Sunday, January 22, 2017

Let There Be Voice


This is dedicated to my father, who was a successful journalist in China and never had a chance to taste freedom of speech, free press and democracy!

The closest "democracy" he ever experienced was on 4/5/1976.  After the Chinese Prime Minister Zhou En Lai died, hundreds of thousands of people gathered on Tian An Men Square in Beijing to pay their respect to Zhou.  It was toward the end of Culture Revolution, even when people had tremendous dissatisfaction with the direction of the country, no one dared to openly shout out what's on their mind; and no one dared to bring a large sign with their favorite statement written on it.  Instead, they posted small hand-written notes on People's Monument -- thousands and thousands of them...  My father quietly went to Tian An Men Square on 4/5/1976, all by himself, and took nearly a hundred pictures.  Weeks following that day, we spent so much time together in our "dark room" to develop those photos.  I was stunned when I saw people's sad faces and read those beautiful poems -- it was so REAL.  None of them got published, of course.  In fact, none of his coworkers even knew that he had the courage to go and capture those precious historical moments.

I am so thankful for having the opportunity to come to America, where free speech and democracy is truly valued.  As I marched on the streets in downtown Chicago, as I read all the signs and heard all the words, I thought about my father, and I told myself to forever cherish democracy -- the very thing that my father had always wanted to experience. 

Women's March
Chicago, IL
January 21, 2017

 




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