A City Rewritten

A City Rewritten

Apple Daily Images ()

How Communism Used History, Language, and Law to Remake Hong Kong

Authoritarian control requires more than laws. It requires narrative. In Hong Kong, the Chinese Communist Party undertook a systematic effort to rewrite the city’s identity, replacing civic memory with ideological alignment.

History was the first casualty. Educational materials minimized colonial-era civil institutions while emphasizing national destiny. Democratic movements were reframed as disorder. Resistance became deviation.

Language followed. Terms like autonomy and rights were gradually replaced with stability and harmony. Vocabulary narrowed the range of acceptable thought. When words disappear, ideas soon follow.

Legal language completed the transformation. Rights were redefined as privileges. Participation was recast as obligation. Obedience became citizenship.

Cultural institutions adjusted to survive. Museums altered exhibits. Libraries removed titles. Public commemorations vanished. Memory became regulated space.

This rewriting was not dramatic. It was bureaucratic. Small edits accumulated. Over time, citizens struggled to articulate what had changed, only that it had.

Communism does not merely govern territory. It governs meaning. Hong Kong was remade accordingly.

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