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Chinese people in Papua New Guinea

Chinese people in Papua New Guinea included, as of 2008, only about 1,000 of the "old Chinese"—locally born descendants of late 19th- and early 20th-century immigrants—remain in the country; most have moved to Australia.[5] However, their numbers have been bolstered significantly by new arrivals from overseas Chinese communities in Southeast Asia and later from mainland China.[6] There are also a few migrants from the Republic of China on Taiwan.[7]

Chinese people in Papua New Guinea
巴布亞新幾內亞華人
巴布亚新几内亚华人
Total population
5,000–20,000[1][2]
Languages
Tok Pisin and English; Cantonese (among older people);[3] Mandarin (among new immigrants)[4]
Religion
Christianity,[2] minority Buddhism[4]
Related ethnic groups
Chinese Australians

Migration history edit

Origins edit

Beginning in 1888, the German New Guinea Company (GNGC) imported hundreds of indentured Chinese labourers each year, from Amoy (now Xiamen), Hong Kong, Singapore, and Sumatra to work on coconut and tobacco plantations. They suffered a fatality rate as high as 40% due to tropical diseases and harsh treatment.[8] However, from 1898, the German government formally took over administration of the territory from the GNGC, and promoted free immigration instead of indentured labour. Carpenters, shipbuilders, engineers, tailors, and shopkeepers flowed into the territory, spreading out to various towns including Rabaul, Kokopo, Kavieng, Lae, and Madang.[9] Ships regularly sailed back and forth to Hong Kong. From a population of 200 in 1890, the Chinese community grew to 1427 by 1913. Of those, just 101 were women.[8][9]

Australian invasion edit

In 1914, Australia invaded and occupied New Guinea; during the occupation, which continued until 1919, they refused further entry to Chinese.[8] In 1920, New Guinea was formally placed under Australian control as a League of Nations mandate; the new administration extended laws of Australia, in particular the Immigration Restriction Act 1901, over New Guinea, making it far more difficult for Chinese to gain entry to the territory. Chinese who had settled there before 1922 received permanent residency, but those few who arrived afterwards could only receive temporary residency.[10]

The Australians' 1921 survey of their new territory found a total of 1,424 Chinese (1,195 men, 229 women).[11] The gender imbalance in the Chinese community would largely persist due to the policy of refusing entry to wives and children whom New Guinea-resident Chinese men had left behind in China; as a consequence, some Chinese men took indigenous women as wives instead. The children of their marriages tended to be brought up within the Chinese community.[11]

There were also roughly 100 Chinese in Papua; however, movement between New Guinea and the Papua area was restricted, so the community there remained small.[10][12] A 1933 survey found just five Chinese in Papua; Filipinos formed the dominant Asian group, with a population of 88. Port Moresby had only a single Chinese family, headed by Luk Poi Wai, a tailor.[13]

By the eve of the Pacific War, the Chinese population in New Guinea exceeded 2,000.[10]

Japanese invasion edit

After the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, with the Japanese invasion of New Guinea looming just over the horizon, the Australian government moved to evacuate white women and children from the territory. However, they made no similar moves to evacuate the Chinese population there. In early 1942, in response to the pleas of community members, this stance softened slightly, and 300 Chinese were flown to Australia; however, the majority of Chinese women were refused permission to leave.[11][14] Left behind to face occupation by the Imperial Japanese Army, Chinese women became victims of atrocities at a far higher rate than indigenous women. According to community leader Chin Hoi Meen, "Chinese girls had to be supplied to [the Japanese] on demand"; under threat of beatings, death, or imprisonment in a soldiers' brothel as comfort women, Chinese women were also forced to enter into relationships and cohabit with Japanese officers.[15] Chinese men were interned in concentration camps to perform hard labour.[16] A total of 86 local Chinese residents died during the war, 37 of those having been killed by the Japanese.[15] Among the dead was the head of the PNG branch of the Kuomintang, the main political party of the Republic of China at the time; he was executed by Japanese troops as a warning to the community.[16]

In addition to their crimes against local Chinese people, the Japanese sent about 1,600 Republic of China Army prisoners-of-war to Rabaul as slave labourers; many died and were buried there.[17][18] Some soldiers of Taiwan origin came as auxiliaries with the Japanese army as well.[7]

Post-World War II edit

In 1946, the total Chinese population in Papua and New Guinea stood at roughly 2,000 people.[12]

A new immigration policy promulgated in 1948 permitted entrance and temporary residence, in the form of exemptions from immigration restrictions, to Chinese engaged in overseas trade of a minimum volume of £1,000 per year. They would also be permitted to sponsor one assistant if their trade volume reached £2,500 per year, and one additional assistant for every £2,500 above that threshold, whose exemptions were to be reviewed every five years, and to nominate a temporary substitute to come to PNG in their place for up to three years if they had to leave the territory. Wives of traders who had lived in the territory since 1921 were granted a permanent exemption from immigration restrictions; others were granted temporary exemptions to be reviewed at three-year intervals. Finally, their dependents who left the territory could be granted re-entry permits with a validity of as long as five years.[19] However, World War II and the ongoing Chinese Civil War had disrupted many of the Chinese community's links to China; even after 1949, though local Chinese were able to regain contact with their relatives in China, they found it difficult to go for visits or send their children their due to the lack of diplomatic relations between Australia and the new People's Republic of China government.[14]

The 1966 census found a total of 566 persons born in China (64 men and 17 women in Papua; 297 men and 188 women in New Guinea), 288 persons holding Chinese nationality (206 men, 72 women), and 2,455 persons who responded "Chinese" when asked their race (1,391 men, 1,064 women).[11] As late as the 1970s, local men continued to go to Hong Kong to find Chinese women to marry, and then brought them back to PNG.[20]

In the 1950s, the Australian government gave the Chinese community a choice of taking up Australian citizenship; this decision marked one of the Australian government's earliest breaks in the White Australia policy.[13]

Independence era edit

With independence in 1975, the bulk of the Chinese community in PNG chose to depart for Australia.[2] However, their numbers began to be bolstered again by newcomers in the late 1970s and early 1980s, with ethnic Chinese from Malaysia, from Singapore, from Indonesia, and from the Philippines arriving to work as timber merchants or traders.[6] In the 1990s, as the local currency depreciated, their numbers decreased.[21] However, the number of Chinese would continue to grow with the arrival of many new immigrants from the People's Republic of China, who came not just as employees of Chinese companies but also as independent traders.[5]

Community structure edit

Politics edit

Prior to PNG's independence, the Chinese community had no role in local administration; instead, their political participation was directed towards China. The New Guinea Branch of the Kuomintang (KMT) provided de facto leadership for the community.[22] Though the Chinese Civil War ended with the victory of the Chinese Communist Party and the establishment of the People's Republic of China (PRC), most Chinese in PNG remained supporters of the Kuomintang and their Republic of China (ROC) government based on Taiwan, until the 1960s, when they began to realise that the KMT's plan to retake mainland China was unlikely to be realised.[2] However, their fears of being labelled as communists led them to maintain at least public loyalty to Taiwan well after that, flying the flag of the Republic of China and continuing to send representatives to the ROC's National Assembly in Taipei until Australia's recognition of the PRC in 1972.[22]

After independence, some of the Chinese who held PNG nationality became involved in local politics, primarily as fundraisers or middlemen for major politicians. A few, especially those of mixed blood, attained prominent positions in the government; the best known example is former prime minister Sir Julius Chan.[2]

Business and employment edit

Due to the bureaucracy and delays involved in obtaining a work permit for foreigners, many companies bring in workers from China illegally, with some estimates suggesting as many as 300 Chinese people arrive each week without proper documentation.[23]

Organisations edit

Migrants formed surname and hometown associations in Rabaul during the late 1910s and early 1920s.[16] Port Moresby, in contrast, lacks any such association, due to the diversity and short history of the Chinese community there.[4] Local Chinese there formed one social club, the Cathay Club, in the 1960s; some new Chinese immigrants have joined as well. They typically organise sports and games for their members.[24]

Education edit

In Rabaul, there were two Chinese schools, each associated with a Christian denomination and established with teachers specially hired from China.[3] The Overseas Chinese School (華僑學校) was established with support from the Methodist missionaries in 1922, while St. Theresa's Yang Ching School (養正學校) was set up two years later by Chinese community leaders with support from the Catholic Church.[25] Chinese schools also sprang up in Madang and Kavieng.[26] Many families also sent their children back to China for further studies, but this practise came to an end due to the outbreak of the Second Sino-Japanese War in 1937, and did not resume after peace returned.[14] The wealthiest members of the community were also able to send their children to Australia for further studies.[13]

In the 1950s, subsidies from the Australian government allowed an increasing number of Chinese from New Guinea to attend Australian universities.[14] Their primary destinations were Queensland and New South Wales.[2]

Culture edit

Language edit

Most early Chinese immigrants traced their roots to southern coastal regions of China, especially Guangdong; Siyi dialect became the lingua franca among them, though others spoke various dialects of Cantonese or Hakka[3] As a result, many younger ethnic Chinese have forgotten the language, or never learned it.[13] Starting in the 1970s, many Chinese families hired indigenous women as nannies, who then taught Tok Pisin to the children.[16]

Religion edit

Most Chinese in Papua New Guinea are at least nominally Christian.[2] The German colonial era saw the first Chinese converts to Catholicism.[3] Chinese Catholic and Methodist churches have been operating in Rabaul since the 1920s.[16] In contrast, there is only one Buddhist temple in PNG, the Manjusri Buddhist Centre (曼珠精舍) in Port Moresby, established in 1994 by Malaysian Chinese expatriates and now operated by the Taiwan-based Fo Guang Shan order; they generally conduct sermons in Mandarin.[4]

Ethnicity and identity edit

Due to gender imbalances, mixed marriages between Chinese men and indigenous women have long been common in PNG's Chinese community. The offspring of such marriages tended to be accepted as Chinese if they were raised within the community and learned the language.[27] However, at the same time, the Chinese community tended to look down on indigenous people as "savages"; prior to independence, Chinese were in the middle tier of a racial hierarchy, discriminated against by whites but equally lording it over the indigenous people; after independence, they came to resent the political power those same indigenes had been given over them.[28]

Even within the Chinese community, tensions exist between different groups of immigrants. Local Chinese in particular blame mainland China for disrupting previously-peaceful inter-ethnic relationships between the Chinese community and indigenous peoples.[29] In particular, mainland Chinese migrants' activities have earned them a poor reputation not just among indigenous people, but among local Chinese and ethnic Chinese expatriates from Southeast Asia as well; the latter view them as "crooks" and "conmen".[5] Mainland Chinese migrants' practise of illegally opening shops in sectors which are restricted to PNG nationals, such as low-end hospitality and retail businesses; these bring them into direct economic competition with local people.[5] For example, during September 2007 anti-Chinese riots in Mount Hagen, PNG's third largest city, Chinese-owned warehouses became targets for arsonists and armed robbers.[30]

Notable people edit

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Nelson 2007, p. 8
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Chin 2008, p. 118
  3. ^ a b c d Wu 2005, p. 710
  4. ^ a b c d Ichikawa 2006, p. 120
  5. ^ a b c d Chin 2008, p. 124
  6. ^ a b Chin 2008, p. 119
  7. ^ a b Nelson 2007, p. 7
  8. ^ a b c Wu 2005, p. 707
  9. ^ a b Ichikawa 2006, p. 114
  10. ^ a b c Ichikawa 2006, p. 115
  11. ^ a b c d Nelson 2007, p. 2
  12. ^ a b Jones 2005, p. 233
  13. ^ a b c d e f g Nelson 2007, p. 3
  14. ^ a b c d Ichikawa 2006, p. 116
  15. ^ a b Nelson 2008, p. 18
  16. ^ a b c d e Wu 2005, p. 708
  17. ^ "Gov't to probe abandoned tombs in Papua New Guinea", Radio Taiwan International, 2009-01-08, retrieved 2009-02-12
  18. ^ Jiang, Wei; Liu, Shuyin (2009-01-11), "华侨意外发现揭开历史:600余抗战遗骸乱葬海外", Hunan TV, retrieved 2009-02-13
  19. ^ Jones 2005, p. 236
  20. ^ Wu 2005, p. 711
  21. ^ Chin 2008, p. 121
  22. ^ a b Wu 2005, p. 709
  23. ^ York, Jeffrey (2009-01-02), "Papua New Guinea and China's New Empire", The Globe and Mail, Toronto, retrieved 2009-02-12
  24. ^ Ichikawa 2006, p. 122
  25. ^ Chow, Sylvia, ed. (2007). Sacred Heart School: For the sake of the children. Kedron, Qld: Sacred Heart School Reunion Committee. ISBN 9780646476490.
  26. ^ Ichikawa 2003, p. 190
  27. ^ Wu 2005, pp. 711–712
  28. ^ Wu 2005, pp. 712–714
  29. ^ Chin 2008, p. 125
  30. ^ "巴布亚新几内亚华人社区遭纵火抢劫", BBC News, 2007-09-21, retrieved 2009-02-12
  31. ^ Cahill 2006
  32. ^ Johns, Eric (2004-11-05), , Post-Courier, Papua New Guinea, archived from the original on 2011-06-16, retrieved 2009-02-13
  33. ^ "Chinese in PNG feel brunt of Gaming machine crackdown", Radio New Zealand International, 2004-10-18, retrieved 2009-02-12

Sources edit

  • Cahill, Peter (2006). "Chin, Hoi Meen". Australian Dictionary of Biography (Online ed.). Canberra: Australian National University. ISSN 1833-7538. Retrieved 2009-02-12.
  • Chin, James (2008), (PDF), Chinese Southern Diaspora Studies, 2: 117–126, archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-04-24, retrieved 2009-02-16
  • Ichikawa, Tetsu (2003), "Transformation of Chinese Migration Patterns and Their Community in Papua New Guinea" (PDF), Journal of Asian and African Studies (65): 181–206
  • Ichikawa, Tetsu (May 2006), "Chinese in Papua New Guinea: Strategic Practices in Sojourning", Journal of Chinese Overseas, 2 (1): 111–132, doi:10.1353/jco.2006.0005
  • Jones, Paul (2005), (PDF), Chinese–Australian Journeys: Records on travel, migration and settlement, 1860–1975, Research Guides, Australia: National Archives, pp. 233–249, ISBN 978-1-920807-30-6, archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-06-22, retrieved 2009-02-12
  • Nelson, Hank (2007), The Chinese in Papua New Guinea (PDF), State, Society, and Governance in Melanesia Discussion Paper, Canberra: Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, Australian National University, retrieved 2009-02-12
  • Nelson, Hank (2008), (PDF), The Journal of Pacific History, 43: 1–22, doi:10.1080/00223340802054578, hdl:1885/26333, S2CID 161290629, archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-06-10
  • Wu, David Y. H. (2005), "Chinese in Papua New Guinea", in Ember, Melvin; Ember, Carol R.; Skoggard, Ian (eds.), Encyclopedia of Diasporas, pp. 706–715, ISBN 978-0-306-48321-9

Further reading edit

  • Cahill, Peter (1996), "Chinese in Rabaul, 1921–1942: normal practices or containing the yellow peril", Journal of Pacific History, 31: 72–91, doi:10.1080/00223349608572807
  • Inglis, Christine (1972), "Chinese", in Ryan, Peter (ed.), Encyclopaedia of Papua and New Guinea, Carlton: Melbourne University Press, pp. 170–74, ISBN 978-0-522-84025-4
  • Inglis, Christine (1975), "Particularism in the economic organization of the Chinese in Papua New Guinea", Anthropological Forum, 4 (1): 69–76, doi:10.1080/00664677.1975.9967294
  • Inglis, Christine (1978), Social Structure and Patterns of Economic Action: The Chinese in Papua New Guinea, Ph.D. dissertation, London School of Economics
  • Inglis, Christine (1991), "Women and trade: a Chinese example from Papua New Guinea", in Baker, Hugh D.R.; Feuchtwang, Stephan (eds.), An old state in new settings: studies in the social anthropology of China: in memory of Maurice Freedman, Occasional Papers, United Kingdom: Anthropological Society of Oxford, pp. 44–69, ISBN 978-1-870047-40-1
  • Willson, Margaret (1987), "A History of the Chinese Business Community in Papua New Guinea", Research in Melanesia, 11–12: 26–33
  • Willson, Margaret (1989), "The Trader's Voice: PNG-born Chinese Business and the 1987 Elections", in Oliver, M. (ed.), Eleksin: The 1987 National Election in Papua New Guinea, Port Moresby: University of Papua New Guinea, pp. 99–108, ISBN 978-9980-84-041-7
  • Wu, David Y. H. (1974), "To Kill Three Birds with One Stone:the Rotating Credit Associations of the Papua New Guinea Chinese", American Ethnologist, 1 (3): 565–584, doi:10.1525/ae.1974.1.3.02a00110
  • Wu, David Y. H. (1975), "Overseas Chinese Entrepreneurship and Kinship Transformation: an Example from Papua New Guinea", Bulletin of the Institute of Ethnology, 39: 85–105
  • Wu, David Y. H. (1977), "Ethnicity and Adaptation: Overseas Chinese Entrepreneurship in Papua New Guinea", Southeast Asian Journal of Social Science, 5 (1–2): 85–95, doi:10.1163/080382477X00074
  • Wu, David Y. H. (1977), "Chinese as An Intrusive Language", in Wurm, S. A. (ed.), Language, Culture, Society, and the Modern World, Fascicle 2, New Guinea Area Languages and Language Study, vol. 3, Canberra: Australian National University, pp. 1047–1055, ISBN 978-0-85883-159-9
  • Wu, David Y. H. (1978), "The Chinese in New Guinea: The Adaptation of an Immigrant Population", in Watson-Gegeo, Karen Ann; Seaton, S. Lee (eds.), Adaptation and Symbolism: Essays on Social Organization, Honolulu: University Press of Hawai’i, pp. 101–124
  • Wu, David Y. H. (1982), The Chinese in Papua New Guinea, 1890–1990, Hong Kong: Chinese University Press, ISBN 978-962-201-255-4
  • Wu, David Yen-ho (1998), "The Chinese in Papua New Guinea: Diaspora Culture of the late 20th Century", in Wang, Ling-chi; Wang, Gungwu (eds.), The Chinese Diaspora: Selected Essays, vol. II, Singapore: Times Academic Press, pp. 206–216

chinese, people, papua, guinea, included, 2008, update, only, about, chinese, locally, born, descendants, late, 19th, early, 20th, century, immigrants, remain, country, most, have, moved, australia, however, their, numbers, have, been, bolstered, significantly. Chinese people in Papua New Guinea included as of 2008 update only about 1 000 of the old Chinese locally born descendants of late 19th and early 20th century immigrants remain in the country most have moved to Australia 5 However their numbers have been bolstered significantly by new arrivals from overseas Chinese communities in Southeast Asia and later from mainland China 6 There are also a few migrants from the Republic of China on Taiwan 7 Chinese people in Papua New Guinea巴布亞新幾內亞華人巴布亚新几内亚华人Total population5 000 20 000 1 2 LanguagesTok Pisin and English Cantonese among older people 3 Mandarin among new immigrants 4 ReligionChristianity 2 minority Buddhism 4 Related ethnic groupsChinese Australians Contents 1 Migration history 1 1 Origins 1 2 Australian invasion 1 3 Japanese invasion 1 4 Post World War II 1 5 Independence era 2 Community structure 2 1 Politics 2 2 Business and employment 2 3 Organisations 2 4 Education 3 Culture 3 1 Language 3 2 Religion 3 3 Ethnicity and identity 4 Notable people 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Notes 6 2 Sources 7 Further readingMigration history editOrigins edit Beginning in 1888 the German New Guinea Company GNGC imported hundreds of indentured Chinese labourers each year from Amoy now Xiamen Hong Kong Singapore and Sumatra to work on coconut and tobacco plantations They suffered a fatality rate as high as 40 due to tropical diseases and harsh treatment 8 However from 1898 the German government formally took over administration of the territory from the GNGC and promoted free immigration instead of indentured labour Carpenters shipbuilders engineers tailors and shopkeepers flowed into the territory spreading out to various towns including Rabaul Kokopo Kavieng Lae and Madang 9 Ships regularly sailed back and forth to Hong Kong From a population of 200 in 1890 the Chinese community grew to 1427 by 1913 Of those just 101 were women 8 9 Australian invasion edit In 1914 Australia invaded and occupied New Guinea during the occupation which continued until 1919 they refused further entry to Chinese 8 In 1920 New Guinea was formally placed under Australian control as a League of Nations mandate the new administration extended laws of Australia in particular the Immigration Restriction Act 1901 over New Guinea making it far more difficult for Chinese to gain entry to the territory Chinese who had settled there before 1922 received permanent residency but those few who arrived afterwards could only receive temporary residency 10 The Australians 1921 survey of their new territory found a total of 1 424 Chinese 1 195 men 229 women 11 The gender imbalance in the Chinese community would largely persist due to the policy of refusing entry to wives and children whom New Guinea resident Chinese men had left behind in China as a consequence some Chinese men took indigenous women as wives instead The children of their marriages tended to be brought up within the Chinese community 11 There were also roughly 100 Chinese in Papua however movement between New Guinea and the Papua area was restricted so the community there remained small 10 12 A 1933 survey found just five Chinese in Papua Filipinos formed the dominant Asian group with a population of 88 Port Moresby had only a single Chinese family headed by Luk Poi Wai a tailor 13 By the eve of the Pacific War the Chinese population in New Guinea exceeded 2 000 10 Japanese invasion edit After the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor with the Japanese invasion of New Guinea looming just over the horizon the Australian government moved to evacuate white women and children from the territory However they made no similar moves to evacuate the Chinese population there In early 1942 in response to the pleas of community members this stance softened slightly and 300 Chinese were flown to Australia however the majority of Chinese women were refused permission to leave 11 14 Left behind to face occupation by the Imperial Japanese Army Chinese women became victims of atrocities at a far higher rate than indigenous women According to community leader Chin Hoi Meen Chinese girls had to be supplied to the Japanese on demand under threat of beatings death or imprisonment in a soldiers brothel as comfort women Chinese women were also forced to enter into relationships and cohabit with Japanese officers 15 Chinese men were interned in concentration camps to perform hard labour 16 A total of 86 local Chinese residents died during the war 37 of those having been killed by the Japanese 15 Among the dead was the head of the PNG branch of the Kuomintang the main political party of the Republic of China at the time he was executed by Japanese troops as a warning to the community 16 In addition to their crimes against local Chinese people the Japanese sent about 1 600 Republic of China Army prisoners of war to Rabaul as slave labourers many died and were buried there 17 18 Some soldiers of Taiwan origin came as auxiliaries with the Japanese army as well 7 Post World War II edit In 1946 the total Chinese population in Papua and New Guinea stood at roughly 2 000 people 12 A new immigration policy promulgated in 1948 permitted entrance and temporary residence in the form of exemptions from immigration restrictions to Chinese engaged in overseas trade of a minimum volume of 1 000 per year They would also be permitted to sponsor one assistant if their trade volume reached 2 500 per year and one additional assistant for every 2 500 above that threshold whose exemptions were to be reviewed every five years and to nominate a temporary substitute to come to PNG in their place for up to three years if they had to leave the territory Wives of traders who had lived in the territory since 1921 were granted a permanent exemption from immigration restrictions others were granted temporary exemptions to be reviewed at three year intervals Finally their dependents who left the territory could be granted re entry permits with a validity of as long as five years 19 However World War II and the ongoing Chinese Civil War had disrupted many of the Chinese community s links to China even after 1949 though local Chinese were able to regain contact with their relatives in China they found it difficult to go for visits or send their children their due to the lack of diplomatic relations between Australia and the new People s Republic of China government 14 The 1966 census found a total of 566 persons born in China 64 men and 17 women in Papua 297 men and 188 women in New Guinea 288 persons holding Chinese nationality 206 men 72 women and 2 455 persons who responded Chinese when asked their race 1 391 men 1 064 women 11 As late as the 1970s local men continued to go to Hong Kong to find Chinese women to marry and then brought them back to PNG 20 In the 1950s the Australian government gave the Chinese community a choice of taking up Australian citizenship this decision marked one of the Australian government s earliest breaks in the White Australia policy 13 Independence era edit With independence in 1975 the bulk of the Chinese community in PNG chose to depart for Australia 2 However their numbers began to be bolstered again by newcomers in the late 1970s and early 1980s with ethnic Chinese from Malaysia from Singapore from Indonesia and from the Philippines arriving to work as timber merchants or traders 6 In the 1990s as the local currency depreciated their numbers decreased 21 However the number of Chinese would continue to grow with the arrival of many new immigrants from the People s Republic of China who came not just as employees of Chinese companies but also as independent traders 5 Community structure editPolitics edit Prior to PNG s independence the Chinese community had no role in local administration instead their political participation was directed towards China The New Guinea Branch of the Kuomintang KMT provided de facto leadership for the community 22 Though the Chinese Civil War ended with the victory of the Chinese Communist Party and the establishment of the People s Republic of China PRC most Chinese in PNG remained supporters of the Kuomintang and their Republic of China ROC government based on Taiwan until the 1960s when they began to realise that the KMT s plan to retake mainland China was unlikely to be realised 2 However their fears of being labelled as communists led them to maintain at least public loyalty to Taiwan well after that flying the flag of the Republic of China and continuing to send representatives to the ROC s National Assembly in Taipei until Australia s recognition of the PRC in 1972 22 After independence some of the Chinese who held PNG nationality became involved in local politics primarily as fundraisers or middlemen for major politicians A few especially those of mixed blood attained prominent positions in the government the best known example is former prime minister Sir Julius Chan 2 Business and employment edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it February 2009 Due to the bureaucracy and delays involved in obtaining a work permit for foreigners many companies bring in workers from China illegally with some estimates suggesting as many as 300 Chinese people arrive each week without proper documentation 23 Organisations edit Migrants formed surname and hometown associations in Rabaul during the late 1910s and early 1920s 16 Port Moresby in contrast lacks any such association due to the diversity and short history of the Chinese community there 4 Local Chinese there formed one social club the Cathay Club in the 1960s some new Chinese immigrants have joined as well They typically organise sports and games for their members 24 Education edit In Rabaul there were two Chinese schools each associated with a Christian denomination and established with teachers specially hired from China 3 The Overseas Chinese School 華僑學校 was established with support from the Methodist missionaries in 1922 while St Theresa s Yang Ching School 養正學校 was set up two years later by Chinese community leaders with support from the Catholic Church 25 Chinese schools also sprang up in Madang and Kavieng 26 Many families also sent their children back to China for further studies but this practise came to an end due to the outbreak of the Second Sino Japanese War in 1937 and did not resume after peace returned 14 The wealthiest members of the community were also able to send their children to Australia for further studies 13 In the 1950s subsidies from the Australian government allowed an increasing number of Chinese from New Guinea to attend Australian universities 14 Their primary destinations were Queensland and New South Wales 2 Culture editLanguage edit Most early Chinese immigrants traced their roots to southern coastal regions of China especially Guangdong Siyi dialect became the lingua franca among them though others spoke various dialects of Cantonese or Hakka 3 As a result many younger ethnic Chinese have forgotten the language or never learned it 13 Starting in the 1970s many Chinese families hired indigenous women as nannies who then taught Tok Pisin to the children 16 Religion edit Most Chinese in Papua New Guinea are at least nominally Christian 2 The German colonial era saw the first Chinese converts to Catholicism 3 Chinese Catholic and Methodist churches have been operating in Rabaul since the 1920s 16 In contrast there is only one Buddhist temple in PNG the Manjusri Buddhist Centre 曼珠精舍 in Port Moresby established in 1994 by Malaysian Chinese expatriates and now operated by the Taiwan based Fo Guang Shan order they generally conduct sermons in Mandarin 4 Ethnicity and identity edit Due to gender imbalances mixed marriages between Chinese men and indigenous women have long been common in PNG s Chinese community The offspring of such marriages tended to be accepted as Chinese if they were raised within the community and learned the language 27 However at the same time the Chinese community tended to look down on indigenous people as savages prior to independence Chinese were in the middle tier of a racial hierarchy discriminated against by whites but equally lording it over the indigenous people after independence they came to resent the political power those same indigenes had been given over them 28 Even within the Chinese community tensions exist between different groups of immigrants Local Chinese in particular blame mainland China for disrupting previously peaceful inter ethnic relationships between the Chinese community and indigenous peoples 29 In particular mainland Chinese migrants activities have earned them a poor reputation not just among indigenous people but among local Chinese and ethnic Chinese expatriates from Southeast Asia as well the latter view them as crooks and conmen 5 Mainland Chinese migrants practise of illegally opening shops in sectors which are restricted to PNG nationals such as low end hospitality and retail businesses these bring them into direct economic competition with local people 5 For example during September 2007 anti Chinese riots in Mount Hagen PNG s third largest city Chinese owned warehouses became targets for arsonists and armed robbers 30 Notable people editSir Julius Chan Prime Minister 1980 82 and 1994 97 13 Byron Chan son of Julius and member of parliament for the Namatanai District 13 Chin Hoi Meen businessman and community leader recipient of the King s Medal for Courage in the Cause of Freedom 31 32 Robert Seeto former governor of New Ireland Province 13 Ni Yumei Cragnolini president of the Chinese Association 33 Perry Kwan Speaker of the Third House of Assembly 20 April 1972 22 June 1972 Member for New Ireland See also edit nbsp New Guinea portal nbsp China portalJapanese settlement in Papua New GuineaReferences editNotes edit Nelson 2007 p 8 a b c d e f g Chin 2008 p 118 a b c d Wu 2005 p 710 a b c d Ichikawa 2006 p 120 a b c d Chin 2008 p 124 a b Chin 2008 p 119 a b Nelson 2007 p 7 a b c Wu 2005 p 707 a b Ichikawa 2006 p 114 a b c Ichikawa 2006 p 115 a b c d Nelson 2007 p 2 a b Jones 2005 p 233 a b c d e f g Nelson 2007 p 3 a b c d Ichikawa 2006 p 116 a b Nelson 2008 p 18 a b c d e Wu 2005 p 708 Gov t to probe abandoned tombs in Papua New Guinea Radio Taiwan International 2009 01 08 retrieved 2009 02 12 Jiang Wei Liu Shuyin 2009 01 11 华侨意外发现揭开历史 600余抗战遗骸乱葬海外 Hunan TV retrieved 2009 02 13 Jones 2005 p 236 Wu 2005 p 711 Chin 2008 p 121 a b Wu 2005 p 709 York Jeffrey 2009 01 02 Papua New Guinea and China s New Empire The Globe and Mail Toronto retrieved 2009 02 12 Ichikawa 2006 p 122 Chow Sylvia ed 2007 Sacred Heart School For the sake of the children Kedron Qld Sacred Heart School Reunion Committee ISBN 9780646476490 Ichikawa 2003 p 190 Wu 2005 pp 711 712 Wu 2005 pp 712 714 Chin 2008 p 125 巴布亚新几内亚华人社区遭纵火抢劫 BBC News 2007 09 21 retrieved 2009 02 12 Cahill 2006 Johns Eric 2004 11 05 Helping the Aussies Post Courier Papua New Guinea archived from the original on 2011 06 16 retrieved 2009 02 13 Chinese in PNG feel brunt of Gaming machine crackdown Radio New Zealand International 2004 10 18 retrieved 2009 02 12 Sources edit Cahill Peter 2006 Chin Hoi Meen Australian Dictionary of Biography Online ed Canberra Australian National University ISSN 1833 7538 Retrieved 2009 02 12 Chin James 2008 Contemporary Chinese Community in Papua New Guinea Old Money versus New Migrants PDF Chinese Southern Diaspora Studies 2 117 126 archived from the original PDF on 2009 04 24 retrieved 2009 02 16 Ichikawa Tetsu 2003 Transformation of Chinese Migration Patterns and Their Community in Papua New Guinea PDF Journal of Asian and African Studies 65 181 206 Ichikawa Tetsu May 2006 Chinese in Papua New Guinea Strategic Practices in Sojourning Journal of Chinese Overseas 2 1 111 132 doi 10 1353 jco 2006 0005 Jones Paul 2005 Chinese in Papua New Guinea and Pacific Island Territories PDF Chinese Australian Journeys Records on travel migration and settlement 1860 1975 Research Guides Australia National Archives pp 233 249 ISBN 978 1 920807 30 6 archived from the original PDF on 2009 06 22 retrieved 2009 02 12 Nelson Hank 2007 The Chinese in Papua New Guinea PDF State Society and Governance in Melanesia Discussion Paper Canberra Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies Australian National University retrieved 2009 02 12 Nelson Hank 2008 The Consolation Unit Comfort Women At Rabaul PDF The Journal of Pacific History 43 1 22 doi 10 1080 00223340802054578 hdl 1885 26333 S2CID 161290629 archived from the original PDF on 2007 06 10 Wu David Y H 2005 Chinese in Papua New Guinea in Ember Melvin Ember Carol R Skoggard Ian eds Encyclopedia of Diasporas pp 706 715 ISBN 978 0 306 48321 9Further reading editCahill Peter 1996 Chinese in Rabaul 1921 1942 normal practices or containing the yellow peril Journal of Pacific History 31 72 91 doi 10 1080 00223349608572807 Inglis Christine 1972 Chinese in Ryan Peter ed Encyclopaedia of Papua and New Guinea Carlton Melbourne University Press pp 170 74 ISBN 978 0 522 84025 4 Inglis Christine 1975 Particularism in the economic organization of the Chinese in Papua New Guinea Anthropological Forum 4 1 69 76 doi 10 1080 00664677 1975 9967294 Inglis Christine 1978 Social Structure and Patterns of Economic Action The Chinese in Papua New Guinea Ph D dissertation London School of Economics Inglis Christine 1991 Women and trade a Chinese example from Papua New Guinea in Baker Hugh D R Feuchtwang Stephan eds An old state in new settings studies in the social anthropology of China in memory of Maurice Freedman Occasional Papers United Kingdom Anthropological Society of Oxford pp 44 69 ISBN 978 1 870047 40 1 Willson Margaret 1987 A History of the Chinese Business Community in Papua New Guinea Research in Melanesia 11 12 26 33 Willson Margaret 1989 The Trader s Voice PNG born Chinese Business and the 1987 Elections in Oliver M ed Eleksin The 1987 National Election in Papua New Guinea Port Moresby University of Papua New Guinea pp 99 108 ISBN 978 9980 84 041 7 Wu David Y H 1974 To Kill Three Birds with One Stone the Rotating Credit Associations of the Papua New Guinea Chinese American Ethnologist 1 3 565 584 doi 10 1525 ae 1974 1 3 02a00110 Wu David Y H 1975 Overseas Chinese Entrepreneurship and Kinship Transformation an Example from Papua New Guinea Bulletin of the Institute of Ethnology 39 85 105 Wu David Y H 1977 Ethnicity and Adaptation Overseas Chinese Entrepreneurship in Papua New Guinea Southeast Asian Journal of Social Science 5 1 2 85 95 doi 10 1163 080382477X00074 Wu David Y H 1977 Chinese as An Intrusive Language in Wurm S A ed Language Culture Society and the Modern World Fascicle 2 New Guinea Area Languages and Language Study vol 3 Canberra Australian National University pp 1047 1055 ISBN 978 0 85883 159 9 Wu David Y H 1978 The Chinese in New Guinea The Adaptation of an Immigrant Population in Watson Gegeo Karen Ann Seaton S Lee eds Adaptation and Symbolism Essays on Social Organization Honolulu University Press of Hawai i pp 101 124 Wu David Y H 1982 The Chinese in Papua New Guinea 1890 1990 Hong Kong Chinese University Press ISBN 978 962 201 255 4 Wu David Yen ho 1998 The Chinese in Papua New Guinea Diaspora Culture of the late 20th Century in Wang Ling chi Wang Gungwu eds The Chinese Diaspora Selected Essays vol II Singapore Times Academic Press pp 206 216 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chinese people in Papua New Guinea amp oldid 1172492306, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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