What the Fight for Hong Kong Is Really About

Writer and activist Wilfred Chan on what the movement teaches us about authoritarianism, nationality, and liberation

Maria Bustillos
GEN

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Photo Illustration; Source: Michael CW Chiu

TThousands have been arrested since protests began last summer against a proposed bill, since withdrawn, permitting Hong Kongers to be extradited to mainland China. The PRC-friendly Hong Kong government, led by Chief Executive Carrie Lam, has failed to quell the ongoing unrest. Steadily increasing street violence and arrests culminated in the terrifying 12-day siege of Hong Kong Polytechnic University, which ended on November 29. The six-month anniversary march that followed on December 8 drew somewhere between 183,000 and 800,000 people, depending on whether you believe the police or the organizers. And a far-flung diaspora of Hong Kongers has been dedicated to amplifying the story worldwide.

To gain a deeper understanding of what’s been going on​ — and what the future of activism in the former British colony may hold​ — GEN called up writer and activist Wilfred Chan. Born in Hong Kong and raised in Seattle, Chan lives and works in New York, where he’s been analyzing the ongoing protests; he is a founding member of the Lausan Collective, a forum for writers, researchers, activists, and artists of Hong Kong and its diaspora.

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