Thousands attend vigil for Tiananmen's 20th in Hong Kong

by fayala | June 5, 2009 at 09:15 am
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Over 150,000 people came to honor the 20th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square protests in Victoria Park, event organizers said Thursday.

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Francesca Ayala reports from Hong Kong.

HONG KONG -- Thousands of people gathered in Hong Kong on Thursday night to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square protests with a candlelight vigil.

Organizers say more than 150,000 people filed into Victoria Park to pay their respects to the hundreds, possibly thousands, who lost their lives rallying for democracy in Beijing on June 4, 1989. According to the event's organizers an additional 50,000 people filled the streets surrounding the venue. Police estimates given to CNN and the New York Times put the number of attendees at 63,000.

Many were dressed in black or white, the Chinese color for mourning.

"It shows that the people of Hong Kong haven't forgotten and will not forgive what was done by the Chinese Communist government," said Lee Cheuk-yan, one of the vigil's organizers and a pro-democracy legislator.

Lee is blacklisted from entering the mainland for supporting the demonstrations. On the night of the bloody government crackdown, he was in his room at the Beijing Hotel, crying.

German tourists Alfred Folkers and Isolde Schwarz recalled watching the rallies on television and said they still could not find the words to articulate how shocked and sad they felt.

"We want to support the Hong Kong people and show our respect for this activity," Schwarz said of the vigil.

Hong Kong is the only part of China where people were allowed to honor the 1989 protests.

Debby Chan, a member of the Tiananmen Mothers Campaign, was touched by the thousands who attended.

"There has been a denial of justice for 20 years," said Chan, 28, "I'm deeply moved, it's proof that many Hong Kong people still preserved their conscience."

Zachery, who declined to give her last name, was born in China but now lives and studies in Hong Kong. The 17-year-old handed out flyers about her pro-democracy student organization during the event. Zachery was not yet born at the time of the 1989 demonstration. In fact, she said she didn't even know about the protests when she studied in China.

"What we can do now is take every opportunity to show our need for democracy and show others that we won't surrender," she said.

Martin Lee, a long-time pro-democracy campaigner said attendance for the vigil made him proud to be Chinese.

"There is hope for democracy in China," he said.

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Jarrett Martineau
Jarrett Martineau
flagged this story as Eyewitness Report

at 09:39 on June 5th, 2009

This is an eyewitness report from the NowPublic member fayala who was on the scene.

recommend This comment thread is now closed
1
Jarrett Martineau

Great post. Thanks for this.

Did you have trouble uploading photos?


1
fayala

No problem!

No troubles uploading photos, either. 

1
Amy Judd

It's amazing how many people came out in support, I'm glad there are so many of us not willing to forget.

Thanks for this piece.


1
fayala

Thanks so much!

As a reporter, I worry that my constant exposure to the ugly side of the world's face will eventually leave me insensitive to the issues I address in my writing.

This event, however, proved that the power of the human spirit can always surprise you.

There was this old man who arrived at the venue four hours early just so he could get a spot close to the front of the stage. He was also one of the first to light his candle for those who died in 1989. By the time everyone's candles were lit and the crowd started to sing along with the people on stage, that man started crying. I was deeply moved by it.

Witnessing this was one of the most exciting and touching moments of my life. It is a truly beautiful thing to watch hope bring nearly 200,000 people together.

1
Jarrett Martineau

Sounds incredible.

1
JeffHuang

Thanks for the post and the photos

This story was created over 3 months ago, the comment thread is now closed.

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First Flagged at 9:21 AM, Jun 5, 2009 by Jarrett Martineau
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