Ethnic minorities celebrate HKSAR's 20th Anniversary by sharing beauty of the city through photography
The photo exhibition at a Ma On Shan shopping centre on September 2 was teeming with people, waiting in anticipation. It was towards the end of a roving exhibition that had already visited six other venues.
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The photo exhibition at a Ma On Shan shopping centre on September 2 was teeming with people, waiting in anticipation. It was towards the end of a roving exhibition that had already visited six other venues.
Looking closely, the growing numbers of onlookers were curious by the mix of the throng: people decked out in vivid shawls and blouses made of what looked to be Dhaka weaves, women draped in silk saris or hijabs, and girls in pretty party dresses, while several of their Chinese counterparts stood out in traditional cheongsams.
All were congregating for the award presentation ceremony of a successful photography education and competition programme, “Hong Kong in My Eyes” (HKIME), one of various community-organised activities staged across the city to encourage celebration for all during the 20th anniversary year of the establishment of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR).
The event organiser, community service organisation Hong Kong Community Network-LINK Centre, explained the importance of engaging ethnic minorities. “There are about 580,000 ethnic minority members in Hong Kong, accounting for 8 per cent of the HKSAR’s population,” the organiser’s representative Ban Fan Kwok-fai estimated, noting the combination of foreign domestic helpers and local residents.