After a year-long hangover, can Hong Kong reawaken its desire to do better?
Keane Shum says Hong Kong’s famous can-do spirit seems to have waned after the events of the past year
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![Will we challenge each other to improve, or have we stopped trying to become better versions of ourselves? Will we challenge each other to improve, or have we stopped trying to become better versions of ourselves?](https://www-scmp-com.libproxy1.nus.edu.sg/sites/default/files/styles/486w/public/images/methode/2015/12/31/ba7eecda-af9a-11e5-86ff-b7a34a11666b_486x.jpg?itok=Nl5HuC4Y)
I am proud of my parents the same way I am proud of Hong Kong, of the audacity to have aspirations and, more difficult, the determination to realise them
My father, born in a village in Kam Tin during the Japanese occupation, was cut from this dreamwoven cloth. He yearned for the city beyond the village walls, then for the world beyond the city limits. So one winter day in 1962, having exhausted his options in Hong Kong, he took off from Kai Tak for Australia. He hoarded degrees like they were precious metals, to be mined for increasingly lucrative corporate jobs. He got married and had children. And when he and my mother felt they had hit the ceiling of their middle-class immigrant life, they came back to Asia. I was three.
We came back, but my parents never stopped being immigrants, never stopped striving in their own lives and for their children’s. We never had a Benz, but the company provided the next best thing, a Lexus, to say nothing of international school tuition, fancy club memberships and roomy apartments on the south side of Hong Kong Island with sweeping views of the South China Sea. It was about 40km from Kam Tin, but the distance my father had traversed was, of course, immeasurable.
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I used to be bashful about these spoils of upward mobility, wary of being out of touch with the real Hong Kong. But I have come to recognise that my Hong Kong is as real as anyone’s, and I have nothing to be embarrassed about. I am proud of my parents the same way I am proud of Hong Kong, of the audacity to have aspirations and, more difficult, the determination to realise them.
But as the events of the past year have unfolded, I have begun to wonder if that determination, even that aspiration, is waning; that this dragon is entering its slumber. Fifteen months ago, the world watched as our city, or at least parts of it, seemed poised to punch above its weight again, confronting the Chinese Communist Party more brazenly than any world power has dared in recent times. Then, by the start of this year, that (mis)adventure had already been put to bed, for better or worse.
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![Pro-establishment lawmakers express regret over their “mistakes” in the voting process for the 2017 reform package. Photo: May Tse Pro-establishment lawmakers express regret over their “mistakes” in the voting process for the 2017 reform package. Photo: May Tse](https://www-scmp-com.libproxy1.nus.edu.sg/sites/default/files/styles/486w/public/images/methode/2015/12/31/8bfc2920-af65-11e5-86ff-b7a34a11666b_486x.jpg?itok=sX28VmWJ)
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