Joe_Chung

Joe Chung

Joe Chung (Chinese: 鍾祖康, born 1960s) is a writer and political commentator from Hong Kong, who lives in Stavanger, Norway.[1] He is known for his best-seller[2] books I Don't Want to be Chinese Again and China is Stranger than Fiction, severely criticizing Chinese culture,[3] both of which garnered support in Hong Kong and Taiwan.

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Life and career

Joe Chung was born in the 1960s in Hong Kong. He became concerned with Chinese politics following the imprisonment of Wei Jingsheng in 1979. In 1991 he completed his master's degree in sociology at Chinese University of Hong Kong. In the elections of 1994 and 1999 for the District Councils of Hong Kong (known as District Boards before 1997), he represented the Hong Kong Democratic Party in the geographical constituency of Wong Tai Sin but was not elected. In 2001 he openly called for independence of Taiwan and was criticised by the Chinese Communist Party as "more arrogant than Taiwan separatists". He is a frequent contributor to Hong Kong Open magazine. In 2012 he contributed several articles to the Apple Daily regarding National Education in Hong Kong and the sovereignty of the Senkaku Islands, also known as Diaoyu Island in People's Republic of China.[4]

Political activism

In the 1990s, Joe Chung was frequently active in pro-democratic approach human rights activities in Hong Kong. On 9 July 1995, Joe Chung and other activists burnt the flag of the People's Republic of China outside the offices of Xinhua in Hong Kong to protest the arrest by the Chinese authorities of Harry Wu, the Chinese penal colony researcher. On 30 November 1995, Wei Jingsheng Action Group chairman Joe Chung, accompanied by other members of the Wei Jingsheng Action Group, publicly burned a cartoon image of Chinese Communist leader Deng Xiaoping to demand the release of democracy campaigner Wei Jingsheng. The event occurred outside the office of the Xinhua News Agency in Happy Valley on Thursday, 29 November 1995. Both these events were widely reported by local media and news agencies the following day.

Taiwan independence controversy

On 4 May 2000, (the anniversary of the 4 May movement), Joe Chung published an op-ed piece in the Hong Kong Ming Pao, titled "Taiwan Has the Right to Independence" (台灣有權獨立). An article in the Sing Tao published in Hong Kong on 20 May 2000 titled "鐘祖康被指【煽動分裂】親中報炮轟《明報》" (Joe Chung accused of inciting break-up of China as Communist newspapers bombard the Ming Pao) commented on the following events. According to the article, the Communist affiliated Hong Kong newspapers Ta Kung Pao and Wen Wei Po responded to Joe Chung's article with a barrage of over 20 articles in the following days with articles such as "Taiwan Has No Right to Independence" (台灣無權獨立) in the Wen Wei Po on 9 May 2000. The articles refuted Chung's arguments, accusing him of "splitting China", "contravening article 23 of the Basic Law", and being a "traitor" to China. They also attacked the Ming Pao, accusing it of breaking its promise to "publish a Chinese newspaper for Chinese people". Sing Tao Daily noted that concerted, sustained attacks by the Communist press of this ferocity had not been seen since the pre-handover 1990s when the Communist press had attacked Hong Kong Governor Chris Patten. The article also noted that Joe Chung was both glad that his article had stirred up debate, but feared for his personal safety as result. Also according to the article, Ming Pao declined to publish Joe Chung's rebuttal of these attacks, saying that enough had been said on the matter. After the publication of the Sing Tao article, the attacks continued with articles such as "Some 'Chinese People' Who Hate Their Own Country" (某些仇恨自己國家的'中國人') published in the Ta Kung Pao, on 29 May 2001.

I Don't Want to be Chinese Again

Joe Chung published I Don't Want to be Chinese Again (來生不做中國人) in November 2007, which has been printed in 55 editions.[3] According to Liberty Times, The book was written in response to the sentiment from "[a] recent online survey of Chinese people found that 65 percent of respondents would prefer not to be Chinese at all".[5] The book severely criticized the Chinese culture.[3]

Donation to Hong Kong Liaison Office

According to media reports, on 16 July 2012, a Hong Kong Legislative Council member, Power to the People lawmaker Albert Chan Wai Yip presented a book by Joe Chung, "I don't want to be Chinese again", to Zhang Xiaoming, director of China's Liaison Office, as an act of protest against China's central government, before boycotting a lunch meeting at the Legislative Council.[citation needed]

Bibliography

  • 高官廢話公式寶鑑—探討香港社會超穩定的語言學基礎 [On the Road to Unaccountability: the Best Paid Officials in the World Demonstrate How to Defend the Indefensible]. Hong Kong: Xiafei'er Publishing House. 2002. ISBN 962-867-563-X.
  • 網上搜證寶典網上搜證寶典—附全球26名校網上資料庫效能測試報告 [Online Supersearcher's Bible : including an overall review of the databases subscribed to by 26 top universities]. Hong Kong: Xiafei'er Publishing House. 2003. ISBN 962-867-568-0.
  • 來生不做中國人 [I Don't Want to be Chinese Again]. Taipei: Asian Culture Press. 2007. ISBN 978-986-7178-52-7.
  • 中國比小說更離奇 [China is Stranger Than Fiction]. Taipei: Taiwan Interminds Publishing Inc. 2007. ISBN 978-986-6789-14-4.
  • 中國,你憑什麼? [China : Where is Your Pride?]. Hong Kong: People's Culture Publishing House. 2009. ISBN 978-988-1725-0-35.
  • 向中國低文明說不 [Say NO to Uncivilized China]. Hong Kong: Enrich Publishing Ltd. 2014. ISBN 978-988-8292-07-3.
  • 拷問中國:兼論習近平論文剽竊事證 [Interrogating China: The Evidence of Xi Jinping’s Plagiarism]. Taipei: Asian Culture Press. 2014. ISBN 978-986-5794-23-1.

References

  1. Lau, Shirley (31 October 2010). "Diaspora diaries". South China Morning Post. Archived from the original on 29 August 2021. Retrieved 29 August 2021. In his neck of the woods, Chung is somewhat of an authority on Chinese affairs - and not only because he is the author of best-sellers I Don't Want to be Chinese Again and China is Stranger than Fiction. It is also because he is one of only 400 Chinese people living in Stavanger, in southern Norway. ... Chung is largely oblivious to the debate, however, enjoying a quiet Scandinavian life with his wife and one-year-old twins.
  2. Lo, Alex (26 June 2017). "Joe Chung: a Chinese who rejects all things Chinese". South China Morning Post. Archived from the original on 29 August 2021. Retrieved 29 August 2021. Among the first ones it has profiled is Joe Chung, the best-selling Hong Kong author of Don't reincarnate as a Chinese in the next life. The book is admired by many intellectuals and politicians in Hong Kong and Taiwan. No doubt it captures something of the zeitgeist. Chung's rejection of all things Chinese is total – he is even critical of the language itself. He moved his whole family to the Norwegian city of Stavanger in the early 2000s. ... Long before it became fashionable to advocate localism, Hong Kong separatism, Taiwan independence and anti-China emotionalism, he had been advocating all of them – except he sees Hong Kong society as inherently Chinese and corrupt as well.
  3. Fan, C. Simon (2016). Culture, Institution, and Development in China: The economics of national character. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge. p. 249. ISBN 978-1-138-18571-5. Archived from the original on 27 April 2023. Retrieved 29 August 2021. Some books have severely criticized the Chinese culture in recent years, including The Ugly Chinaman and the Crisis of China Culture by Bo-Yang (1985) and I Don't Want to Be Chinese Again by Joe Chung (2007). Although these authors are Chinese, the titles of their books alone might prevent them from being published in Western countries. However, these books are highly popular among Chinese readers. For example, Chung's book was first published in November 2007 and has already been printed in 55 editions.
  4. Ogura, Junko (14 October 2010). "Japanese party urges Google to drop Chinese name for disputed islands". US: CNN. Archived from the original on 4 October 2012.
  5. "The Liberty Times Editorial: Only Taiwan can decide its future". Liberty Times. 19 June 2014. Archived from the original on 29 August 2021. Retrieved 29 August 2021. A recent online survey of Chinese people found that 65 percent of respondents would prefer not to be Chinese at all. This sentiment prompted the Hong Kong author Joe Chung (鍾祖康) to write his 2010 bestseller I Don't Want To Be Chinese (來生不做中國人).

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