest remaining historical treaty port districts and largest collection of buildings of a style known as qilou (騎樓qí lóu), characterized by recessed walkways on the first floor that protect pedestrians from the elements. Built in the 1920s and '30s by diaspora Teochew, who tried to protect their capital from the Great Depression, the neighborhood contains many visual elements that, as Beh noticed, make it strangely reminiscent of an overseas "Chinatown" found within China.

Laid out with a traditional Chinese pavilion at its center, encircled by qilou adorned with colonial-style crown mouldings and Romanesque arches, the architectural hybridity of Little Park is evocative of overseas Chinese enclaves developed in the same era as far away as Vancouver or Manila. Family-run shops, selling fragrant Chinese medicine and dried ingredients, jut out from tenement rows like in New York's Chinatown or Hong Kong, and even their signs are etched in red and gold traditional Chinese characters in the calligraphic "Regular Script" made iconic by Hong Kong's neon signs and contrasted by mainland aficionados against the "ugly" Heiti typefaces ubiquitous in their own cities.

However, when the original property owners left China again during the Japanese occupation and, later, the Communist revolution, most of the neighborhood's buildings - hotels, trading company offices and private residences - were abandoned. Except for a handful that have been returned to private ownership, none have been maintained in the decades since. Today, most are classified as "at-risk structures" in danger of collapse and are occupied by just a smattering of residents and shops renting out the ground floor. Residents say that, in some cases, authorities cannot trace the descendants of the original owners to get approval for renovation, or can't sort out the tangle of competing property claims between owners' families and the enterprises that occupied the buildings during land reform movements in the middle of the 20th century.

Guangdong Party Secretary Hu Chunhua came to survey the city in August. Among his proposals, he brought up the term "spiritual home", the idea that Shantou's growth can come from fostering the diaspora's emotional attachment to the city.

Li says: "In this way, it's like an 'ancestral temple' where overseas Chinese can come and see their culture, these cultural elements they took to those communities abroad and made flourish - it started here, and it's attractive because it's not lost or decaying, but it's something the locals value, that's continuing to improve."

In November, after Hu's visit, the phrase "protecting and animating heritage architecture in Little Park" made its first appearance in a report from the 11th Party Congress in Shantou, and two buildings, including the iconic Shantou Hotel built in 1933, now have new facades and scaffolds strung with slogans like "Shared Homeland, Shared Memories". The street in front of Shantou Hotel is also slated to be redeveloped for commercial and residential use in June this year. But to property owner Norman Lee, the fight for Little Park is just beginning.

Lee is a Hong Kong concert pianist of Teochew origin and present owner of Shantou's Xiang Yuan, a European style mansion his grandfather completed in 1928 after making his fortune in business. The family moved to Hong Kong in the 1920s and, though provincial policy mandated the return of diaspora property to owners in 1991, it took the family 25 years to finally evict the textile firm that had been renting it.

With the property back in his control, Lee began to renovate the estate in 2015 and reopened it at the start of this year as a private piano museum. He also plans to host film and music festivals there in the future, but believes that making a community for overseas Chinese will take more than just a face-lift.

Courtesy of The World of Chinese, www.theworldofchinese.com

The World of Chinese

相關焦點

  • Qingdao, China's Sailing City
    'Qingdao China' ship harbored in the Mediterranean port of Alexandria in Egypt as a stop in its journey along the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road.
  • Suifenhe: A Centenary City Pursuing
    ThatisSuifenhe,aportcityofHeilongjiangProvince,keepsacloserelationshipwithRussia.Havingahistoryofoveronehundredyears,thecitycantraceitsoriginallthewaybacktotheconstructionoftheMiddle-EastRailway
  • Banking on sports has proved to be a winner
    Sporting spirit has been deeply embedded in the Bank of China's corporate values, said Huang Danggui, general manager of the company's corporate banking department.
  • It's time to stand up for banking
    Writer: Murray GreigFrom the perspective of an impatient and socially inept Canadian, the main reason for the excruciatingly slow pace of personal banking
  • 希望你能練就我一樣的「英語閱讀」能力:A blast rocked the city
    希望你能練就像我一樣的「英語閱讀」能力:A blast rocked the city這是兩篇內容完全一樣但用詞不同的「原版英語」。The blast rocked the city's port area, destroying buildings, shattering windows and sending up a plume of red smoke.
  • ...expo site to transform city skyline for the better in time
    With the responsibility of creating what was essentially a new city within a city, Hui said great care was taken to create a master plan where so far 33 buildings have been realized with another
  • China’s banking industry undergoes drastic transformation in...
    (File photo)The banking industry in China is undergoing a fundamental shift as traditional banks are challenged by internet and AI fin-tech
  • 新奇配件:無線USB適配器iUSBport 2
    HyperDrive iUSBport 2是你需要擴大你的移動存儲設備最先進、靈活、兼容的設備,它適用於任何iOS、Android或WiFi功能的設備,它可以讓一切WiFi設備能瞬間相互連接到一起,就算用戶想用行動裝置看電影也只需先把移動硬碟插到iUSBport2,然後打開行動裝置上的配套軟體即可
  • 中文Business Banking Manager 底薪10萬澳幣+獎金!
    In this role you will be: Delivering the highest possible sales productivity of business banking products and servicesBased in a Business Centre, you will
  • Travelport財報:2014年Q1 Travelport淨收入為5.72億美 同比增長4%
    亞特蘭大 2014年5月8日-全球旅遊業領先的交易處理提供商Travelport Limited宣布了其截止3月31日的2014年第一季度財務業績。  在談到公司的財務業績時,Travelport的總裁兼CEO Gordon Wilson表示:  「在Travelport輔助服務營銷平臺發布一周年之際,我很高興公司能夠通過與航空公司的合作進一步強化自身機票業務。
  • Chinese bank wants to finance Mauritius fishing port
    Bank has made a trip to Mauritius as part of a financial assessment mission planned for the construction of a fishing port at Bain des Dames, near the harbour in Mauritius, Port-Louis.
  • Smart port promotes high-efficiency logistics construction
    Guangxi Beibu-Gulf Economic Zone Planning Construction and Administration Office, together with nearly 10 industry partners, took part in the event, aiming at the goal of constructing a world first-class port
  • 中東航空籤約採用Travelport RC&B技術
    現在,中東航空的機票將能夠通過Travelport Smartpoint 6.0進行搜索與出售。現在,通過與Travelport的合作,我們能夠更有效地向我們的客戶展示我們的產品。Travelport非洲、中東與南亞地區總裁兼總經理拉比·薩伯(Rabih Saab)表示:「中東航空認可Travelport的技術能夠驅動其業務增長,我們對此感到高興。通過引入創新性新產品,Travelport正在重新定義旅遊商務。我們將會繼續與中東航空合作,將它們的內容有效地傳遞給Travelport在全球由67000多家旅遊代理商組成的網絡。」
  • 如何在Matrixport 玩轉固定收益理財
    如果想屯幣,Matrixport APP固定收益產品如何?Matrixport固定收益理財點評:1、一定期限內鎖倉,保本穩拿收益2、無鎖倉隨時可提取,保本穩拿收益3、APP背景可靠為你鎖倉保駕一、紮實背景,鎖倉無憂
  • 「ANY MALAYSIAN PORT」僅指一個單數港口嗎
    It specified port of loading 「Any Malaysian port」.The issuing bank refused to pay due to following reasons:a.Bills of lading show more than one port of loading whereas the LC calls for only one port of loading, namely "Any Malaysian port" and not
  • City of Darkness Now Smiling Bright as Little Thailand
    After WW2, China reclaimed the city, and as a result of the civil war between the nationalists and the communists, thousands of refugees fled the mainland; their first port of call was to set up shop in
  • 英語新聞|Engineers put Qingdao Port at forefront of a…
    of engineers from Qingdao Port, East China's Shandong province has actively promoted independent innovation since its establishment in 2013, helping turn the facility into Asia's first fully automated port
  • 東航、上航與Travelport續籤全球分銷協議
    民航資源網2015年11月4日消息:11月3日,領先的全球旅行商務平臺Travelport公司宣布,它與中國東方航空公司及其全資子公司上海航空公司續籤了一份新的為期多年的全球分銷協議,協議內容涉及Travelport的Rich Content & Branding(富內容與品牌推廣)解決方案。
  • | What Is Nostalgia Good For?
    It was to slough off a burden of nostalgia that you went so far away.你走過那麼遠的路,只是為了擺脫懷舊的重負。——Italo Calvino 伊塔羅卡爾維諾「回不去」是種怎樣的感受?What Is Nostalgia Good For?
  • Bank of America Global Investment Banking Analyst
    •Dedication to building a career in the investment banking industry.【地點】 US【網申連結】http://33h.co/emPW