Hakka people: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|Ethnic group native to southeastern China and Taiwan}} |
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{{For|other uses|Hakka}} |
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{{About|the Hakka people|the Hakka language|Hakka Chinese}} |
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{{Cleanup|reason=Significant unsourced material, often poorly organized and ungrammatical|date=April 2024}} |
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{{refimprove|date=December 2008}} |
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{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2021}} |
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{{Infobox ethnic group |
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| group = Hakka |
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| native_name = {{lang|zh|客家}} {{lang|hak|Hak-kâ|italics=no}}<br/>{{lang|zh-hant|客家漢族}}<ref name="HH" /> |
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| image = [[File:KotaKinabalu Sabah Gaya-Street-Sunday-Market-17.jpg|250px]] |
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| caption = Hakka dancers performing [[Lion Dance#Regional types|traditional Qilin dance]] in Malaysia |
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| pop = 80 million<ref name= B /> |
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| popplace = [[China]], [[Taiwan]], [[Southeast Asia]], [[Europe]], [[Americas]] |
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| langs = {{Plain list| |
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* [[Hakka Chinese]] |
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* [[Standard Chinese]] |
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* [[Taiwanese Hakka]] |
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* [[Taiwanese Mandarin]] |
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* [[Cantonese]] |
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}} |
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| rels = [[Chinese folk religion]], [[Confucianism]], [[Taoism]], [[Mahayana Buddhism]], [[Christianity]], [[Islam]] |
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}} |
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{{Infobox Chinese |
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| c = 客家 |
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| l = guest families |
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| p = Kèjiā |
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| tp = Kè-jia |
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| w = {{tone superscript|K'o4-chia1}} |
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| mi = {{IPAc-cmn|k|e|4|.|j|ia|1}} |
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| bpmf = ㄎㄜˋ ㄐㄧㄚ |
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| h = {{tone superscript|Hag2-ga24}} |
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| gan = Kak6 Ga1 |
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| j = Haak3 gaa1 |
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| y = Haak-gāa |
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| ci = {{IPAc-yue|h|aak|3|-|g|aa|1}} |
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| tl = Kheh-ka |
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| vie = người Khách Gia, người Hẹ |
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}} |
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The '''Hakka''' ({{zh|c=客家}}), sometimes also referred to as '''Hakka-speaking Chinese''',<ref name="HH">{{citation|url=http://iir.nccu.edu.tw/attachments/journal/add/4/40-0304-12-2-6.pdf|date =2004|title=Rethinking Taiwanese and Chinese Identity: Melissa J. Brown's Is Taiwan Chinese?|publisher=Institute of International Relations|volume=40|pages=454–458|issn=1013-2511|oclc=206031459|work=iir.nccu.edu.tw|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110727162922/http://iir.nccu.edu.tw/attachments/journal/add/4/40-0304-12-2-6.pdf|archive-date=27 July 2011|url-status=dead|first=Murray A.|last=Rubinstein}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.newsgd.com/gd/gdculture/content/2009-08/24/content_5621371.htm|title=Hakka culture GuangdongCulture |publisher=Newsgd.com|access-date=15 January 2015}}</ref> or '''Hakka Chinese''',<ref>{{Cite book|last=Yen|first=Ching-hwang|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NUfICgAAQBAJ&pg=PA379|title=The Chinese In Southeast Asia and Beyond: Socioeconomic and Political Dimensions|date=2008-07-21|publisher=World Scientific|isbn=978-981-4471-99-2|page=379|language=en}}</ref> or '''Hakkas''', are a southern [[Han Chinese subgroup]] whose principal settlements and ancestral homes are dispersed widely across the provinces of southern China and who speak a language that is closely related to [[Gan Chinese|Gan]], a Han Chinese dialect spoken in Jiangxi province. They are differentiated from other southern Han Chinese by their dispersed nature and tendency to occupy marginal lands and remote hilly areas. The Chinese characters for ''Hakka'' ({{lang|zh|{{linktext|客|家}}}}) literally mean "guest families".<ref name="lacroix-56">{{cite book |last=LaCroix |first=Frederick E. |title=The sky rained heroes: A journey from war to remembrance |publisher=Synergy Books |year=2009 |isbn=978-0-9821601-3-8 |location=Austin |page=56}}</ref> |
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{{Infobox Ethnic group |
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|group=Hakka<br>客家 Hak-kâ <br> 客家漢族<ref name="HH" /> |
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|image = <div style="margin-top:1px; margin-bottom:1px;"><br> |
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[[Image:Sun Yat-sen 1924 Guangzhou.jpg|70px]] </br> |
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[[Image:DengXiaoping.jpg|70px]] [[Image:Lee Kuan Yew.jpg|70px]] </br> [[File:Fannwong.jpg|70px]][[Image:Yap-Ah-Loy.jpg|70px]][[Image:EricTsang small.jpg|70px]] |
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|caption = From top to bottom right: [[Sun Yat-sen]], [[Deng Xiaoping]], [[Lee Kuan Yew]] <br>[[Fann Wong]], [[Yap Ah Loy]], [[Eric Tsang]] |
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|poptime=estimated 30 - 45 million worldwide |
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|popplace='''[[Greater China]]''' ([[Guangdong]], [[Fujian]], [[Jiangxi]], [[Guangxi]], [[Hong Kong]], [[Taiwan]]), '''[[Southeast Asia]]''' ([[Malaysia]], [[Indonesia]], [[Thailand]], [[Singapore]]) |
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|langs=[[Hakka (language)|Hakka]] + language(s) of their country of residence |
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|rels=Predominantly [[Mahayana Buddhism]], [[Confucianism]], [[Taoism]], [[Traditional Chinese religion]]. Minority [[Christianity]]. |
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|related=Other [[Han Chinese]], [[She people]]}} |
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{{Chinese |
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|c=[[wikt:客|客]][[wikt:家|家]] |
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|p=kèjiā |
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|gan=Kak6 Ga1 |
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|h=hag<sub>2</sub> ga<sub>24</sub> |
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|j=haak3 gaa1}} |
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The Hakka have settled in [[Guangdong]], [[Fujian]], [[Jiangxi]], [[Guangxi]], [[Sichuan]], [[Hunan]], [[Zhejiang]], [[Hainan]], and [[Guizhou]] in China, as well as in [[Taoyuan City]], [[Hsinchu County]], [[Miaoli County]], [[Pingtung County]], and [[Kaohsiung City]] in [[Taiwan]]. Their presence is especially prominent in the Lingnan or Liangguang area, comprising the [[Cantonese]]-speaking provinces of [[Guangdong]] and [[Guangxi]]. Despite being partly assimilated to the Cantonese-speaking population, they retain a significant presence there. |
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The '''Hakka''' people ([[Hakka (language)|Hakka language]]: 客家人 ''Hak-kâ ngin''; [[Mandarin Chinese]]: 客家人 ''Kèjiā ren'') also known as '''Hakka Han''',<ref name="HH">{{citation|last=Rubinstein|first=M. A|url=http://iir.nccu.edu.tw/attachments/journal/add/4/40-0304-12-2-6.pdf|publication-date =2004|title=Rethinking Taiwanese and Chinese Identity: Melissa J. Brown's Is Taiwan Chinese?|publisher=Institute of International Relations|volume=40|pages=454–458|isbn=1013-2511}}</ref><ref>[http://www.newsgd.com/gd/gdculture/content/2009-08/24/content_5621371.htm Guangdong Hakka culture] Newsgd.com.2009-August-24.Retrieved on 2010-March 6</ref> are [[Han Chinese]] who speak the [[Hakka (language)|Hakka language]] and based in the provinces of [[Guangdong]], [[Jiangxi]], and [[Fujian]] in [[China]]. Their ancestors were often said to have arrived from what is today's central China centuries ago.<ref>http://www.asiawind.com/hakka/history.htm</ref> It is said that in a series of migrations, the Hakkas moved, settled in their present locations in southern China, and then migrated overseas to various countries throughout the world.<ref>http://english.longyan.gov.cn/hakka/200810/t20081031_66680.htm</ref> They have had a significant influence on the course of Chinese and [[overseas Chinese]] history: in particular, they have been a source of revolutionary, political, and military leaders. |
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Like the other southern Han Chinese subgroups, Hakka mainly comprise Central Plains Chinese refugees fleeing social unrest, upheaval, and invasions. However, the Hakka were different in being late arrivals, moving from Central China into Southern China when the earlier groups of Han Chinese settlers in the south had already developed distinctive local identities and languages.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Li|first1=Hui|last2=Pan|first2=Wu-Yun|last3=Wen|first3=Bo|last4=Yang|first4=Ning-Ning|last5=Jin|first5=Jian-Zhong|last6=Jin|first6=Li|last7=Lu|first7=Da-Ru|title=Origin of Hakka and Hakkanese: a genetics analysis|journal=Acta Genetica Sinica|date=September 2003|volume=30|issue=9|pages=873–880|pmid=14577381}}</ref><ref name="ocac">{{cite web|url=http://edu.ocac.gov.tw/lang/hakka/english/a/a.htm|title=The Hakka: The Jews of Asia|publisher=Edu.ocac.gov.tw|access-date=15 January 2015|archive-date=9 September 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190909162739/http://edu.ocac.gov.tw/lang/hakka/english/a/a.htm|url-status=dead}}</ref> Their migration path was also different, and they entered Guangdong, Guangxi and Fujian via Jiangxi province, instead of traversing Hunan or moving along the Fujian coast. |
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== Migrations and group identification == |
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The use of the term ''Hakka'' to describe this people is thought to be comparatively recent, dating to the [[Qing Dynasty]] (c. 17th century).{{Citation needed|date=April 2009}} |
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Today, substantial numbers of Hakka Chinese have migrated overseas to various countries throughout the world.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://english.longyan.gov.cn/hakka/200810/t20081031_66680.htm|title=Welcome to Longyan Municipal People's Government, PRC|publisher=English.longyan.gov.cn|access-date=15 January 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140406133148/http://english.longyan.gov.cn/hakka/200810/t20081031_66680.htm|archive-date=6 April 2014|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref name="B">{{cite web|url=http://news.sina.com.cn/s/2003-02-16/161851996s.shtml?from=wap|title=客家文化探密:怀念先人 感念生活 客家人闹元宵|website=news.sina.com.cn}}</ref> |
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One theory of the Hakka people's origins suggests they could be related to the [[Xiongnu]] nomadic people, who had a considerable, sometimes dominating presence in northern China from the [[Han Dynasty|Han Dynasty (202 BC-AD 220)]] period to the [[Southern and Northern Dynasties|Southern and Northern Dynasties (420-589)]]<ref>http://lozada.davidson.edu/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/cyberhak.pdf</ref>, merging and assimilating within the general Han populace. However, the more commonly held view is the Hakka are a subgroup of the Han Chinese. Their ancestors migrated southwards several times because of social unrest, upheaval, and continued invasion by foreign forces since the [[Jin Dynasty (265-420)]]. Subsequent migrations occurred at the end of the [[Tang Dynasty]] in the 10th century and during the end of the [[Song Dynasty|Northern Song Dynasty]] in 1125 which saw a massive flood of refugees southward, when the [[Jurchens]] captured the northern Song capital of [[Kaifeng|Bianliang]]. A further southward migration may have continued as then [[Mongol]]s defeated the Jurchen Jin Dynasty and proceeded to take down the [[Song Dynasty|Southern Song]], establishing the [[Yuan Dynasty]] in 1271. It's unclear the precise movements of the Hakka people when the [[Ming Dynasty]] overthrew the Yuan in the 14th century, and subsequently fell to the [[Manchu]]s who formed the [[Qing Dynasty]] in 16th century. |
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==Origin and identity== |
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During the reign of [[Kangxi Emperor|Qing Emperor Kangxi]], the [[Great Clearance|coastal regions were evacuated]] by imperial edict for almost a decade, due to the dangers posed by the remnants of the Ming court who had fled to what is now Taiwan. When the threat was eliminated, the Kangxi Emperor issued an edict to re-populate the coastal regions. To aid the move, each family was given monetary incentives to begin their new lives; newcomers were registered as "Guest Families" (客戶, kèhù). |
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===Migrations=== |
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The Hakka arrived in southern China much later than other southern Han Chinese populations. These earlier waves of southern Han Chinese immigrants occupied the coastal areas and fertile lowlands and had already formed distinctive cultural identities and dialects. Consequently, the Hakka were forced to locate their settlements on marginal territories and relatively infertile land. |
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The Hakka arrived in the Lingnan region by traversing Jiangxi and Fujian. During their journey through Jiangxi they intermarried with the Yao and She, two non-Han ethnic minorities. In Fujian, they developed the habit of living in communal fortresses. Intermarriage with aboriginal groups and the adoption of habits that diverged from the Han, such as communal fortress living, increased the Cantonese distaste for the Hakka and aroused suspicion. |
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The existing [[Cantonese people|Cantonese speaking inhabitants]] (''[[Punti]]'' or 本地, "original land") of these areas were protective of their own more fertile lands, and the newcomers were pushed to the outer fringes of fertile plains, despite having migrated legitimately, or they settled in more mountainous regions to eke out a living. People were also able to purchase and sell land. Conflict between the two groups grew, and it is thought that "Hakka" was a term of derision used by the ''[[Punti]]'' aimed at the newcomers. Eventually, the tension between the two groups (the Hakkas had by then been settled for several hundred years, and could not be regarded as migrants in any sense) would lead to a series of 19th century skirmishes known as the [[Punti-Hakka Clan Wars]] (土客械鬥) in the [[Pearl River Delta]]. The problem was not that the two groups spoke a different tongue. In fact the 'locals' were composed of different people speaking several mutually unintelligible tongues, as typical of the Chinese country-side all over China, but they would regard each other as 'locals' or Puntis but not the Hakkas. |
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During the 16th century, in response to an economic boom, the Hakkas moved into hilly areas to mine for [[zinc]] and [[lead]] and also moved into the coastal plains to cultivate cash crops. After an economic downturn, many of these ventures failed, and many Hakka had to turn to pillaging to survive.<ref>{{cite book|title=Networks beyond Empires: Chinese Business and Nationalism in Hong Kong …|first= Huei-Ying|last=Kuo}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://edu.ocac.gov.tw/lang/hakka/english/a/a.htm|title=The Hakka People|website=全球華文網路教育中心|access-date=25 September 2011|archive-date=9 September 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190909162739/http://edu.ocac.gov.tw/lang/hakka/english/a/a.htm|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref name="ocac" /> |
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The term 'Punti' is not however synonymous with 'Cantonese', as a Cantonese in any other part of China, say for example Beijing, would not be able to call himself a 'Punti', as the puntis of that area would be of Beijing or Hebei people. |
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=== Genetic findings === |
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The term 'Punti' is a Hakka word given to the Cantonese by the Hakka people. In Cantonese, the Hakka word 'Punti' is pronounced 'boon-day'. |
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Studies show extensive gene flows and a very close relationship between the Hakka and the surrounding Han Chinese populations in the south.<ref name="Chen" /><ref name=":0">{{Cite journal |last1=Luo |first1=Chunfang |last2=Duan |first2=Lizhong |last3=Li |first3=Yanning |last4=Xie |first4=Qiqian |last5=Wang |first5=Lingxiang |last6=Ru |first6=Kai |last7=Nazir |first7=Shahid |last8=Jawad |first8=Muhammad |last9=Zhao |first9=Yifeng |last10=Wang |first10=Fenfen |last11=Du |first11=Zhengming |last12=Peng |first12=Dehua |last13=Wen |first13=Shao-Qing |last14=Qiu |first14=Pingming |last15=Fan |first15=Haoliang |date=2021-05-24 |title=Insights From Y-STRs: Forensic Characteristics, Genetic Affinities, and Linguistic Classifications of Guangdong Hakka and She Groups |journal=Frontiers in Genetics |language=English |volume=12 |doi=10.3389/fgene.2021.676917 |issn=1664-8021 |doi-access=free|pmid=34108995 |pmc=8181459 }}</ref><ref name=":1">{{Cite journal |last1=Feng |first1=Yuhang |last2=Zhao |first2=Yutao |last3=Lu |first3=Xiaoyu |last4=Li |first4=Haiyan |last5=Zhao |first5=Kai |last6=Shi |first6=Meisen |last7=Wen |first7=Shaoqing |date=2024-01-22 |title=Forensic analysis and sequence variation of 133 STRs in the Hakka population |journal=Frontiers in Genetics |volume=15 |pages=1347868 |doi=10.3389/fgene.2024.1347868 |issn=1664-8021 |pmc=10839782 |pmid=38317659 |doi-access=free}}</ref> According to a 2009 study published in the ''[[American Journal of Human Genetics]]'', Hakka are principally of Han Chinese descent,<ref name="Chen" /><ref name=":0" /><ref name=":1" /> exhibiting an average genetic difference of 0.32% with other tested Han Chinese persons.<ref name="Chen" /> Nonetheless, compared with other southern Han Chinese groups, the Hakka genetic profile exhibits a slight skew towards northern Han people.<ref name="Chen" /><ref name=":1" /> This is in line with their migratory history as later arrivals to the south than the other Han Chinese groups. |
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===Cultural identity=== |
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Over time, the term "Hakka" was adopted by the newcomers to refer to themselves, not least due to the migratory tendencies inherent in their own culture. However, because the term also covers [[Hakka (language)|Hakka language]]-speakers, (in the same way that Punti covered several people speaking different tongues) and because the Han Chinese registered as Guest Families who migrated at the time may not have been Hakka language-speakers, and because of intermarriages among Hakka and Punti members (which showed that relation between the two were very good at times), identification as Hakka was largely a matter of self-selection. Through studies of both [[Cantonese people|Cantonese]] and Hakka genealogies, some Hakka and Punti people with the same surnames claim the same ancestors, although their descendants strongly identify with one group to the exclusion of the other. |
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[[File:客家 Xaque - Hakka Couple in the Philippines - Boxer Codex (1590).jpg|thumb|Hakka peasants wearing [[Hanfu]] during [[Ming dynasty]], as depicted in the [[Boxer Codex]] (1590)]] |
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The Hakka identify as Han Chinese and genetic studies show they are principally of Han ancestry,<ref name=":0" /> despite a recorded history of intermarriage with minority groups such as the Yao and the She. Furthermore, the Hakka language belongs to the Sinitic group of languages, being linguistically proximate to the Gan dialect of Jiangxi. The Hakka also exhibit traditional Confucian values, such as a respect for family, ancestor veneration, and a commitment to both learning and the ideals of a Confucian gentleman. Finally, they carry Han Chinese surnames and use Han Chinese naming conventions. [[Lingnan]] Hakka place names indicate a long history of the Hakka being culturally Han Chinese.<ref>{{cite book |author=Herold Jacob Wiens |url=http://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/001257219 |title=China's march toward the tropics: a discussion of the southward penetration of China's culture, peoples, and political control in relation to the non-Han-Chinese peoples of south China and in the perspective of historical and cultural geography |publisher=Shoe String Press |year=1954 |page=270 |chapter=Chapter VIII: Ethnic Distribution |lccn=54013401 |oclc=576470153 |quote=taste which alone are sufficient to demonstrate that the ancestors of the Hakka had long been in the ranks of the Han-Chinese civilization. In the Hakka region, more than elsewhere in Ling-nan, are such excellent old names as Fu-yung-chang (Hibiscus Range), Chin-p'ing Shan (Brocade-screen Mountains), Sung-yuan-ch'i (Pine-springs)}}</ref> Like the Cantonese, they fiercely insisted on their Han identities and were principal movers of the [[Anti-Qing sentiment| Anti-Qing]] movement. |
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The Hakka ancestors are thus but one group amongst many who migrated southwards, becoming linguistically marked by differences yet unified through cultural assonances. Hakka people now are found in the southern Chinese provinces, chiefly in [[Guangdong]], south-western [[Fujian]], southern [[Jiangxi]], southern [[Hunan]], [[Guangxi]], southern [[Guizhou]], south-eastern [[Sichuan]], and on [[Hainan]] and [[Taiwan]] islands, where there are television news broadcasts in the Hakka language. The [[Hakka (language)|Hakka dialects]] across these various provinces differ [[phonology|phonologically]], but the Meixian (Meizhou) dialect of Hakka is considered the archetypal spoken form of the language. Migratory patterns have been established for some groups e.g. in Taiwan, northern and southern migrations from corresponding provinces in China. |
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However, the Hakka differed in their lifestyles and their preferred mode of habitation - living in large communal fortress-like buildings (known as [[Fujian tulou|''tulou)'']] instead of residing in courtyard houses (or [[Siheyuan|''siheyuan'']]). They also settled in marginal or hardscrabble hill land avoided by other Han Chinese subgroups, and in this regard, were considered similar to non-Han aborigines. They also exhibited gender egalitarianism to a greater degree than other southern Chinese.[[File:Hakka in China.png|thumb|Hakka language distribution in mainland China and Taiwan{{image citation needed|date=February 2024}}]]Unlike other Han Chinese groups, the Hakkas are not named after a geographical region, e.g. a province, county or city. The Hakka people have a distinct identity from the [[Cantonese people]]. As 60% of the Hakkas in China reside in Guangdong province, and 95% of overseas Hakkas ancestral homes are in Guangdong. Hakkas from [[Chaoshan]], Guangzhou, and [[Fujian]] may self-identify as only Chaoshanese, Cantonese and Hokkiens. |
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Although different, and also not different, in some social customs and culture (e.g. [[Hakka (language)|linguistic differences]]) from the surrounding population, the Hakkas are not a [[List of Chinese ethnic groups|separate ethnic group]]: they belong to the [[Han Chinese]] majority. Historical sources shown in census statistics relate only to the general population, irrespective of particular districts, provinces, or regions. These census counts were made during imperial times. They did not distinguish what language the population spoke. Therefore they do not directly document Hakka migrations. The study by [[Xianglin Luo|Luo Xianglin]], ''K'o-chia Yen-chiu Tao-Liu / An Introduction to the Study of the Hakkas'' (Hsin-Ning & Singapore, 1933) used genealogical sources of family clans from various southern counties. With population movement, it is reasonable to assume that there is mixing among both the Hakka newcomers and the indigenous people, and between the ''She'' and ''Hakka''. |
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===Distant origins=== |
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However, according to the recent 2009 studies made by American Journal of Human Genetics, it was found that comparing with other Southern Hans, Hakka's gene are slightly tilted towards Northern Hans. Nevertheless, the study has shown a strong common genetic relationship between all Han Chinese with only 0.3% difference.<ref>[http://hk.news.yahoo.com/article/091126/4/fd8v.html 星破解漢人基因圖譜 南北華人基因差異微妙] Yahoo News retrieved 2010-01-15</ref> |
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It is commonly held that the Hakkas are a subgroup of the Han Chinese that originated in the central plains.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Constable|first1=Nicole|title=Guest People: Hakka Identity in China and Abroad|date=2005|publisher= Univ. of Washington Press|location=Seattle|isbn=9780295984872|page=9}}</ref><ref name=hu-sp/> To trace their origins, a number of theories so far have been brought forth among anthropologists, linguists and historians:<ref name=wang/> |
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The Hakkas have a custom of buying the unwanted baby daughters of the Yue puntis in Guangdong, as Puntis favored sons over daughters. These Punti-moys (本地妹) then made brides for Hakka sons when they grew up. Hakka daughters did not enter Punti households in the same way, and there is no equivalent Hakka-mui term in the Punti vocabulary. The Yue punti genes thus entered Hakka populations. |
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#the Hakkas are Han Chinese originating solely from the [[Central Plain (China)|Central Plain]];<ref name=wang/> |
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==Social and cultural influences== |
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#the Hakkas are northern Han Chinese from the Central Plain with some inflow of Han Chinese from the south;<ref name=wang/> |
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{{Cleanup-section|date=February 2008}} |
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#the Hakkas are southern Han Chinese with some inflow of northern Han Chinese from the Central Plain.<ref name=wang/> |
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[[Image:Snail pit tulou.jpg|thumb| [[Fujian Tulou|Tulou]] buildings in Fujian]] |
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Due to their agrarian lifestyle, the Hakkas have a unique architecture based on defense and communal living (''See'' [[Hakka architecture]]), and a hearty savory cuisine based on an equal balance between texturised meat and vegetables, and fresh vegetables (''See'' [[Hakka cuisine]]). |
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The theories indicating a descent from both northern and southern Han are the most likely and are together supported by multiple scientific studies into the genetics.<ref name=hu-sp>{{cite journal|last=Hu|first=SP|author2=Luan, JA|author3=Li, B|author4=Chen, JX|author5=Cai, KL|author6=Huang, LQ|author7=Xu, XY|title=Genetic link between Chaoshan and other Chinese Han populations: Evidence from HLA-A and HLA-B allele frequency distribution|journal=American Journal of Physical Anthropology|date=January 2007|volume=132|issue=1|pages=140–50|pmid=16883565|doi=10.1002/ajpa.20460}}</ref><ref name=wang>{{cite journal|last=Wang|first=WZ|author2=Wang, CY|author3=Cheng, YT|author4=Xu, AL|author5=Zhu, CL|author6=Wu, SF|author7=Kong, QP|author8=Zhang, YP|title=Tracing the origins of Hakka and Chaoshanese by mitochondrial DNA analysis|journal=American Journal of Physical Anthropology|date=January 2010|volume=141|issue=1|pages=124–30|pmid=19591216|doi=10.1002/ajpa.21124|doi-access=free}}</ref><ref name="Chen">{{cite journal |last=Chen |first=Jieming |author2=Zheng, Houfeng |author3=Bei, Jin-Xin |author4=Sun, Liangdan |author5=Jia, Wei-hua |author6=Li, Tao |author7=Zhang, Furen |author8=Seielstad, Mark |author9=Zeng, Yi-Xin |author10=Zhang, Xuejun |author11=Liu, Jianjun |date=1 December 2009 |title=Genetic Structure of the Han Chinese Population Revealed by Genome-wide SNP Variation |journal=The American Journal of Human Genetics |volume=85 |issue=6 |pages=775–785 |doi=10.1016/j.ajhg.2009.10.016 |pmc=2790583 |pmid=19944401}}</ref> Furthermore, research into the mitochondrial DNA of the Hakka indicates that the majority of their matrilineal gene pool consists of lineages prevalent in the southern Han.<ref name=wang/> Clyde Kiang stated that the Hakkas' origins may also be linked with Han's ancient neighbors, the [[Dongyi]] and [[Xiongnu]] people.<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.taiwandocuments.org/language.htm|title=Related Topics: Non-legal Considerations: Language|publisher=Taiwandocuments.org|access-date=15 January 2015}}</ref> However, this is disputed by many scholars and Kiang's theories are considered to be false.<ref>{{cite book|last=Cheung|first=Sidney C.H.|title=On the south China track: Perspectives on anthropological research and teaching|year=1998|publisher=Hong Kong Institute of Asia-Pacific Studies, Chinese University of Hong Kong|location=Hong Kong|isbn=978-962-441-540-7|page=160}}</ref> |
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When Hakkas expanded into areas with pre-existing populations, there was often little agricultural land left for them to farm. As a result, many Hakka men turned towards careers in the military or public service. Consequently, the Hakka culturally emphasized education. |
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Hakka Chinese scientist and researcher Dr. Siu-Leung Lee stated in the book by Chung Yoon-Ngan, ''The Hakka Chinese: Their Origin, Folk Songs And Nursery Rhymes'', that the potential Hakka origins from the Northern Han and [[Xiongnu]] and that of the indigenous Southern [[She people|She]] and [[Baiyue|Yue]] tribes, "are all correct, yet none alone explain the origin of the Hakka", pointing out that the problem with [[DNA profiling]] on limited numbers of people within population pools cannot correctly ascertain who is really the Southern Chinese, because many Southern Chinese are also from Northern Asia; Hakka or non-Hakka.<ref>{{cite book|last=Choon|first=Yoon Ngan|title=The Hakka Chinese: Their Origin, Folk Songs And Nursery Rhymes|year=2005|publisher=Poseidon Books|location=BURLEIGH MDC QLD. 4220, AUSTRALIA|isbn=978-1-921005-50-3}}</ref> It is known that the earliest major waves of Hakka migration began due to the attacks of the two aforementioned tribes during the [[Jin dynasty (266–420)]].<ref name="Pioneers">{{cite book|last=Lee|first=Khoon Choy|title=Pioneers of modern China : understanding the inscrutable Chinese|year=2006|publisher=World Scientific Publishing|location=River Edge, New Jersey|page=62|isbn=9789812566188|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1jlOQc8BumIC&q=peru+20%2C000+Britain+15%2C200%2C+Vietnam+15.000&pg=PA65}}</ref> |
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Unlike the majority of other Han Chinese women, Hakka women did not practice [[footbinding]]. |
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=== Definitional problems and disambiguation === |
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Hakka people built [[Fujian Tulou|Tulou]] buildings which has been inscribed in 2008 by [[UNESCO]] as a [[World Heritage Site]]<ref>[http://whc.unesco.org/en/list/1113 Fujian Tulou - UNESCO World Heritage Centre<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>. |
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The study of this population group is complicated by linguistic uncertainty and nomenclatural ambiguity in the historical record. The term ''Hakka'' ({{lang|zh|{{linktext|客|家}}}}) is sometimes broadly used to refer to other southern Han Chinese groups during their southward migration. Imperial census statistics did not distinguish what [[varieties of Chinese]] the population spoke. Some family genealogies also employ the term Hakka ({{lang|zh|{{linktext|客|家}}}}) to refer to their southward migration, even though they belonged to the earlier groups of Han Chinese settlers and did not speak a Gan-affiliated language. These clans would be properly regarded as belonging to local dialect groups due to the timing of their arrival, the language they spoke, the customs they practiced, and the route of their traversal. These families were not part of the groups of settlers today associated with the Hakka, who arrived in southern China at a much later date through Jiangxi province and who spoke a Gan-affiliated language. |
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For example, the study by [[Lo Hsiang-lin]], ''K'o-chia Yen-chiu Tao-Liu / An Introduction to the Study of the Hakkas'' (Hsin-Ning & Singapore, 1933) used genealogical sources of family clans from various southern counties, leading to the inclusion of native southern Han Chinese families into the Hakka category. |
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===Martial arts=== |
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The Hakka community is also a source for a variety of martial arts. Those systems in general are referred to as [[Hakka Kuen]] (Hakka Fist). [[Southern Praying Mantis]], [[Bak Mei]] and Dragon [[Kung Fu]] are examples of styles practised by the Hakkas. |
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== Language == |
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{{Main|Hakka Chinese}} |
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[[Image:meizhou map2005.jpg|thumb|270px|left|[[Meizhou Prefecture]] (in yellow) in Guangdong Province, where [[Xingning]] and [[Mei County, Guangdong|Meixian]] are located]] |
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[[File:"I speak Hakka" sign.jpg|thumb|[[Hakka Chinese]] sign]] |
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===In Guangdong=== |
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The Hakkas who live in Guangdong comprise about 60% of the total Hakka population. Worldwide, over 95% of the overseas-descended Hakkas came from this Guangdong region, usually from [[Huizhou]]: the Hakkas there live mostly in the eastern part of the province, particularly in the so-called Xing-Mei ([[Xingning]]-[[Mei County, Guangdong|Meixian]]) area. Guangxi contains the second-largest Hakka community. Unlike their kin in Fujian, the Hakkas in the Xingning and Meixian area developed a non-fortress-like unique architectural style, most notably the weilongwu (Chinese: 圍龍屋, wéilóngwū or Hakka: Wui Lung Wuk) and sijiaolou (Chinese: 四角樓, sìjǐaolóu or Hakka: Si Kok Liu). |
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Hakka Chinese is the native Chinese variety of the Hakka people. Hakka Chinese is the closest Chinese variety to [[Gan Chinese]] in terms of phonetics, with scholars studies consider the late Old Gan together with Hakka Chinese and the Tongtai dialect of [[Jianghuai Mandarin]] to have been the [[lingua franca]] of the [[Southern and Northern dynasties|Southern dynasties]].<ref>Lu Guoyao (魯國堯), ''On Gan-Hakka and the Tongtai dialect derived from lingua franca of Southern Dynasties'' (客、贛、通泰方言源於南朝通語說), 2003, {{ISBN|7-5343-5499-4}}, pages 123–135</ref> Northern Hakka varieties have partial mutual intelligibility with southern Gan. Accordingly, Hakka is sometimes classified as a variety of Gan. Some studies posit that Hakka people and [[Gan people]] have close genetic relations and shared [[areal feature]]s.<ref>{{Cite book |title=The Sino-Tibetan Languages |date=2003 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=0-7007-1129-5 |editor-last=Thurgood |editor-first=Graham |language=en |editor-last2=LaPolla |editor-first2=Randy J.}}</ref> |
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===In Fujian=== |
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It was said that the early Hakka ancestors traveled from north China entered [[Fujian]] first, then through [[Tingjiang river]] they traveled to [[Guangdong]] and other parts of China and overseas. So [[Tingjiang river]] is also regarded as Hakka's Mother River. |
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In Taiwan, the [[Ministry of Education (Republic of China)|Ministry of Education]] named "Taiwanese Hakka Chinese" as one of the [[languages of Taiwan]].<ref>{{cite web|title=不僅只有台灣閩南語,台灣客家語也是「台語」!|url=http://www.hakka.gov.tw/content.asp?cuItem=124497&mp=2013|author=黃玉振|publisher=行政院客家委員會|date=25 May 2011|access-date=17 April 2012|quote=只要是共同生長於台灣這塊土地上的所有族群的成員,他們不僅都是台灣人,而且他們所操持的族群語言也都是「台灣話」(或「台語」)!|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130928032303/http://www.hakka.gov.tw/content.asp?cuItem=124497&mp=2013|archive-date=28 September 2013|url-status=dead}}</ref> |
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The Hakkas who settled in the mountainous region of south-western Fujian province developed a unique form of architectural building known as ''tu lou'' (土樓), literally meaning ''earthen structures''. The ''tu lou'' are round or square and were designed as a combined large fortress and multi-apartment building complex. The structures typically had only one entrance-way, with no windows at ground level. Each floor served a different function: the first floor containing a well and livestock, the second food storage and the third and higher floors contain living spaces. Tu-lou were built to withstand attack from bandits and marauders. |
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==Culture== |
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{{Main|Hakka culture}} |
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Nearly all of southern Jiangxi province is Hakka, especially in [[Ganzhou]]. |
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[[Hakka culture]] has been largely shaped by the new environment, which they had to alter many aspects of their culture to adapt, which helped influence their architecture and cuisine. When the Hakka expanded into areas with pre-existing populations in the South, there was often little agricultural land left for them to farm. As a result, many Hakka men turned towards careers in the military or in public service. |
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===In Sichuan=== |
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Emperor [[Kangxi]] (reigned AD 1662 to AD 1722), after a tour of the land, decided the province of Sichuan had to be repopulated after many wars. Seeing the Hakkas were living in poverty in the coastal regions in Guangdong province the Emperor encouraged the Hakkas in the south to emigrate to [[Sichuan]] province. He offered financial assistance to those who were willing to resettle in Sichuan; eight ounces of silver per man and four ounces per woman or child. |
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=== Architecture === |
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{{Main|Hakka architecture}} |
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During the late [[Ming Dynasty|Ming]] and [[Qing Dynasty|Qing]] Dynasties, [[Hong Kong]] was in the imperial district of Xin-An (Now [[Shenzhen]]) County.<ref>'''New Peace County''', ''A Chinese Gazetteer of the Hong Kong Region'' Peter Y.L. Ng, Hong Kong University Press, 1983. ISBN 962-209-043-5.</ref> The 1819 gazetteer lists 570 Punti and 270 Hakka contemporary settlements in the whole district.<ref>Ng (1983), p. 84.</ref>. However, the area covered by Xin-An county is greater than what was to become the British imperial enclave of Hong Kong by 1899. Although there had been settlers originating from the mainland proper even before the [[Tang Dynasty]], historical records of those people are non-extant, only evidence of settlement from archaeological sources can be found.<ref>See p.12, 圖片 香港今昔 by 高添強 (Gao TianQiang), 三聯書店. (1997 2nd Ed.) ISBN 962-04-1180-3</ref> The New Territories lowland areas had been settled originally by several clan lineages in Kam Tin, Sheung Shui, FanLing, Yuen Long and Taipo, and hence termed the [[Punti]] before the arrival of the Hakka, and fishing families of the [[Tanka]] and [[Hoklo]] groups to the area<ref>Gao 1997, p.16.</ref>. Since the prime farming land had already been farmed, the Hakka land dwellers settled in the less accessible and more hilly areas. Hakka settlements can be found widely distributed around the Punti areas, but in smaller communities. Many are found on coastal areas in inlets and bays surrounded by hills. |
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[[Image:China Fujian Tulou Gaobei Qiaofulou.jpg|thumb|[[Tianluokeng tulou cluster]]. [[Hukeng, Fujian]]]] |
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Hakka people built several types of [[tulou]] and peasant [[Hakka walled village|fortified villages]] in the mountainous rural parts of far western Fujian and adjacent southern Jiangxi and northern Guangdong regions. A representative sample of [[Fujian tulou]] (consisting of 10 buildings or building groups) in Fujian was inscribed in 2008 as a UNESCO [[World Heritage Site]].<ref>{{cite web |author=UNESCO World Heritage Centre |title=Fujian ''Tulou'' |url=https://whc.unesco.org/en/list/1113 |access-date=15 January 2015 |publisher=Whc.unesco.org}}</ref> |
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Hakka dialect speaking communities are thought to have arrived in the Hong Kong area after the rescinding of the [[Great Clearance|coastal evacuation]] order in 1688.<ref>'''Down to Earth.''' The Territorial Bond in South China. ed. David Faure & Helen Siu, Stanford University Press. (1995) ISBN 0-8047-2434-2. See p.123-160, in Patrick Hase's article 'Alliance of Ten'.</ref>, such as the Hakka speaking Lee clan lineage of [[Wo Hang]], one of whose ancestors is recorded as arriving in the area in 1688. |
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Another very popular architectural style in northern east Guangdong, such as [[Xingning, Guangdong|Xingning]] and [[Meixian District|Meixian]], is Wrapped Dragon Village ({{zh|t=圍龍屋|p=wéilóngwū|links=no}}). |
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As the strong Punti lineages dominated most of the north western New Territories, Hakka communities began to organise local alliances of lineage communties such as the [[Sha Tau Kok]] ''Alliance of Ten'' or ''Shap Yeuk'' as Patrick Hase writes.<ref>p.123-160, Faure & Siu, (1995)</ref>. Hakka villages from Wo Hang to the west and [[YanTian]] to the east of Sha Tau Kok came to use it as a local market town and it became the center of Hakka dominance. Further, the Shap Yeuk's land reclamation project transforming marshland to arable farmland with the creation of dykes and levvies to prevent storm flooding during the early nineteenth century shows an example of how local cooperation and the growing affluence of the landed lineages in the Alliance of Ten provided the strong cultural, socioeconomic Hakka influence on the area. |
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=== Cuisine === |
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Farming and cultivation has been the traditional occupations of Hakka families from imperial times up until the 1970s. Farming was mostly done by Hakka women while their menfolk sought labouring jobs in the towns and cities. Many men entered indentured labour abroad as was common from the end of the 19th century to Second World War. Post war, males took the opportunity to seek work in Britain and other countries later to send for their families to join them once they sent enough money back to cover travel costs. |
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{{Main|Hakka cuisine}} |
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[[File:Lei Cha in Vegeterian Restaurant.jpg|thumb|300x300px|Lei Cha, a very healthy dish made with green tea, basil, coriander and mugwort]] |
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Hakka cuisine is known for the use of preserved meats and tofu, as well as stewed and braised dishes. Some of the popular dishes are ''Yong Tau Foo'' and ''Lei Cha''. These dishes are popular in Taiwan, Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand, and Singapore. The taste profile is generally light, tending even towards blandness, with a preference for allowing the taste of the ingredients, especially the herbs, to emerge through any seasoning. |
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[[File:Malaysian Yong Tau Foo.jpg|thumb|300x300px|Yong Tau Foo in Malaysia, brought over by Hakka emigres]] |
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''[[Lei cha]]'' is a traditional [[Southern Chinese]] tea-based beverage or rice gruel that forms a part of [[Hakka cuisine]]. Ingredients include green tea, basil, sawtooth coriander, mug wort, and a kind of herb known as "Fu Yip Sum". Generally regarded as laborious and difficult to make. Usually eaten with side dishes. |
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''[[Yong tau foo]]'' is a Hakka Chinese food consisting primarily of tofu that has been filled with either a ground meat mixture or fish paste. It can be eaten dry with sauce or served in a soup base. |
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As post war education became available to all children in Hong Kong, a new educated class of Hakka became more mobile in their careers. Many moved to the government planned new towns which sprung up from the 1960s. The rural Hakka population began to decline as people moved abroad, and away to work in the urban areas. By the end of the 1970s, agriculture was firmly in the decline in Hakka villages.<ref>Gao, (1997)</ref> Today, there are still Hakka villages around Hong Kong, but being remote, many of their inhabitants have moved to the post war new towns like Sheung Shui, TaiPo, Shatin and further afield. |
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''[[Abacus seeds|Suanpanzi]]'' is another popular Hakka dish which literally means "abacus seeds". It consists of mainly yam or tapioca beaten in to the shape of abacus beads. The dish is served with minced pork or chicken and with light seasoning. |
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===Cuisine=== |
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The Hakka people have a marked cuisine and style of Chinese cooking which is little known outside the Hakka home. Hakka cuisine concentrates on the texture of food - the hallmark of Hakka cuisine. Whereas preserved meats feature in Hakka delicacy, stewed, braised, roast meats, 'texturized' contributions to the Hakka palate have a central place in their repertoire. In fact the raw materials for Hakka food are no different from raw materials for any other type of regional Chinese cuisine, what you cook depends on what is available in the market. Hakka cuisine may be described as outwardly simple but tasty. The skill in Hakka cuisine lies in the ability to cook meat thoroughly without hardening it, and to naturally bring out the proteinous flavour ([[umami]] taste) of meat. Most of the Chinese restaurants in the United Kingdom are owned by Hakkas.{{Citation needed|date=November 2007}} |
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=== Music === |
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The Hakkas who settled in the harbour and port areas of Hong Kong placed great emphasis on seafood cuisine. Hakka cuisine in Hong Kong is less dominated by expensive meats, instead emphasis is placed on an abundance of vegetables. Pragmatic and simple, Hakka cuisine is garnished lightly with sparse or little flavouring. Modern Hakka cooking in Hong Kong favours [[offal]], an example being Deep-Fried Intestines (炸大腸 or Tza Da Tzang). Others include tofu with preservatives, along with their signature dish Salt Baked Chicken (鹽焗雞 or Yam Guk Gai). Another specialty is the Poon Choy (盆菜).<ref>Sterling, Richard. Chong, Elizabeth. Qin, Lushan Charles. [2001] (2001) World Food Hong Kong. Hong Kong: Lonely Planet Publishing. ISBN 1-86450-288-6</ref> While it may be difficult to prove these were the actual diets of the old Hakka community, it is presently a commonly accepted view. The above dishes and their variations are in fact found and consumed throughout China including Guangdong, and are not particularly unique or confined to the Hakka Chinese population. Offal in China was/is also more expensive than meat, as was/is fatty pork more expensive than lean pork. Offal was/is a premier food in China. Other dishes consumed by Hakkas and many Chinese include chicken's feet and duck's feet. |
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[[File:Taiwanese Hakka Opera at the Zhongyuan festival.jpg|thumb|Taiwanese [[Hakka opera]] at the [[Ghost Festival]]]] |
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[[File:100年5月20日臺灣客家魅力嘉年華在台北世貿南港展覽館 展出現場拍攝有最道地的客家美食最精采的客家文化最豐富的客家傳統最精美的客家商品 - panoramio (66).jpg|thumb|Hakkapop festival]] |
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==== Hill song ==== |
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{{Main|Hakka hill song}} |
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It should be noted that the Hakka's modern societal structure and experience includes far more diverse and complex global elements than the Hong Kong landscape, where only a small fraction of the Hakka reside or have transitioned through. |
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Hakka hill songs are traditionally used by hillside farmers in parts of Taiwan and China, mainly for entertainment in the farming fields and courting practices. They are characterized by the strong, resonating melody and voice, which echo around hills and can be heard for up to a mile around the area. Hill songs can be considered a form of communication, as its participants often use it to communicate love songs or news. |
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===Preservation=== |
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In the latter half of the 20th century, a stronger emphasis has been placed on Hakka preservation through folk art and customs. A Hakka language dictionary has also been completed auspiciously on 1997 by Dr CF Lau [ISBN Reference: ISBN 962-201-750-9], a devoted contributor to the preservation of the Hakka language in Hong Kong. |
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==== Hakkapop ==== |
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{{Main|Hakka popular music}} |
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The Hakkas have emigrated to many regions worldwide, notably [[India]], [[Bangladesh]], [[Malaysia]], [[Singapore]], [[Indonesia]], [[Thailand]] and [[Myanmar]]. |
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Hakkapop is a genre of Hakka pop music made primarily in China, Taiwan, Malaysia and Indonesia. |
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=== Views on gender === |
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Hakka people also emigrated to [[Australia]], [[Brunei]], [[Canada]], the [[United States]], and to many countries in [[Europe]], including [[Great Britain]], [[France]], [[Spain]], [[Germany]], [[Austria]], [[Belgium]], and the [[Netherlands]]. Hakka people also are found in [[South Africa]] and [[Mauritius]], on the islands of the [[Caribbean]] ([[Jamaica]] and [[Trinidad and Tobago]], and in [[Americas|Central and South America]], particularly in [[Panama]] and [[Brazil]]. Most expatriate Hakka in Great Britain have ties to Hong Kong; many emigrated when Hong Kong still was a British colony during a period coinciding with the Cultural Revolution of China and economic depression in Hong Kong. There was once a sizable Hakka community in [[Kolkata|Calcutta]], but most have migrated to [[Canada]], the [[United States]], [[Australia]], [[Taiwan]] or [[Austria]]. Today there are about 90-100 million Hakka speakers around the world. In Malaysia, Singapore and Indonesia, Hakka people are sometimes known as ''Khek'', the [[Hokkien]] (Minnan) pronunciation of the ''Hak'' in ''Hakka''. |
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Historically, Hakka women did not [[Foot binding|bind their feet]] when the practice was commonplace in other parts of China.<ref name=Davis>{{cite book|last1=Davis|first1=Edward L.|title=Encyclopedia of Contemporary Chinese Culture|date=2005|publisher=Routledge|location=London|isbn=9780415241298|page=333|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2rLBvrlKI7QC&pg=PA333}}</ref> Hakka women are known for their independent nature and willingness to engage in hard work typically reserved for men in other dialect groups. |
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This may have been driven by historical necessity rather than cultural differences, since the Hakka employed marginal hill lands which were less fertile than the river valley occupied by other Han subgroups, such as the Cantonese, the Teochew and the Hoklo people. |
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===Hakkas in Indonesia=== |
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Migration of Hakka people to Indonesia happened in several waves. The first wave landed in [[Bangka Island]] and Belitung islands as tin miners in the 18th century. The second group of colonies were established along the [[Kapuas River]] in [[Kalimantan]] in the 19th century. The [[Kwangtung]] [[Hakka]] settlers even established the [[Lanfang Republic]] in [[Kalimantan|Western Kalimantan]] which lasted 107 years and had 10 presidents in 1777, until it was ended by [[Dutch East Indies|Dutch occupation]] in 1884. In the early 20th century, new arrivals from Meixian joined their compatriots as traders and labourers in major cities such as [[Jakarta, Indonesia|Jakarta]] and [[Pontianak, Indonesia|Pontianak]]. |
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=== Media === |
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In 1950, China Central People's Broadcasting Station recruited the first Hakka broadcaster, Zhang Guohua, based on a radius of two kilometers from the Meixian government. On April 10, 1950, the '''Voice of Hakka (客家之聲)''' started broadcasting. It broadcast nine hours of Hakka Chinese programs every day through shortwave radio and online radio, targeting countries and regions where Hakka people gather, such as Japan, Indonesia, Mauritius, Reunion Island, Australia, Hong Kong and Taiwan. |
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Hakkas also live in Indonesia's largest [[tin]] producer islands of [[Bangka Belitung province]].<ref>{{cite news|url=http://merito.wordpress.com/2007/08/19/dari-tiongkok-ke-pulau-bangka-bedol-desa-ala-kuli-tionghoa|publisher=AMCA|title=Dari Tiongkok ke Pulau Bangka Bedol Desa ala Kuli Tionghoa|date= August 19, 2007. Retrieved on 2007-September 10}}</ref> They are the second majority ethnic group after [[Malays (ethnic group)|Malay]] at about 330,000.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.asiawind.com/forums/read.php?f=1&i=9449&t=9449|publisher=Asiawind |title=Hakka ngin in Bangka Islands, Indonesia|date= October 27, 2005. Retrieved on 2007-September 10}}</ref> The Hakka population in the province is also the second largest in Indonesia after [[West Kalimantan]]'s and one of the highest percentages of Chinese living in Indonesia. |
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In 1988, '''Meizhou Television Station (梅州電視臺)''' was founded. In 1994, '''Hakka Public Channel''', also known as '''Meizhou TV-2''' had started broadcasting. Hakka Chinese began to appear in television programs. In 2021, it was renamed [[:zh:梅州廣播電視台客家生活頻道|'''Hakka Life Channel (客家生活頻道)''']]. |
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The first ancestors of Hakkas in Bangka and Belitung reached the islands in the 1700s from [[Guangdong]]. Many of them worked as tin mining labourers. Since then, they have remained on the island along with the native Malay. Their situation was much different from those of Chinese and native populations of other regions, where legal cultural conflicts were prevalent since the 1960s until 1999, by which [[Indonesian Chinese]] had finally regained their cultural freedoms. Here they lived together peacefully and still practiced their customs and cultural festivals, such as in celebrating the Chinese New Year and Qingming, while in other regions they were strictly banned by government legislation prior to 1999.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.kompas.com/kompas-cetak/0608/23/humaniora/2898211.htm|publisher=KOMPAS|title=Kebersamaan Tanpa Prasangka |date= August 23, 2006. Retrieved on 2007-September 10}}</ref> The majority religions of ''Chinese Babel'' are [[Confucianism]] and [[Buddhism]], with a significant number who are [[Christian]]. A small number are of [[confessed]] Islam as some have married Malays. |
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In 1991, '''Meizhou People's Broadcasting Station (梅州人民廣播電臺)''', also known as '''Meizhou Wired Broadcasting Station (梅州有線廣播電臺)''' officially started broadcasting. Meizhou Radio News: FM94.8 or urban FM101.9. Meizhou Radio Traffic Channel: FM105.8 MHz. Meizhou Radio Private Car Channel: FM94.0 or urban FM103.9. Until now, Hakka Chinese is still used for news program, radio drama program, emotional program, entertainment program and cultural program. |
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Hakkas on the island of Bangka have an unusual accent, said to be heavily influenced by Malay, especially in younger generations. The younger generations speak much more Malay than the older Hakka. As Chinese languages employ tones to distinguish different words, differences in tone can change a word's meaning entirely; the Hakka dialect spoken by the islanders has such a different tonal system that their spoken language is hardly intelligible to Hakkas of other regions. However, they still refer to themselves as ''Thong ngin'' as do the younger people, and speak ''Thong boi''. ''Hakka ngin'' words are unpopular, as well as ''Hakkafa''. The Hakka spoken in the [[Muntok]] area in Bangka is considered to be standard. Many Hakkas in the province have moved outside the islands, especially to [[Jakarta]]. There are more than 30,000 - 50,000 ''Chinese Babel'' in Jakarta who speak both Malay and ''Thong boi''. |
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In 1999, '''3CW Chinese Radio Australia (3CW澳大利亞中文廣播電臺)''' was launched. It used Mandarin, Cantonese and Hakka. |
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There is also a large Chinese population from Bangka and Belitung who live abroad, such as in [[China]] and [[Hongkong]]. They are proud to be ''Chinese Bangka Belitung'', so they regularly return home once or twice a year to celebrate Chinese New Year, or to pay their respects at [[Qingming]].<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.kompas.com/kompas-cetak/0504/15/tanahair/1653384.htm |
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|publisher=KOMPAS|title=Menengok Kelenteng-kelenteng Tua di Bangka |date= April 15, 2005. Retrieved on 2007-September 10}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.kompas.com/ver1/Nusantara/0704/05/095115.htm|publisher=KOMPAS|title=Ribuan Warga Tionghoa Rayakan Ceng Beng|date= August 19, 2007. Retrieved on 2007-September 10}}</ref> |
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In 2001, Meizhou Television Station merged with Meizhou People's Broadcasting Station and was renamed '''[[:zh:梅州市广播电视台|Meizhou Radio and Television Station (MRT, 梅州廣播電視臺)]]'''. In 2004, the station had officially completed its establishment. |
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====Pontianak==== |
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Hakka people in <!-- delete -- Indonesia are found primarily in cities in Western Kalimantan (Borneo), such as--> [[Pontianak, Indonesia|Pontianak]] live alongside with ''teochew'' speaking Chinese. Whilst the ''teochews'' are dominant in the centre of Pontianak, the hakkas are more dominant in small towns along the [[Kapuas River]] in the regencies of Sanggau, Sekadau and Sintang. Their hakka dialect is originally of ''Mei Xien'' (Hakka: MoiYan) standard but heavily influenced by the ''teochews'' dialect and vocabularies from the local Malay and [[Dayak people|Dayak]] tribes. |
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In 2003, '''[[:zh:台灣公共廣播電視集團|Taiwan Broadcasting System (TBS, 臺灣公共廣播電視集團)]]''' established a Hakka satellite cable channel "'''[[Hakka TV]]'''". In Taiwan, there are seven Hakka Chinese radio channels. |
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The Hakkas in this region are descendants of gold prospectors who migrated from China in the late 19th century. |
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In 2005, '''Meixian Radio and Television Station (梅縣廣播電視臺)''' was reorganized after the separation of the National Cultural System Reform Bureau. It is a public institution under the jurisdiction of the Meixian County Party Committee and County Government. The channel can be watched in Meizhou and surrounding area with an audience of over 4 million people. |
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====Singkawang==== |
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The Hakkas in [[Singkawang]] and the surrounding regencies of [[Sambas]], [[Bengkayang]], [[Ketapang]] and Landak speak a different standard of Hakka dialect to the Hakkas along the Kapuas River. Their place of origin in China is ''tai phu'' ([[Dabu]] 大埔), a district in Mei Xien. also Fuk Luk Hoi which means winds of the six seas. |
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In 2012, '''Voice of Hong Kong (香港之聲)''' started broadcasting. Hakka Chinese is used on Sihai Kejia Channel. |
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====Jakarta==== |
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Hakka can still be heard in some commercial districts in Jakarta. Their numbers increase with internal migrations from the three regions mentioned above. |
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In 2019, '''Shenzhou Easy Radio (神州之聲)''' added a Hakka Chinese radio break which broadcasts to the southeast coast of mainland China, Taiwan, Southeast Asia, the South Pacific and Japan. On '''Radio The Greater Bay (大灣區之聲)''', Sihai Kejia Channel has also joined. |
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===In East Timor=== |
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There was a relatively large and vibrant Hakka community in [[East Timor]] before the Indonesian invasion in 1975. According to the local Chinese Timorese association's estimation, the Hakka population in 1975 was estimated to be around 25,000 (including a small minority of other Chinese ethnicity from Macau). During the invasion, many Hakkas were killed. According to a book source, it was estimated that about 700 Hakkas were killed on the first week of invasion in Dili alone. No clear numbers had been recorded since many Hakkas evacuated and escaped to [[Australia]]. Recent re-establishment of Hakka associations registered approximately about 2,400 Hakkas remaining (400 families, including part Timorese families) in East Timor. |
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In 2023, The ''[[Xuexi Qiangguo]]'' (學習強國) Platform under the supervision of the [[Publicity Department of the Chinese Communist Party]] added automatic broadcasting in Hakka Chinese.{{cn|date=August 2024}} |
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Now Hakka diaspora can be found in [[Darwin, Northern Territory|Darwin]] and spread-out in major cities such as [[Brisbane]], [[Sydney]] and [[Melbourne]] of Australia, Portugal, Macau and small numbers in other parts of the world. They often are highly-educated, and many continue their education in Taiwan or China, while a majority of the younger generation study in Australia. The Australian government took some years to assess their claims to political asylum in order to establish their credentials as genuine refugees and not illegal immigrants, as partially related to the political situation in East Timor during that time. As no Asian country was willing to accept them as residents, nor to grant political asylum to displaced Hakka and other Timorese, they were forced to live as stateless persons for a time. Despite this condition, many Hakkas had become successful, and established restaurant chains, shops, supermarkets, and import operations in Australia. Since the independence of East Timor in 2000, some Hakka families had returned and invested in businesses in the newborn nation. |
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== |
== Religion == |
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{{See also|Religion in China}} |
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Hakkas form the second largest subgroup of the ethnic Chinese population of [[Malaysia]]. During this time, [[Chung Keng Quee]], Capitan China of Perak and Penang was founder of Taiping, leader of the Hai San, a millionaire philanthropist, an innovator in the mining of tin and was respected by both Chinese and European communities in the early colonial settlement. A well known Hakka man was [[Yap Ah Loy]], a [[Kapitan]] in [[Kuala Lumpur]] from 1868 to 1885, where he brought significant economic contributions, founded Kuala Lumpur and also was an influential figure among the ethnic Chinese. <!-- where's the stats to show the hakka is the 2nd largest ethnic group in Malaysia? and who said the hakka restaurant available in KL? why didn't you include the reference when it's available? ~~~~ --> |
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[[File:Hukengcun - tombs south of town - DSCF3607.JPG|thumb|Typical traditional hillside tombs. [[Hukeng, Fujian]]]] |
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The religious practices of Hakka people are largely similar to those of other Han Chinese. [[Ancestor veneration in China|Ancestor veneration]] is the primary form of religious expression.<ref>{{cite book|last=Lozada|first=Eriberto|editor1-last=Ember|editor1-first=Carol R.|editor2-last=Ember|editor2-first=Melvin|editor3-last=Skoggard|editor3-first=Ian|title=Encyclopedia of Diasporas: Immigrant and Refugee Cultures Around the World|volume=2|date=2005|publisher=Springer Science & Business Media|location=Dordrecht, Netherlands|isbn=9780306483219|pages=92–103|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7QEjPVyd9YMC&pg=PA92}}</ref> One distinctively Hakka religious practice involves the worship of dragon deities.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://subtpg.tpg.gov.tw/web-life/taiwan/9802/9802-12.html |title=客家夥房的土地龍神 |access-date=10 August 2017 |archive-date=19 April 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120419051110/http://subtpg.tpg.gov.tw/web-life/taiwan/9802/9802-12.html |url-status=dead }}</ref> |
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==Discrimination== |
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In [[East Malaysia]], they form a significant part of the [[Borneo|Bornean]] state of [[Sabah]] where most of the ethnic Chinese are of Hakka descent. The story goes that in the late 19th century, the British, who had just colonised [[Sabah]] (then known as British North Borneo), opted to bring in Hakka labourers from [[Guangdong]] country because the Hakka were known to be industrious workers. The first batch of Hakkas brought here landed in [[Kudat]] on April 4, 1883 under the leadership of Lo Tai Fung. In the following decades Hakka immigrants settled throughout the state, with their main population centres in [[Kota Kinabalu]] (then known as Jesselton), [[Sandakan]], [[Tawau]] and [[Kudat]]. According to the 1991 census, there were 113000 Hakkas in the state. This constituted 57% of the total ethnic [[Chinese people|Chinese]] population in [[Sabah]]. The second largest Chinese subgroup were the Cantonese with only 28000 persons.<ref name=ref1>http://www.asiawind.com/forums/read.php?f=1&i=4039&t=4028</ref> This shows that [[Sabah]] is one of very few regions in the world where Hakkas clearly outnumber other Chinese subgroups. Most of the Hakkas in Sabah speak with the [[Huizhou|Huiyang]] accent (Hakka: Fuiyong, 惠陽). Hakka is the lingua franca among the Chinese in Sabah to such an extent that Chinese of other subgroups who migrate to [[Sabah]] from other states in [[Malaysia]] and elsewhere usually end up learning the Hakka dialect. |
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===Imperial era - Qing dynasty=== |
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People of Hakka ancestry comprised the notable mainstay of the [[Taiping Heavenly Kingdom]], although other dialect groups also enlisted. The leader of the [[Xiang Army]], [[Zeng Guofan]], had a special contempt for Hakka women, referring to them as "hillbilly witches". |
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In retaliation for killing three Hunanese officers, the Xiang Army exterminated the entire Hakka population of Wukeng and [[Chixi, Guangdong|Chixi]] during military counter-attacks on the Hakkas in the year 1888. The army also massacred tens of thousands of other Hakkas in Guanghai, a region of Taishan, Guangdong. Many of the killings in Guanghai took place in the Dalongdong area.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Zhang |first=Wei-Bin |date=December 2007 |title=New China's Long March from Servility to Freedom |journal=Nova Science Publication}}</ref> |
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===In Jamaica=== |
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Most [[Chinese Jamaicans]] are Hakka and they have a long history in [[Jamaica]]. Between 1845 and 1884, nearly 5000 Hakka arrived in Jamaica on 3 major voyages. Most came to Jamaica under contract as indentured servants. Under the terms of the contract, free return passage was available for any Hakka who wanted to return to China. Most of them did.<ref>[http://www.chinesejamaican.com/history.html Hakka Chinese Jamaican<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> In 1854, 205 Chinese workers who had been working on the Panama canal arrived in Jamaica. They had demanded re-settlement due to the threat of [[Yellow Fever]] in Panama. Many were ill upon arrival in Jamaica and were immediately hospitalized in Kingston. Less than 50 of these immigrants survived. The rest died of Yellow Fever. |
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The Taiping rebellion caused millions of casualties on both sides. In retaliation, after defeating the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom, the Xiang Army targeted Hakka villages and is estimated to have killed ~30,000 Hakkas every day during the height of the retaliation.<ref>''The Hakka Odyssey & their Taiwan homeland''. p. 120, Clyde Kiang. 1992</ref> |
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Chin Pa-kung (a.ka. Jackson Chin), opened a wholesale business in Kingston where the Desnoes and Geddes building now stands. Chang Si-Pah and Lyn Sam opened groceries nearby. These gentleman provided guidance for other Chinese immigrants to Jamaica.<ref>[http://www.jamaica-gleaner.com/pages/history/story0055.htm Jamaica Gleaner: Pieces of the Past: The Arrival Of The Chinese]</ref> |
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===Discrimination against Hakka by the Cantonese === |
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During the 1960s-1970s, there was substantial migration of Hakka Jamaican Chinese to the USA and Canada. |
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Cantonese people have had a history of friction with Hakka, despite the both of them being Han subgroups speaking varieties of Chinese that exhibit relatively high mutual intelligibility (both dialects tracing straightforward descent from Middle Chinese). The Cantonese regarded the Hakka as displaying non-Han habits and as opportunists intruding on Cantonese territory. The conflict between the two groups led to one of the largest inter-ethnic genocides in history. |
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====Mass killings of Hakkas in China==== |
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===In Mauritius=== |
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[[File:Crane Lake Wei (Longgang Museum of Hakka Culture) 1.jpg|thumb|Shenzhen Hakkas Folk Customs Museum-Hehu New Residence]] |
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The vast majority of Mauritian Chinese are Hakkas. Most of the Mauritian Hakkas emigrated to Mauritius in the mid 1940's came from the Guangdong province, especially from the Meizhou or Meixian region. |
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The [[Red Turban Rebellion (1854–1856)|Red Turban]] rebels, who were mostly of Cantonese ancestry, carried out a genocidal campaign against the Hakkas during a revolt against the Qing dynasty. The Cantonese Red Turbans killed 13 Hakka village chiefs and 7,630 other Hakkas while on their way to Heshan, and after conquering it, they killed another 1,320 Hakkas. |
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The bloody [[Punti–Hakka Clan Wars]], saw reciprocal massacres by both groups, but the Hakka bore the brunt of the casualties. This war eventually killed some 500,000 Hakkas (or quite possibly even more). During these killings, the Cantonese generally collaborated with the Xiang people, since both dialect groups had an axe to grind against the Hakka. |
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In retaliation for a Hakka massacre of Cantonese people, Cantonese peasants butchered 500 Hakkas in a village located in the rural Enping county forcing the surviving Hakkas to flee, but these refugees, who numbered some 4,000 Hakka, were later all caught and killed by Cantonese peasants, who spared neither women nor child. Government officials mobilized officers and men from the local Cantonese peasants to regain the Guanghai area which was occupied by the Hakkas. The number of Hakkas killed was tens of thousands in the Dalongdong area of Guanghai alone. |
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====Discrimination and hatred of Hakka outside Guangdong==== |
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The Cantonese murdered more than 70 Hakka fellow provincials in Shanghai under the justification of a Hakka conspiracy that the [[Jiaying]] group was surrendering the city to foreign control.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rOSDktQ4q0IC&pg=PA80|title=Native Place, City, and Nation: Regional Networks and Identities in Shanghai, 1853–1937|page=80|isbn=9780520915459|last1=Goodman|first1=Bryna|date=20 October 1995|publisher=University of California Press }}</ref> On 27 August 1925, villages in a county belonged to the Hakka minority were attacked, Chiang's Punti (Cantonese) men and soldiers did not hesitate to rape their women and pillage their homes.<ref>The Broken Wave: The Chinese Communist Peasant Movement, 1922–1928, Volume 90 By Roy Hofheinz [https://archive.org/details/brokenwavechines0000hofh/page/220 <!-- quote=punti rape hakka rape. -->]</ref> |
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Inter-ethnic hatred between the two groups also rose to a boil in Malaysia. Memories of conflict and old grudges sparked another round of conflict between the Hakkas and Cantonese in Perak, [[British Malaya|Malaya]], leading to the [[Larut Wars]]. |
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Upon arriving in Madagascar, the Cantonese colluded to prevent any Hakka migration to Madagascar. |
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==== By Guangxi people ==== |
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More than 100,000 Hakkas were slaughtered by the locals in Guangxi province during another clan war. In October 1850, the Cantonese and Hakkas were hacking and killing each other for over 40 days in [[Guigang]].{{citation needed|date=February 2024}} |
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===Attacks against Hakka by the Lingao people=== |
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Between 1925 and 1926, thousands were killed and wounded when the ethnic hatred of the Hakkas by the natives of [[Lingao]] turned violent in northwestern Hainan.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7FjrBgAAQBAJ&pg=PA202|title=Peasants without the Party: Grassroots Movements in Twentieth-Century China: Grassroots Movements in Twentieth-Century China|first=Lucien|last=Bianco|date=4 March 2015|publisher=Routledge|isbn=9781317463108|via=Google Books}}</ref> |
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==Hakka in mainland China== |
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[[Image:meizhou map2005.jpg|thumb|left|[[Meizhou Prefecture]] (in yellow) in Guangdong Province, where [[Xingning, Guangdong|Xingning]] and [[Mei County, Guangdong|Meixian]] are located.]] |
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Hakka populations are found in 13 out of the 27 [[Provinces of China|provinces]] and [[Autonomous regions of China|autonomous regions]] of mainland China. |
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===Guangdong=== |
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[[File:At home with the Hakkas in South China (1921) (14775083364).jpg|thumb|right|Christian missionaries with Hakka students of a girls' school in [[Waichow]], [[Guangdong]], 1921.]] |
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Hakkas who live in Guangdong comprise about 60% of the total Hakka population. Worldwide, over 95% of the overseas-descended Hakkas came from this Guangdong region, usually from [[Meizhou]] and [[Heyuan]] as well as other towns such as [[Shenzhen]], [[Jieyang]], [[Dongguan]] and [[Huizhou]]. Hakkas live mostly in the northeast part of the province, particularly in the so-called Xing-Mei ([[Xingning, Guangdong|Xingning]]–[[Mei County, Guangdong|Meixian]]) area. Unlike their kin in Fujian, Hakka in the Xingning and Meixian area developed a non-fortress-like unique architectural style, most notably the weilongwu ({{zhi|t=圍龍屋|p=wéilóngwū}} or Hakka: Wui Lung Wuk) and sijiaolou ({{zhi|t=四角樓|p=sìjǐaolóu}} or Hakka: Si Kok Liu). |
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===Fujian=== |
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[[File:Chengqilou gun hole.JPG|thumb|right|Gun port in a Hakka [[Fujian tulou]]]] |
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[[File:Gun for defense.JPG|thumb|right|A musket in a Hakka Fujian tulou]] |
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Tradition states that the early Hakka ancestors traveling from north China entered Fujian first, then by way of the [[Ting River]] they traveled to Guangdong and other parts of China, as well as overseas. Thus, the Ting River is also regarded as the Hakka Mother River. |
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The Hakkas who settled in the mountainous region of south-western Fujian province developed a unique form of architecture known as the ''[[tulou]]'' ({{lang|zh|土樓}}), literally meaning ''earthen structures''. The ''tulou'' are round or square and were designed as a combined large fortress and multi-apartment building complex. The structures typically had only one entrance-way, with no windows at ground level. Each floor served a different function: the first floor contained a well and livestock, the second food storage and the third and higher floors living spaces. ''Tulou'' were built to withstand attack from bandits and marauders. |
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Today, Western Fujian is inhabited by 3 million Hakkas, scattered around villages in 10 counties (county-level 'cities' and districts) in Longyan and Sanming prefectures, 98% of whom are Hakkas living in Changting, Liancheng, Shanghang, Wuping, Yongding, Ninghua, Qingliu and Mingxi counties.<ref name="en.people.cn">{{cite web|url=http://en.people.cn/200011/21/eng20001121_55741.html|title=Townsmen Sentiment Always Serves as a Link|website=en.people.cn}}</ref> |
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===Jiangxi=== |
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Jiangxi contains the second largest Hakka community. Nearly all of southern Jiangxi province is Hakka, especially in [[Ganzhou]]. In the Song dynasty, a large number of Han Chinese migrated to the delta area as the Court moved southward because invasion of northern minority. They lived in Jiangxi and intermixed with the She and Yao minorities. Ganzhou was the place that the Hakka have settled before migrating to Western Fujian and Eastern Guangdong. During the early Qing dynasty, there was a massive depopulation in Gannan due to the ravage of pestilence and war. However, Western Fujian and Eastern Guangdong suffered population explosion at the same time. Some edicts were issued to block the coastal areas, ordering coastal residents to move to the inland. The population pressure and the sharp contradiction of the land redistribution drove some residents to leave. Some of them moved back to Gannan, integrating with other Hakka people who lived there already for generations. Thus, the modern Gannan Hakka community was finally formed.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.gndaily.com/english/2009-01/03/content_100656.htm|title=Ganzhou.China|publisher=Gndaily.com|access-date=15 January 2015|archive-date=4 March 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304102554/http://www.gndaily.com/english/2009-01/03/content_100656.htm|url-status=dead}}</ref> |
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===Sichuan=== |
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The [[Kangxi Emperor]] ({{reign|1662|1722}}) after a tour of the land, decided the province of [[Sichuan]] had to be repopulated after the devastation caused by [[Zhang Xianzhong]]. Seeing the Hakka were living in poverty in the coastal regions in [[Guangdong province]], the emperor encouraged the Hakkas in the south to migrate to Sichuan province. He offered financial assistance to those willing to resettle in Sichuan: eight ounces of silver per man and four ounces per woman or child. |
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Sichuan was originally the origin of the Deng lineage until one of them was hired as an official in Guangdong during the [[Ming dynasty]] but during the Qing plan to increase the population in 1671 they came to Sichuan again. [[Deng Xiaoping]] was born in Sichuan.<ref name="Dai2009">{{cite book|author=Yingcong Dai|title=The Sichuan Frontier and Tibet: Imperial Strategy in the Early Qing|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DYHfVVAAf_kC&pg=PA25|year=2009|publisher=University of Washington Press|isbn=978-0-295-98952-5|pages=25–}}</ref> |
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===Hunan=== |
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Hakka people are mainly concentrated in Liuyang and Liling villages. |
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===Henan=== |
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As with those in Sichuan, many Hakka emigrated to [[Xinyang|Xinyang Prefecture]] (in Southern Henan Province), where [[Li Zicheng]] carried out a massacre in Guangzhou (now in [[Huangchuan]]) on 17 January 1636. |
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== Hakka in Hong Kong == |
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[[File:Sam Tung Uk Assembly Hall view 202007.jpg|thumb|[[Sam Tung Uk Museum]]]] |
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During the 15th century to 19th century, [[Hong Kong]] was in the imperial district of [[Bao'an County|Xin'an]] (now [[Shenzhen]]) County.<ref>''New Peace County, A Chinese Gazetteer of the Hong Kong Region'' Peter Y.L. Ng, Hong Kong University Press, 1983. {{ISBN|962-209-043-5}}.</ref> The [[Gazetteer of Xin'an County|1819 gazetteer]] lists 570 [[Punti]] and 270 Hakka contemporary settlements in the whole district.<ref>Ng (1983), p. 84.</ref> However, the area covered by Xin'an county is greater than what was to become the British imperial enclave of Hong Kong [[Convention for the Extension of Hong Kong Territory|by 1898]]. Although there had been settlers originating from the mainland proper even before the Tang dynasty, historical records of those people are non-extant, only evidence of settlement from archaeological sources can be found.<ref>See p.12, 圖片 香港今昔 by 高添強 (Gao TianQiang), 三聯書店. (1997 2nd Ed.) {{ISBN|962-04-1180-3}}</ref> The [[New Territories]] lowland areas had been settled originally by several clan lineages in [[Kam Tin]], [[Sheung Shui]], [[Fanling]], [[Yuen Long]], [[Lin Ma Hang]] and [[Tai Po]] and hence termed the Punti before the arrival of the Hakka, and fishing families of the [[Tanka people|Tanka]] and [[Hoklo people|Hoklo]] groups to the area.<ref>Gao 1997, p.16.</ref> Since the prime farming land had already been farmed, the Hakka land dwellers settled in the less accessible and more hilly areas. Hakka settlements can be found widely distributed around the Punti areas, but in smaller communities. Many are found on coastal areas in inlets and bays surrounded by hills. |
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Hakka-speaking communities are thought to have arrived in the Hong Kong area after the rescinding of the [[Great Clearance|coastal evacuation]] order in 1688,<ref name="Hase">{{cite book|last1=Hase|first1=Patrick|editor1-last=Faure|editor1-first=David|editor2-last=Siu|editor2-first=Helen|title=Down to Earth : The Territorial Bond in South China|date=1995|publisher=Stanford University Press|isbn=978-0-8047-2434-0|oclc=31815055|chapter=Alliance of Ten|pages=123–160}}</ref> such as the Hakka speaking Lee clan lineage of [[Sheung Wo Hang|Wo Hang]], one of whose ancestors is recorded as arriving in the area in 1688. |
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As the strong Punti lineages dominated most of the north western New Territories, Hakka communities began to organise local alliances of lineage communities such as the [[Sha Tau Kok]] ''Alliance of Ten'' or ''Shap Yeuk'' as [[Patrick Hase]] writes.<ref name=Hase /> Hakka villages from Wo Hang to the west and [[Yantian District|Yantian]] to the east of Sha Tau Kok came to use it as a local market town and it became the center of Hakka dominance. Further, the Shap Yeuk's [[Land reclamation in Hong Kong|land reclamation]] project transforming marshland to arable farmland with the creation of dykes and levees to prevent storm flooding during the early 19th century shows an example of how local cooperation and the growing affluence of the landed lineages in the Alliance of Ten provided the strong cultural, socioeconomic Hakka influence on the area. |
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Farming and cultivation have been the traditional occupations of Hakka families from imperial times up until the 1970s. Farming was mostly done by Hakka women while their menfolk sought labouring jobs in the towns and cities. Many men entered indentured labour abroad as was common from the end of the 19th century to the Second World War. Post war, males took the opportunity to seek work in Britain and other countries later to send for their families to join them once they sent enough money back to cover travel costs. |
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As post war education became available to all children in Hong Kong, a new educated class of Hakka became more mobile in their careers. Many moved to the [[New towns of Hong Kong|government planned new towns]] which sprung up from the 1960s. The rural Hakka population began to decline as people moved abroad, and away to work in the urban areas. By the end of the 1970s, agriculture was firmly in the decline in Hakka villages.<ref>Gao, (1997)</ref> Today, there are still Hakka villages around Hong Kong, but being remote, many of their inhabitants have moved to the post war new towns like [[Sheung Shui]], [[Tai Po]], [[Sha Tin]] and further afield. |
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== Hakka in Taiwan == |
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[[File:大路關 客家藍衫.jpg|thumb|right|Hakka women in traditional attire in [[Kaohsiung]], Taiwan, pre-1945.]] |
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The Hakka population in Taiwan is around 4.6 million people today.<ref>{{cite web|date=5 October 2012|title=About the Hakka people in Taiwan|url=http://web.pts.org.tw/hakka/english.htm|website=HakkaTV|publisher=Public Television Service|access-date=4 February 2015}}</ref> Hakka comprise about 15 to 20% of [[Taiwanese people]] and form the second-largest ethnic group in the country. They are descended largely from Hakka who migrated from southern and northern Guangdong and western Fujian.<ref name=ocac/> The early Hakka immigrants were the island's first agriculturalists and formed the nucleus of the Chinese population, numbering tens of thousands at the time.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Davidson|first1=James W.|author-link=James W. Davidson|title=The Island of Formosa, Past and Present : history, people, resources, and commercial prospects : tea, camphor, sugar, gold, coal, sulphur, economical plants, and other productions|year=1903|publisher=Macmillan|url=https://archive.org/details/islandofformosap00davi|location=London and New York|ol=6931635M|oclc=1887893|page=[https://archive.org/details/islandofformosap00davi/page/561 561]}}</ref> They resided in "savage border districts, where land could be had for the taking, and where a certain freedom from official oppression was ensured."{{sfnp|Davidson|1903|p=590}} Back then the Hakka on Taiwan had gained a reputation with the authorities of being turbulent and lawless.{{sfnp|Davidson|1903|p=591}} |
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In the past the Hakka in Taiwan owned [[matchlock]] [[musket]]s. Han people traded and sold matchlock muskets to the [[Taiwanese aborigines]]. The Aboriginals used their matchlock muskets to defeat the Americans in the [[Formosa Expedition]]. During the [[Sino-French War]] the Hakka and Aboriginals used their matchlock muskets against the French in the [[Keelung Campaign]] and [[Battle of Tamsui]]. |
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Liu Mingchuan took measures to reinforce Tamsui, in the river nine torpedo mines were planted and the entrance was blocked with ballast boats filled with stone which were sunk on 3 September, matchlock armed "Hakka hill people" were used to reinforce the mainland Chinese battalion, and around the British Consulate and Customs House at the Red Fort hilltop, Shanghai Arsenal manufactured Krupp guns were used to form an additional battery.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=abMMAQAAMAAJ&q=taiwan+matchlocks+stones|title=Maritime Taiwan: Historical Encounters with the East and the West|first=Shih-shan Henry|last=Tsai|date=19 August 2009|publisher=M.E. Sharpe|isbn=9780765623287|via=Google Books}}</ref> |
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[[File:桃園客家文化館 (32279619111).jpg|thumb|[[Taoyuan Hakka Culture Hall]], Taiwan]] |
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[[:zh:林朝棟|Lin Ch'ao-tung]] ({{lang|zh-hant|林朝棟}}) was the leader of the Hakka militia recruited by Liu Ming-ch'uan.<ref>Rouil, 60–61</ref> |
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The Hakka used their matchlock muskets to resist the Japanese invasion of Taiwan and Hakka Han people and Aboriginals conducted an insurgency against Japanese rule. The Hakka rose up against the Japanese in the [[Beipu uprising]]. |
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Taiwan's Hakka population concentrates in [[Hsinchu]] and [[Hsinchu County]], [[Miaoli County]] and around [[Zhongli District]] in [[Taoyuan City]] and [[Meinong District]] in [[Kaohsiung]] and in [[Pingtung County]], with smaller presences in [[Hualien County]] and [[Taitung County]]. In recent decades,{{when|date=May 2011}} many Hakka have moved to the largest metropolitan areas, including Taipei and Taichung. |
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On 28 December 1988, 14,000{{failed verification|date=March 2021}} Hakka protestors took to the streets in Taipei to demand the Nationalist government to "return our mother tongue", carrying portraits of Sun Yat-sen.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://taiwantoday.tw/news.php?unit=20,29,29,35,45&post=26391|title = Reviving the Hakka Way of Life|date = April 2013}}</ref> The movement was later termed "1228 Return Our Mother Tongue Movement". |
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Hakka-related affairs in Taiwan are regulated by the [[Hakka Affairs Council]]. Hakka-related tourist attractions in Taiwan are [[Dongshih Hakka Cultural Park]], [[Hakka Round House]], [[Kaohsiung Hakka Cultural Museum]], [[Meinong Hakka Culture Museum]], [[New Taipei City Hakka Museum]], [[Taipei Hakka Culture Hall]] and [[Taoyuan Hakka Culture Hall]]. |
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==Hakka diaspora== |
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[[File:Hakka Round House, Houlong Township, Miaoli County outside overview 20150507.jpg|thumb|[[Hakka Round House]] in [[Miaoli County]].]] |
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===Southeast Asia=== |
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====Vietnam==== |
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There are two groups of Hakka in Vietnam. One is known as [[Ngái people]] and lives along the border with China in Northern Vietnam. Another group are Chinese immigrants to Southern Vietnam, known as '''Người Hẹ''' and is located around [[Ho Chi Minh City]] and [[Vũng Tàu]]. |
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====Cambodia==== |
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About 65% of the [[Hakka Chinese|Hakka]] trace their roots back to [[Meizhou]] and [[Heyuan|Heyuan prefectures]] in Guangdong Province. About 70% of the Hakkas are found in Phnom Penh where they dominate professions in the field of [[Traditional Chinese medicine|Traditional Chinese Medicine]] and shoemaking. Hakkas are also found in [[Takéo Province]], [[Stung Treng]] and [[Rattanakiri]] who consist of vegetable growers and rubber plantation workers. Hakka communities in the provinces migrated to Cambodia through Tonkin and Cochinchina in the 18th and 19th centuries.<ref>Willmott (1967), p. 23-4</ref> |
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====Thailand==== |
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[[File:The Hakkas association of Pakchong Thailand 3.jpg|thumb|The Hakkas association of [[Pak Chong]]]] |
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There are no records as to when Hakka descendants arrived in Thailand. In 1901, Yu Cipeng, a Hakka member of The League Society of China came to visit Thailand and found that the establishment of many varied organizations among the Hakka was not good for unity. He tried to bring the two parties together and persuaded them to dissolve the associations in order to set up a new united one. In 1909 The Hakka Society of Siam was established and [[Chao Phraya Yommarat (Pan Sukhum)]], then interior minister, was invited to preside over the opening ceremony for the establishment of the society's nameplate, located in front of the Chinese shrine "Lee Tee Biao". Yang Liqing was its first president.<ref>[http://www.hakkathailand.com/home/default_English.php?lang=English] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110202073935/http://www.hakkathailand.com/home/default_English.php?lang=English|date=2 February 2011}}</ref> |
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====Singapore==== |
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In 2010, 232,914 people in Singapore reported Hakka ancestry. Singapore's most prominent Hakka is its founding prime minister, [[Lee Kuan Yew]]. |
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====Malaysia==== |
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[[File:Muar Hakka Association.jpg|thumb|Muar Hakka Association in [[Johor]].]] |
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Hakka people form the second largest subgroup of the ethnic [[Malaysian Chinese|Chinese]] population of [[Malaysia]], particularly in the [[Peninsular Malaysia|peninsula]], with several prominent Hakka figures emerging during [[British Malaya|colonial British rule]]. There are 1,729,000 people of Hakka ancestry in Malaysia as of 2016.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://joshuaproject.net/countries/MY|title=People Groups|author=Joshua Project|website=joshuaproject.net}}</ref> [[Chung Keng Quee]], "Captain China" of [[Perak]] and [[Penang]], was the founder of the mining town of [[Taiping, Perak|Taiping]], the leader of the [[Hai San Secret Society|Hai San]], a millionaire philanthropist and an innovator in the [[Tin mining|mining of tin]], having been respected by both Chinese and European communities in the early colonial settlement. Another notable Hakka was [[Yap Ah Loy]], who founded [[Kuala Lumpur]] and was a [[Kapitan Cina]] of the settlement from 1868 to 1885, bringing significant economic contributions and was also an influential figure among the ethnic Chinese. |
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In the district of [[Jelebu]], [[Negeri Sembilan]], Hakka people make up more than 90% of the Chinese subgroup with dialect itself acting as a [[lingua franca]] there. This has contributed greatly to the fact that the place is commonly known among Hakka Chinese as "Hakka Village". The greatest concentration of Hakkas in northern peninsular Malaysia is in [[Ipoh]], [[Perak]] and in Kuala Lumpur and its satellite cities in [[Selangor]]. Concentrations of Hakka people in Ipoh and surrounding areas are particularly high. The Hakkas in the [[Kinta Valley]] came mainly from the [[Meizhou|Jiaying Prefecture]] or [[Meixian District|Meixian]], while those in Kuala Lumpur are mainly of [[Huizhou]] origin.<ref name="leo">{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FaCXCgAAQBAJ&pg=PA87|title=Global Hakka: Hakka Identity in the Remaking|author= Jessieca Leo|page=87|publisher=Brill|isbn=9789004300279|date=3 September 2015}}</ref> |
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A large number of Hakka people are also found in [[Sarawak]], particularly in the city of Kuching and [[Miri, Malaysia|Miri]], where there is a notable population of Hakka people who speak the "[[Ho Poh]]"{{clarify|date=July 2017}} variant of Hakka. |
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In [[Sabah]], most of the ethnic Chinese are of Hakka descent. In the 1990s, the Hakkas formed around 57% of the total ethnic Chinese population in Sabah.<ref>{{cite book |title= The Hakkas of Sabah : a survey of their impact on the modernization of the Bornean Malaysian State|author=Chong, Tet Loi|publisher=Sabah Theological Seminary|date= 2002|pages=32–33}}</ref> Hakka is the lingua franca among the Chinese in Sabah to such an extent that Chinese of other subgroups who migrate to Sabah from other states in Malaysia and elsewhere usually learn the Hakka dialect, with varying degrees of fluency.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FaCXCgAAQBAJ&pg=PA75|title=Global Hakka: Hakka Identity in the Remaking|author= Jessieca Leo|pages=75–76|publisher=Brill|isbn=9789004300279|date=3 September 2015}}</ref> |
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In 1882 the [[North Borneo Chartered Company]] opted to bring in Hakka labourers from [[Longchuan County, Guangdong]]. The first batch of 96 Hakkas brought to Sabah landed in [[Kudat]] on 4 April 1883 under the leadership of Luo Daifeng (Hakka: Lo Tai Fung). In the following decades Hakka immigrants settled throughout the state, with their main population centres in [[Kota Kinabalu]] (then known as Jesselton) and its surroundings (in the districts of [[Tuaran]], [[Penampang]], [[Ranau, Malaysia|Ranau]], [[Papar, Malaysia|Papar]], [[Kota Belud]] as well as a lesser extent to [[Kota Marudu]]), with a significant minority residing in [[Sandakan]] (mainly ex-[[Taiping Rebellion|Taiping revolutionists]]) and other large populations in other towns and districts, most notably in [[Tawau]], [[Tenom]], [[Kuala Penyu]], [[Tambunan]], [[Lahad Datu]], [[Semporna]], [[Sipitang]], [[Beaufort, Malaysia|Beaufort]], [[Keningau]] and [[Kudat]]. The British felt the development of North Borneo was too slow and in 1920 they decided to encourage Hakka immigration into Sabah. In 1901, the total Chinese population in Sabah was 13897; by 1911, it had risen 100% to 27801.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Chong|first1=Tet Loi|title=The Hakkas of Sabah: A Survey on Their Impact on the Modernization of the Bornean Malaysian State|date=2002|publisher=Sabah Theological Seminary|location=Kota Kinabalu|isbn=978-983-40840-0-4|oclc=51876445|page=28}}</ref> Hakka immigration began to taper off during World War 2 and declined to a negligible level in the late 1940s. |
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====Indonesia==== |
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[[File:Indonesia Hakka Museum.JPG|thumb|[[Indonesian Hakka Museum]] in [[Jakarta]].]] |
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Migration of Hakka people to Indonesia happened in several waves. The first wave landed in [[Riau Islands]] such as in [[Bangka Island]] and Belitung as tin miners in the 18th century. The second group of colonies were established along the [[Kapuas River]] in [[Borneo]] in the 19th century, predecessor to early Singapore residents. In the early 20th century, new arrivals joined their compatriots as traders, merchants and labourers in major cities such as Jakarta, Surabaya, Bandung, Medan, etc. |
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Some research shows that the establishment of the Silk Road created commercial trade for the Hakka people in the south or along the way, and created conditions for overseas migration. The book "An Overview of Hakka Migration History: Where are you from?" published by My China Roots & CBA Jamaica mentions that the Hakka people traded with the caravans and stayed overseas to facilitate business, and added descendants Immigrants, Indonesia, Calcutta, Toronto, and Jamaica all still retain a long history of Hakka culture and organization.<ref>“An overview of Hakka migration history: where are you from?”. My China Roots & CBA Jamaica. July, 2016. https://cbajamaica.com/assets/docs/HANDOUT_Hakka_Migration_History.182201835.pdf</ref> |
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In Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore, Hakka people are sometimes known as ''Khek'', from the [[Hokkien]] pronunciation ''kheh''. However, the use of the word 'Khek' is limited mainly to areas where the local Chinese population is mainly of Hokkien origin. In places where other Chinese subgroups predominate, the term 'Hakka' is still the more commonly used. |
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=====Bangka (in Indonesia)===== |
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[[File:印尼邦加島勿里洋小城.jpg|thumb|left|Belinyu, a little Hakka town in northern part of Bangka Island.]] |
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Hakka also live in Indonesia's largest [[tin]] producer islands of [[Bangka Belitung Islands]] province. They are the second majority ethnic group after [[Indonesian Malays|Malays]]. The Hakka population in the province is also the second largest in Indonesia after [[West Kalimantan]]'s and one of the highest percentages of Chinese living in Indonesia. |
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The first group of Hakka in Bangka and Belitung reached the islands in the 18th century from Guangdong. Many of them worked as tin mining labourers. Since then, they have remained on the island along with the native Malay. Their situation was much different from those of Chinese and native populations of other regions, where legal cultural conflicts were prevalent since the 1960s until 1999, by which [[Indonesian Chinese]] had finally regained their cultural freedoms. Here they lived together peacefully and still practiced their customs and cultural festivals, while in other regions they were strictly banned by government legislation prior to 1999.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.kompas.com/kompas-cetak/0608/23/humaniora/2898211.htm|publisher=KOMPAS|title=Kebersamaan Tanpa Prasangka |date= 23 August 2006|access-date=10 September 2007}}</ref> Hakka on the island of Bangka spoke Hopo dialect mixed with Malay, especially in younger generations. Hakka spoken in Belinyu area in Bangka is considered to be standard. |
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=====West Kalimantan (in Indonesia)===== |
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Hakka people in [[Pontianak, Indonesia|Pontianak]] live alongside [[Teochew people|Teochew]] speaking Chinese. While the Teochews are dominant in the centre of Pontianak, the Hakka are more dominant in small towns along the [[Kapuas River]] in the regencies of Sanggau, Sekadau and Sintang. Their Hakka dialect is originally Hopo which influenced by Teochew dialect and also has vocabulary from the local Malay and [[Dayak people|Dayak]] tribes. The Hakka were instrumental in the [[Lanfang Republic]]. |
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The Hakka in this region are descendants of gold prospectors who migrated from China in the late 19th century. |
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The Hakka in [[Singkawang]] and the surrounding regencies of [[Sambas Regency|Sambas]], [[Bengkayang]], [[Ketapang]] and Landak speak a different standard of Hakka dialect to the Hakkas along the Kapuas River. Originally West Borneo has diverse Hakka origin but during the 19th century, a large people came from Jiexi so more Hakkas in the region speak Hopo mixed with Wuhua and Huilai accents that eventually formed the dialect of Singkawang Hakka.<ref name="singkawang">{{cite web|url=http://www.singkawang.us/modules.php?name=News&file=print&sid=337|title=United Singkawang – Bahasa Hakka di Singkawang|publisher=Singkawang.us|access-date=15 January 2015|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150508092128/http://www.singkawang.us/modules.php?name=News&file=print&sid=337|archive-date=8 May 2015}}</ref> |
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=====Jakarta (in Indonesia)===== |
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Hakka people in Jakarta mainly have roots from [[Meizhou]], who came in the 19th century. Secondary migration of the Hakkas from other provinces like Bangka Belitung Islands and West Borneo came later. |
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====East Timor==== |
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{{Main|Chinese people in East Timor}} |
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[[File:East Timor hakka wedding.jpg|thumb|right|A mixed wedding of East Timorese and Hakka in [[East Timor]], where the four [[flower girl]]s and the mother of the bride on the far right are of Hakka descent.]] |
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There was already a relatively large and vibrant Hakka community in East Timor before the 1975 [[Indonesian invasion of East Timor|Indonesian invasion]]. According to an estimate by the local Chinese Timorese association, the Hakka population of [[Portuguese Timor]] in 1975 was estimated to be around 25,000 (including a small minority of other Chinese ethnicities from Macau, which like East Timor was a Portuguese colony). According to a book source, an estimated 700 Hakka were killed within the first week of invasion in [[Dili]] alone. No clear numbers had been recorded since many Hakka had already escaped to neighbouring Australia. The recent re-establishment of Hakka associations in the country registered approximately 2,400 Hakka remaining, organised into some 400 families, including part-Timorese ones. |
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The Timorese Hakka diaspora can currently be found in [[Darwin, Northern Territory|Darwin]], [[Brisbane]], [[Sydney]] and [[Melbourne]] in Australia; in Portugal; in Macau; and in other parts of the world in smaller numbers. They often are highly educated and many continue their education in either Taiwan or the People's Republic of China, while a majority of the younger generation prefer to study in Australia. The Australian government took some years to assess their claims to be genuine [[refugee]]s and not illegal immigrants, as partially related to the political situation in East Timor at the time. As Asian countries were neither willing to accept them as residents nor grant them political asylum to the Timorese in general, they were forced to live as [[stateless persons]] for some time. Despite this condition, many Hakka had become successful, establishing restaurant chains, shops, supermarkets and import operations in Australia. Since [[United Nations Transitional Administration in East Timor|the independence of East Timor]] in 2000, some Hakka families had returned and invested in businesses in the newborn nation.{{citation needed|date=February 2024}} |
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===South Asia=== |
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====India==== |
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There used to be 1500 Hakkas largely at Tangra and Bombay, arriving after the great [[British Raj#Famines, epidemics, public health|British Raj violence and chaos]]. |
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However, from the 1960s, after armed fighting broke out, there has been a steady migration to other countries, which accelerated in the succeeding decades. The majority moved to Britain and Canada, while others went to the United States, Australia, Taiwan, Austria and Sweden. The predominant dialect of Hakka in these communities is Meixian. |
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Hakkas are the largest Chinese community in India after Chinese Cantonese people of Indian ancestry. During the time he held office in Calcutta until the late 2000s, Yap Kon Chung, the Hakka ambassador, protected and helped the Chinese residents in India. Specifically, during the Sino-Indian war of 1962, oppression of Sino-Indian residents accused of [[Anti-Indian sentiment#Myanmar/Burma|Anti-Indian sentiment]] by the Indians was escalated. Yap then made appeals to Prime Minister Nehru to bridge a bond between the Indians and Chinese persons. During his office, he was also the principal at a highly regarded school as well as a political facilitator who helped many families migrate to other countries such as Britain, Canada, the United States and parts of Europe until he himself migrated to Toronto, Canada to join his family. Yap died surrounded by family on 18 April 2014, at the age of 97.{{citation needed|date=February 2024}} |
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===Africa=== |
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====South Africa==== |
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Some Hakka people, notably from Taiwan{{citation needed|date=February 2024}}, migrated to South Africa. |
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====Mauritius==== |
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The vast majority of Mauritian Chinese are Hakkas. Most Mauritian Hakkas who emigrated to Mauritius in the mid-1940s came from Northeastern Guangdong, especially from the Meizhou or Meixian region. |
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As of 2008, the total population of [[Sino-Mauritian]], consisting of Hakka and Cantonese, is around 35,000. |
As of 2008, the total population of [[Sino-Mauritian]], consisting of Hakka and Cantonese, is around 35,000. |
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=== |
====Réunion==== |
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Many |
Many [[Chinois (Réunion)|Chinese people in Réunion]] are of Hakka origin.<ref name="beyondchinatown">{{cite book|title=Beyond Chinatown: new Chinese migration and the global expansion of China|last=Thunø|first=Mette|year=2007|publisher=NIAS Press|isbn= 978-87-7694-000-3|ol=13426825M|page=234|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tSY__ozPK0sC&q=sinwa+la+reunion&pg=PA234|access-date=24 November 2009}}</ref> They either came to [[Réunion]] as [[indentured worker]]s or as voluntary migrants.<ref name="beyondchinatown"/> |
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===Americas=== |
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====United States==== |
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Hakka from all over the world have also migrated to the USA. One group is the New England Hakka Association, which reminds its members not to forget their roots. One example is a blog by Ying Han Brach called "Searching for My Hakka Roots". Another group is the Hakka Association of New York, which aims to promote Hakka culture across the five boroughs of [[New York City]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://hakkany.com/home.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150801133818/http://www.hakkany.com/|url-status=dead|title=Home|archive-date=1 August 2015|website=Hakka Association of NY}}</ref> In the mid-1970s, the Hakka Benevolent Association in San Francisco was founded by Tu Chung. The association has strong ties with the San Francisco community and offers scholarships to their young members. There are significant [[Hakka Americans|Hakka American]] communities in [[San Francisco]], [[San Jose, California|San Jose]], [[Seattle]] and [[Los Angeles]]. |
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There are around 20,000 Taiwanese Hakkas in the United States.{{citation needed|date=February 2024}} |
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====Canada==== |
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There are several Hakka communities across Canada. One group that embraces on Hakka culture in this diverse country is the Hakka Heritage Alliance. Also see Jamaica. |
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====Jamaica==== |
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Most [[Chinese Jamaicans]] are Hakka; they have a long history in [[Jamaica]]. Between 1854 and 1884, nearly 5,000 Hakkas arrived in Jamaica in three major voyages. The Hakkas seized the opportunity to venture into a new land, embracing the local language, customs and culture. During the 1960s and 1970s, substantial migration of Jamaican Hakkas to the US and Canada have occurred.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.chinesejamaican.com/|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130512200323/http://www.chinesejamaican.com/history.html|url-status=dead|title=We are Chinese Jamaicans Worldwide|archive-date=12 May 2013|website=We are Chinese Jamaicans Worldwide}}</ref> The Hakkas in Jamaica came mainly from [[Dongguan]], [[Huiyang]] and [[Bao'an County|Bao'an counties]] of Guangdong Province.<ref name="leo"/> |
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====Suriname==== |
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The Chinese in [[Suriname]] are homogeneous as a group and the great majority can trace their roots to Huidong'an ({{lang|zh-hans|惠东安}}). One famous Hakka is President [[Henk Chin A Sen]].<ref name="leo"/> |
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====Guyana==== |
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Chinese people are a small minority at [[Guyana]]. Guyana's most prominent Hakka Chinese is its first president, [[Arthur Chung]]. |
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===Oceania=== |
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====Australia==== |
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Hakka people first arrived in Australia in the 1880s. Hakka arrivals were halted along with other Chinese immigrants during the [[White Australia policy]] era from 1901 to 1973 and resumed thereafter. Some estimate that there are now 100,000 Hakka people in Australia.<ref>{{cite web|url = http://www.hakkawa.com/galvanising-the-collective-intelligence-of-the-hakka-diaspora-in-western-australia/|title = Galvanising the collective intelligence of the Hakka Diaspora in Western Australia|date = 3 July 2018}}</ref> |
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====New Zealand==== |
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There are people of Hakka descent in New Zealand.<ref>{{cite web|url = https://www.indianweekender.co.nz/Pages/ArticleDetails/35/11188/Face-of-the-Week/Living-in-NZ-A-Chinese-descent-Indian-shares-her-unique-cultural-experience|title = Living in NZ: A Chinese Descent Indian shares her unique cultural experience}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url = https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/56361175.pdf|title = Ethnic Minority migrant Chinese in New Zealand|first1 = Nancy|last1 = McIntyre|date = 2008}}</ref> |
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====Tahiti==== |
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Hakka people first arrived in [[Papara]], [[Tahiti]] in 1865.<ref>{{cite web|url =http://www.thetahititraveler.com/the-chinese-community-in-tahiti-150-years-of-history/|title = The Chinese Community in Tahiti: 150 years of history|date = 3 March 2015}}</ref> |
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== |
==Population== |
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At a 1994 seminar of the World Hakka Association held in [[Meixian District|Meixian]], statistics showed that there were 6,562,429 Hakkas living abroad.<ref name="Pioneers"/> |
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In Taiwan, Hakka people comprise about 15-20% of the population and are descended largely from Guangdong: they form the second largest ethnic group on the island. Many Hakka moved to lands high up in the hills or remote mountains to escape political persecution. Many of the Hakka people continue to live in these hilly locations of Taiwan. |
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Taiwan's Hakka are concentrated in [[Hsinchu City]] and [[Hsinchu County]], [[Miaoli County]], and around [[Chungli]] in [[Taoyuan County, Taiwan|Taoyuan County]], and [[Meinong, Kaohsiung|Meinong]] in [[Kaohsiung County]], and in [[Pingtung County]], with smaller presences in [[Hualian]] and [[Taitung County]]. In recent decades many Hakka have moved to the largest metropolitan areas, including [[Taipei]], [[Taichung]], and [[Kaohsiung]]. |
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In 2000, the worldwide population of Hakka was estimated at 36,059,500 and in 2010 it was estimated at 40,745,200.{{citation needed|date=May 2014}} |
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Many people in Taiwan are of mixed Hoklo, Hakka, and [[Taiwanese aborigines|Formosan aboriginal]] heritage. Approximately half of the population of Hakka in Taiwan also speak [[Taiwanese Hokkien]], and it is highly likely that many Taiwanese-speaking households were descendants of Hakka families in Taiwan who lost their language a few generations back. |
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Another estimate is that approximately 36 million Hakka people are scattered throughout the world. More than 31 million lives in over 200 cities and counties spread throughout five provinces of China (Guangdong, Jiangxi, Guangxi, Fujian, Hunan) as well as Hong Kong.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Hattaway|first1=Paul|title=Peoples of the Buddhist World: A Christian Prayer Diary|date=2004|publisher=Piquant|location=Carlisle|isbn=9780878083619|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OzEOKNPsv2EC&q=An+additional+two+million+Hakka+live+in+Taiwan%2C+1.4+million+in&pg=PA72}}</ref> |
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===In Thailand=== |
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There are no records as to when Hakka descendants pioneered into Thailand. In 1901, Mr. Yu Cipeng, a Hakka member of The League Society of China came to visit Thailand and found that the establishment of many varied organizations among the Hakka was not good for unity. So, he tried to bring the two parties together and persuaded them to dissolve the associations in order to set up a new united one. In 1909 "The Hakka Society of Siam" was established, and Chao Phraya Yommarat, then Interior Minister, was invited to preside over the opening ceremony for the establishment of the society's nameplate, located in front of the Chinese shrine "Lee Tee Biao". Mr. Yang Liqing was its first President.<ref>[http://www.hakkathailand.com/home/default_English.php?lang=English]</ref> |
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{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align: center;" |
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== World Hakka Congress == |
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{| class="wikitable sortable" cellpadding="3" style="text-align: center;" |
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|- |
|- |
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!Region |
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!No |
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!Hakka |
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!Year |
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!Chinese |
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!City |
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!Total |
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!Country |
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!Percentage |
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!Majority |
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!Source |
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|- |
|- |
||
|style="text-align: left;"|{{flagicon|Republic of China}} [[Taiwan]] |
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|1 |
|||
|4,202,000 |
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|1971 |
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|22,813,000 |
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|align="left" | Hong Kong |
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|23,374,000 |
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|align="left" | China |
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|18.4% |
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|Second largest |
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|[[Hakka Affairs Council]], Taiwan, 2014<ref>{{cite web|url=http://tw.news.yahoo.com/%E5%AE%A2%E5%A7%94%E6%9C%83%E4%BA%BA%E5%8F%A3%E8%AA%BF%E6%9F%A5-%E5%85%A8%E5%8F%B0%E7%B4%8418-%E6%98%AF%E5%AE%A2%E5%AE%B6%E4%BA%BA-120807481.html|title=客委會人口調查 全台約18%是客家人|website=tw.news.yahoo.com|date=12 September 2014 }}</ref> |
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|- |
|- |
||
|style="text-align: left;"|{{flag|Hong Kong}} |
|||
|2 |
|||
|1,250,000 est |
|||
|1973 |
|||
|6,643,000 |
|||
|align="left" | Taipei |
|||
|7,300,000 |
|||
|align="left" | Taiwan |
|||
|18.8% |
|||
|Second largest |
|||
|Prof Lau Yee Cheung, [[Chinese University of Hong Kong]], 2010 <ref>{{cite web|url=http://bj.crntt.com/crn-webapp/doc/docDetailCreate.jsp?coluid=160&kindid=6362&docid=101455037&mdate=0923234206|title=香港客家人|website=bj.crntt.com}}</ref> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|style="text-align: left;"|{{flag|Singapore}} |
|||
|3 |
|||
|232,914 |
|||
|1976 |
|||
|2,794,000 |
|||
|align="left" | Taipei |
|||
|3,771,700 |
|||
|align="left" | Taiwan |
|||
|8.3% |
|||
|Fourth largest |
|||
|Singapore census, 2010<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.singstat.gov.sg/docs/default-source/default-document-library/publications/publications_and_papers/cop2010/census_2010_release1/cop2010sr1.pdf|title=Census of Population 2010|access-date=21 May 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161005201416/https://www.singstat.gov.sg/docs/default-source/default-document-library/publications/publications_and_papers/cop2010/census_2010_release1/cop2010sr1.pdf|archive-date=5 October 2016|url-status=dead}}</ref> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|style="text-align: left;"|{{flag|Malaysia}} |
|||
|4 |
|||
|1,650,000 |
|||
|1978 |
|||
|6,550,000 |
|||
|align="left" | San Francisco |
|||
|30,116,000 |
|||
|align="left" | USA |
|||
|25.2% |
|||
|- |
|||
|Second largest |
|||
|5 |
|||
|Malaysia census, 2015<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.thestar.com.my/metro/community/2015/06/16/home-for-hakka-group-opens-mca-president-launches-headquarters-of-federation-of-associations|title=Home for Hakka group opens|first=Oh Ing|last=Yeen|date=16 June 2015|website=The Star Online}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title = The Malaysian Chinese population is decreasing|url=http://www.malaysianchinesenews.com/2015/05/the-malaysian-chinese-population-is-decreasing/}}</ref> |
|||
|1980 |
|||
|align="left" | Tokyo |
|||
|align="left" | Japan |
|||
|- |
|||
|6 |
|||
|1982 |
|||
|align="left" | Bangkok |
|||
|align="left" | Thailand |
|||
|- |
|||
|7 |
|||
|1984 |
|||
|align="left" | Taipei |
|||
|align="left" | Taiwan |
|||
|- |
|||
|8 |
|||
|1986 |
|||
|align="left" | Mauritius |
|||
|align="left" | Mauritius |
|||
|- |
|||
|9 |
|||
|1988 |
|||
|align="left" | San Francisco |
|||
|align="left" | USA |
|||
|- |
|||
|10 |
|||
|1990 |
|||
|align="left" | Kota Kinabalu, Sabah |
|||
|align="left" | Malaysia |
|||
|- |
|||
|11 |
|||
|1992 |
|||
|align="left" | Kaoshiung |
|||
|align="left" | Taiwan |
|||
|- |
|||
|12 |
|||
|1994 |
|||
|align="left" | Meixian, Guangdong |
|||
|align="left" | China |
|||
|- |
|||
|13 |
|||
|1996 |
|||
|align="left" | Singapore |
|||
|align="left" | Singapore |
|||
|- |
|||
|14 |
|||
|1998 |
|||
|align="left" | Miaoli |
|||
|align="left" | Taiwan |
|||
|- |
|||
|15 |
|||
|1999 |
|||
|align="left" | Kuala Lumpur |
|||
|align="left" | Malaysia |
|||
|- |
|||
|16 |
|||
|2000 |
|||
|align="left" | Longyan, Fujian |
|||
|align="left" | China |
|||
|- |
|||
|17 |
|||
|2001 |
|||
|align="left" | Jakarta |
|||
|align="left" | Indonesia |
|||
|- |
|||
|18 |
|||
|2003 |
|||
|align="left" | Zhengzhou, Henan |
|||
|align="left" | China |
|||
|- |
|||
|19 |
|||
|2004 |
|||
|align="left" | Ganzhou, Jiangxi |
|||
|align="left" | China |
|||
|- |
|||
|20 |
|||
|2005 |
|||
|align="left" | Chengdu, Sichuan |
|||
|align="left" | China |
|||
|- |
|||
|21 |
|||
|2006 |
|||
|align="left" | Taipei |
|||
|align="left" | Taiwan |
|||
|- |
|||
|22 |
|||
|2008 |
|||
|align="left" | Xi'an, Shaanxi |
|||
|align="left" | China |
|||
|- |
|||
|23 |
|||
|2010 |
|||
|align="left" | Heyuan, Guangdong |
|||
|align="left" | China |
|||
|- |
|||
|24 |
|||
|2011 |
|||
|align="left" | Beihai, Guangxi |
|||
|align="left" | China |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|style="text-align: left;"|{{flag|Thailand}} |
|||
|1,502,846 |
|||
|9,392,792 |
|||
|67,091,371 |
|||
|16.0% |
|||
|Second largest |
|||
|The World Factbook, 2012<ref name="ROC date">{{cite web|url=https://www.cia.gov/the-world-factbook/countries/thailand/|title=The World Factbook|access-date=18 March 2015}}</ref> |
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|} |
|} |
||
==Hakkaology== |
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==Prominent Hakkas== |
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[[File:06.23 總統出席「講客廣播電臺開播茶會」,與客委會主委李永得一同進入播音室發表談話 (35091231370).jpg|thumb|[[Tsai Ing-wen]], President of Taiwan of Hakka descent, attended the "Lecturer Hakka Language Radio Broadcasting", to give a speech.]] |
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<!--To all editors, especially those with Singaporean IP, please provide English citations before adding figure into the list, more importantly, don't remove the tags here --> |
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Hakkaology ({{lang|zh|客家學}}) is the academic study of the Hakka people and their culture. It encompasses their origins, identity, language, traits, architecture, customs, food, literature, history, politics, economics, diaspora and genealogical records. |
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{{POV-section|date=December 2008}} |
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The Hakkas have had a significant influence, disproportionate to their smaller total numbers, on the course of Chinese and [[overseas Chinese]] history, particularly as a source of revolutionary, political and military leaders. |
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The study of the Hakka people first drew attention to Chinese and foreign scholars, adventurers, missionaries, travellers and authors of the [[Taiping Heavenly Kingdom]] era. [[Ernest John Eitel]], a prominent German missionary, was one of those who took a great interest in this area.<ref>{{Cite book|title = Colonial Hong Kong and Modern China: Interaction and Reintegration|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Vcg3cN4NbdsC&q=hakkalogy&pg=PA144|isbn=9789622097209|last1=Lee|first1=Pui-tak|date=1 September 2005| publisher=Hong Kong University Press }}</ref> [[Theodore Hamberg]], who also wrote an early English-language account of the Taiping Rebellion, is also considered a forefather of Hakka studies in the West.{{citation needed|date=August 2018}} |
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Hakkas were active during the [[Taiping Rebellion]] <sup>[Jonathan D. Spence, "God's Chinese Son", 1997 - see references]</sup>, the largest uprising in the modern history of China. The uprising, also known as [[Jintian Uprising]], originated at the Hakka village of Jintian in Guiping, [[Guangxi]]. It was led by the failed Qing scholar, [[Hong Xiuquan]], who was influenced by Protestant missionaries. Hong's charisma tapped into a consciousness of national dissent which identified with his personal interpretations of the Christian message. His following, who were initially Hakka peasants from Guangxi, grew across the southern provinces. The hugely disciplined Taiping army, which included women in their ranks, captured stoutly-defended towns and cities from the Qing defenders. In 1851, less than a year after the uprising, the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom 太平天囯 was established. It had, at one stage, occupied one-third of China, and almost toppled the [[Qing Dynasty]]. The kingdom lasted for eleven years. |
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Many foreign scholars were full of admiration of the Hakka people. According to prominent sinologist [[Victor Purcell]], the Hakkas "have a stubbornness of disposition that distinguishes them from their fellow Chinese". |
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Hakkas continue to play prominent roles during the revolutionary and republican years of [[Kuomintang]], as well as during the [[Chinese Civil War]] between [[Kuomintang]] and the [[Communist Party of China]], to which many of the leaders on both sides are Hakkas. |
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==Political and military leadership== |
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Lee Kuan Yew, Sun Yat Sen, and Deng Xiao Ping were among four Chinese named as "the 20th Century's 20 Most Influential Asians" by [[Time]] magazine.<ref>{{cite news | title = Asians of the Century | url=http://www.time.com/time/asia/asia/magazine/1999/990823/cover1.html | work=Time | date=August 23, 1999 | accessdate=May 4, 2010}}</ref> |
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{{see also|List of notable Hakkas}} |
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It has been suggested that Hakkas have had a significant influence, disproportionate to their smaller total numbers, on the course of modern Chinese and [[overseas Chinese]] history, particularly as a source of revolutionary, political, military leaders, as well as [[president (government title)|president]]s, [[prime ministers]].<ref name=Davis/> |
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Hakkas started and formed the backbone of the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom,<ref>{{cite book|last1=Spence|first1=Jonathan D.|title=God's Chinese son : the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom of Hong Xiuquan|date=1997|publisher=W.W. Norton|location=New York|isbn=9780393315561|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/godschinesesonta0000spen}}</ref> the largest uprising in the modern history of China. The uprising, also known as [[Jintian Uprising]], originated at the Hakka village of Jintian in Guiping, Guangxi province. It was led by the failed Qing scholar, [[Hong Xiuquan]], who was influenced by [[Protestant]] missionaries. Hong's charisma tapped into a consciousness of national dissent which identified with his personal interpretations of the Christian message. His following, who were initially Hakka peasants from Guangxi, grew across the southern provinces. |
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Hakkas' influence is also evident in [[Guangdong]], China, where the "Hakka Gang" "客家帮" has consistently dominated the provincial government. Presently, the governor, [[Huang Huahua]], and four deputy governors are Hakkas.<ref>{{cite web | title = 港报:黄华华传调京 跻身中国领导人 | url=http://www.suizhou.org/?viewthread-39809.html }}</ref> |
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The Taiping army, which included women in their ranks, captured towns and cities from the defenders, the Taiping troops killed all Manchu children because the Taiping troops with fatal rocks smashed Manchu children's heads<ref>''The Hakka Odyssey & their Taiwan homeland''. p. 157, Clyde Kiang. 1992</ref> Four of the six top Taiping leaders are Hakkas: Hong Xiuquan, [[Feng Yunshan]], [[Yang Xiuqing]] and [[Shi Dakai]]. [[Hong Rengan]], the Premier of the Kingdom, was the first person in China to advocate a federal government and reform. The kingdom lasted from 1851 to 1864. |
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===Revolutionaries and politicians=== |
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* [[China]] |
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** [[Taiping Rebellion|Heavenly Kingdom]] |
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*** [[Hong Xiuquan]] 洪秀全 (''1812-1864; Huaxian, Guangdong''), Heavenly King; Leader, [[Taiping Rebellion]] |
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*** [[Feng Yunshan]] 馮雲山/冯云山 (''1815-1852; Huaxian, Guangdong''), South King |
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*** [[Yang Xiuqing]] 楊秀清/杨秀清 (''1821-1856; Guiping, Guangxi'', East King |
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*** [[Shi Dakai]] 石達開/石达开 (''1831-1863; Guiping, Guangxi''), Wing King |
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*** [[Li Xiucheng]] 李秀成 (''1823-1864; Tengxian, Guangxi''), Loyal King |
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*** [[Chen Yucheng]] 陳玉成/陈玉成 (''1837-1862; Tengxian, Guangxi''), Heroic King |
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*** [[Hong Rengan]] 洪仁玕 (''1822-1864; Huaxian, Guangdong''), Premier and Shield King; First person in China to advocate Western-styled of government and modernization |
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** [[Qing Dynasty]] |
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*** [[Feng Zicai]] 馮子才/冯子才 (''1818-1903; Bobai, Guangxi''), Commanding general, [[Sino-French War]] (the only war that Qing Dynasty had won against foreign countries), 1884–1885 |
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*** [[Liu Yongfu]] 劉永福/刘永福 (''1837-1917; Bobai, Guangxi''), Commander, [[Black Flag Army]]; President, [[Republic of Formosa]], 1895 |
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*** [[Qiu Fengjia]] 丘逢甲 (''1864-1912; Jiaoling, Guangdong; born in Taiwan''), Leader, Taiwanese resistance forces, [[Japanese invasion of Taiwan (1895)|Japanese invasion of Taiwan]], 1895; [[Feng Chia University]] in [[Taichung]] is named in honor of him |
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** [[Republic of China]] |
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*** [[Sun Yatsen]] 孫中山/孙中山 <ref>{{cite web | title = 浓浓乡情系中原—访孙中山先生孙女孙穗芳博士 - 我的祖父是客家人 | url=http://www.chinanews.com.cn/n/2003-12-04/26/376869.html}}</ref> (''1886-1925; Zhongshan, Guangdong''), Founding father of modern China |
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*** [[Charlie Soong]] 宋嘉樹/宋嘉树 (''1863-1918; Wenchang, Hainan''), Financier and staunch supporter in the early days of [[Kuomintang]]; Father of the [[Soong Sisters]], who along with their husbands, were the most influential figures of China in the early 20th century |
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*** [[Soong Ai-ling]] 宋藹齡/宋蔼龄 (''1890-1973; Wenchang, Hainan; born in Shanghai''), Eldest of the [[Soong Sisters]]; Wife of [[H H Kung]] |
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*** [[Soong Ching-ling]] 宋慶齡/宋庆龄 (''1893-1981; Wenchang, Hainan; born in Kunshan, Jiangsu''), Second of the [[Soong Sisters]]; Wife of [[Sun Yat-sen]]; Honorary [[President of the People's Republic of China]], 1981 |
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*** [[Soong May-ling]] 宋美齡/宋美龄 (''1898-2003; Wenchang, Hainan''), Youngest of the [[Soong Sisters]]; Wife of [[Chiang Kai-shek]] |
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*** [[T. V. Soong]] 宋子文 (''1894-1971; Wenchang, Hainan; born in Shanghai''), [[Premier of the Republic of China]], 1930, 1945–1947 |
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*** [[Liao Zhongkai]] 廖仲愷 (''1877-1925; Huiyang, Guangdong; born in USA''), Leader and financier, [[Kuomintang]]; Was one of the three most powerful figures in [[Kuomintang]] when [[Sun Yatsen]] died |
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*** [[Sun Ke]] 孫科/孙科 (''1891–1973; Zhongshan, Guangdong''), [[Premier of the Republic of China]], 1931–1932, 1948–1949 |
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*** [[Chen Jitang]] 陳濟棠/陈济棠 (''1890-1954; Fangcheng, Guangxi''), General, Nationalist China |
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*** [[Xue Yue]] 薛岳 (''1896-1998; Lechang, Guangdong''), Nationalist China most outstanding general during [[2nd Sino-Japanese War]]; Nicknamed "Patton of Asia" |
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*** [[Zhang Fakui]] 張發奎/张发奎 (''1896-1980; Shixing, Guangdong''), Commander-in-Chief during [[Second Sino-Japanese war]] |
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*** [[Xie Jinyuan]] 謝晉元/谢晋元 (''1905-1941; Jiaoling, Guangdong''), Commander, [[Defence of Sihang Warehouse]]; Heroism of the defenders of the warehouse, known as the Eight Hundred Heroes 八百壯士, was made into a movie of the same name |
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*** [[Lee Teng-hui]] 李登辉 <ref>{{cite web | title = 李登辉助选新招:客家人厉害 连战很客气 | url=http://www.zaobao.com.sg/zaobao/special/china/taiwan/pages1/election120300.html }}</ref><ref>{{cite web | title = 福建办世界客属恳亲会不欢迎李登辉 | url=http://www.zaobao.com.sg/chinese/region/others/pages/other_chinese021100.html }}</ref> (''1923-; Yongding, Fujian; born in Taiwan''), [[President of the Republic of China]], 1988–2000; First freely-elected president in Chinese history |
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*** [[Annette Lu]] 呂秀蓮/吕秀莲 <ref>{{cite web | title = 忘记就是背叛——福建南靖吕氏宗亲痛责吕秀莲 | url=http://www.people.com.cn/GB/channel1/10/20000414/38105.html }}</ref> (''1944-; Nanjing, Fujian; born in Taiwan''), Vice-President, [[Republic of China]], 2000–2008 |
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*** [[Wu Po-hsiung]] 吳伯雄/吴伯雄 (''1939-; Yongding, Fujian; born in Taiwan''), Chairman, [[Kuomintang]], 2007-; Mayor, [[Taipei]], 1988–1990 |
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*** [[Hsu Hsin-liang]] 許信良/许信良 (''1941-; Raoping, Guangdong; born in Taiwan''), Co-founder and chairman, [[Democratic Progressive Party]], 1991–1994, 1996–1998 |
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*** [[Tsai Ing-wen]] 蔡英文 (''1956-; born in Taiwan''), Present and first female Chairperson, [[Democratic Progressive Party]], 2008-; Vice-premier, [[Republic of China]], 2006–2007 |
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*** [[Yeh Chu-lan]] 葉菊蘭/叶菊兰 (''1949-; born in Taiwan''), Vice-premier, [[Republic of China]], 2004–2005; Acting mayor, [[Kaohsiung]], 2005–2006 |
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*** [[Chen Shui-bian]] 陳水扁/陈水扁 (''1950-; northern parts of Zhao'an - disputed; born in Taiwan''), [[President of the Republic of China]], 2000–2008 |
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*** [[Lee Ying-yuan]] 李應元/李应元 (''1953; Zhao'an, Fujian; born in Taiwan''), Secretary-General, [[Executive Yuan]], 2005; Secretary-General, [[Democratic Progressive Party]], 2008; Ran and lost to [[Ma Ying-jeou]], Taipei Mayor Elections, 2002 |
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*** [[Ma Ying-jeou]] 馬英九 (born July 13, 1950) is the current [[President of the Republic of China|President]] of the [[Republic of China]] |
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** [[People's Republic of China]] |
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*** [[Deng Xiaoping]] 鄧小平/邓小平(''1904-1997; Guang An, Sichuan''), a prominent Chinese revolutionary, politician, pragmatist and reformer, as well as the late leader of the Communist Party of China (CPC). Deng never held office as the head of state or the head of government, but served as the de facto leader of the People's Republic of China from 1978 to the early 1990s. |
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*** Marshal [[Ye Jianying]] 葉劍英/叶剑英 (''1897-1986; Meixian, Guangdong''), Leader and general; Chairman, National People's Congress, 1978–1983; President, [[People's Republic of China]], 1978–1983; [[Governor of Guangdong]], 1949–1953 |
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*** [[Hu Yaobang]] 胡耀邦 (''1915-89; Linyang, Hunan''), [[General Secretary of the Communist Party of China]], 1980–1987 |
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*** [[Zeng Qinghong]] 曾慶紅/曾庆红 <ref>{{cite web | title = China has new chief, but power may lie elsewhere | url=http://www.csmonitor.com/2002/1118/p01s04-woap.htm}}</ref> (''1939-; Ji'an, Jiangxi''), Vice-President, [[People's Republic of China]], 2003–2008; Was second in ranking after [[Hu Jintao]] in the [[Generations of Chinese leadership|fourth generation]] leadership |
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*** [[Liao Chengzhi]] 廖承志 (''1908-1983; Huiyang, Guangdong; born in Japan''), Well-respected politician; died a week before he was expected to be elected Vice-President, [[People's Republic of China]] <ref>{{cite news | title = LIAO CHENGZHI, 75, A CHINESE LEADER | url=http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F30A17FB3F5F0C728DDDAF0894DB484D81 | work=The New York Times | date=June 11, 1983 | accessdate=May 4, 2010}}</ref> |
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*** [[Ye Ting]] 葉挺/叶挺 (''1896-1946; Huiyang, Guangdong''), Commander-In-Chief, [[New Fourth Army]], one of the two main Chinese communist forces, [[Second Sino-Japanese War]] |
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*** [[Yang Chengwu]] 楊成武/杨成武 (''1914-2004; Changting, Fujian''), General; Vice-Chairman, [[Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference]], 1983–1988 |
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*** [[Ye Xuanping]] 葉選平/叶选平 (''1924-; Meixian, Guangdong''), Vice-Chairman, [[Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference]], 1991–2003; [[Governor of Guangdong]], 1985–1991 |
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*** [[Xie Fei (politician)|Xie Fei]] 謝非/谢非 (''1932-1999; Lufeng, Guangdong''), Vice-chairman, [[National People's Congress]], 1998–1999 |
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*** [[Huang Huahua]] 黃華華/黄华华 (''1946-; Xingning, Guangdong''), Present [[governor of Guangdong]], 2003- |
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** [[Hong Kong]] |
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*** [[Martin Lee]] 李柱銘/李柱铭 (''1938-; Huiyang, Guangdong; born in Hong Kong''), Founding chairman, [[Democratic Party (Hong Kong)|Democratic Party]], 1994–2002; Leading figure of the pro-democracy movement in Hong Kong |
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*** [[Lee Wing Tat]] 李永達/李永达 (''1955-; Huiyang, Guangdong; born in Hong Kong''), Chairman, [[Democratic Party (Hong Kong)|Democratic Party]], 2004–2006 |
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*** [[Tam Yiu Chung]] 譚耀宗/谭耀宗 (''1949-; Huiyang, Guangdong; born in Hong Kong''), Chairman, [[Democratic Alliance for Betterment of Hong Kong]], the largest pro-Beijing political party in Hong Kong, 2007- |
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Hakkas continued to play leading roles during the [[Xinhai Revolution]] that overthrew the Qing dynasty and the republican years of China. When [[Sun Yat-sen]] was a child, he used to listen to an old Taiping soldier telling them stories about the heroics of the Taipings.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.waymarking.com/waymarks/WM4KR6_Dr_Sun_Yat_sen_Chinese_Cultural_Plaza_Honolulu_HI|title=Dr. Sun Yat-sen – Chinese Cultural Plaza – Honolulu, HI – Statues of Historic Figures on Waymarking.com|publisher=Waymarking.com|access-date=15 January 2015}}</ref> This influenced Sun and he proclaimed that he shall be the second Hong Xiuquan. Sun was to become the Father of modern China and many of his contemporaries were his fellow Hakkas.<ref name="作者:门杰丹">{{cite web |url=http://www.chinanews.com/n/2003-12-04/26/376869.html|script-title=zh:浓浓乡情系中原 – 访孙中山先生孙女孙穗芳博士 |trans-title=Interview with Dr. Sun Yat-granddaughter of Dr. Sun Suifang|language=zh|author=门杰丹|website=chinanews.com|date=4 December 2003 |access-date=30 July 2012}}{{Google translation|en|zh-CN|http://www.chinanews.com/n/2003-12-04/26/376869.html|Translate this Chinese article to English}}</ref> |
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* [[Singapore]] |
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** [[Lee Kuan Yew]] 李光耀 (''1923-; Dabu, Guangdong; born in Singapore)'', Founding father of modern [[Singapore]]; [[Prime Minister of Singapore]], his mother Chua (蔡), is a [[Min Nan]] [[Nyonya]] 1959-1990 |
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** [[Lee Hsien Loong]] 李顯龍/李显龙 (''1952-; Dabu, Guangdong; born in Singapore)'', Present [[Prime Minister of Singapore]], his mother [[Kwa Geok Choo|Kwa]] (柯) have ancestry from [[Min Nan]] [[Tong'an]] 2004- |
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** [[Yong Nyuk Lin]] 楊玉麟/杨玉麟 (''1918-, born in Malaysia''), Cabinet Minister, 1959–1976 |
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** [[Hon Sui Sen]] 韓瑞生/韩瑞生 (''1916-83; Jiexi, Guangdong, born in Malaysia''), Finance Minister, 1970–1983 |
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** [[Howe Yoon Chong]] 侯永昌 (''1923-2007; Meixian, Guangdong; born in China''), Cabinet Minister, 1979–1984 |
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** Dr [[Hu Tsu Tau Richard]] 胡賜道/胡赐道 (''1926-; Yongding, Fujian; born in Singapore''), Finance Minister, 1985–2001 |
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** [[Elizabeth Choy]] (Yong Su Moi) 蔡楊素梅/蔡杨素梅 (''1910-2006; born in Malaysia''), War heroine; First and only woman to be on the [[Legislative Council of Singapore]], 1951 |
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Zheng Shiliang, a medical student and classmate of Sun, led the [[Xinhai Revolution#Huizhou Uprising|Huizhou Uprising]] ({{lang|zh-hant|惠州起義}}) in 1900. Huizhou is an area in Guangdong province where most of the population are Hakkas. Deng Zhiyu led the [[Xinhai Revolution#Huizhou Qinühu Uprising|Huizhou Qinühu Uprising]] ({{lang|zh-hant|惠州七女湖起義}}) in 1907. All of the Four Martyrs of Honghuagang ({{lang|zh-hant|紅花崗四烈士}}) are Hakkas – one of which was Wen Shengcai who assassinated the Manchu general, Fu Qi, in 1911. |
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* [[Malaysia]] |
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** [[Yap Ah Loy]] 葉亞來/叶亚来 (''1837-1885; Huiyang, Guangdong; born in China''), Founder of [[Kuala Lumpur]] |
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** [[Chung Keng Quee]] 鄭景貴/郑景贵 (''1827-1901; Zengcheng, Guangdong; born in China''), Founder of [[Taiping, Perak|Taiping]], [[Perak]]; Kapitan China, [[Penang]] and [[Perak]] |
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** [[Yap Kwan Seng]] 葉觀盛/叶观盛 <ref>{{cite web | title = Last Kapitan's legacy lives on | url=http://www.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2007/4/28/central/17551213&sec=central}}</ref> (''1846-1902; Chixi, Guangdong; born in China''), Last Kapitan China, [[Kuala Lumpur]], 1989-1902; A major road, Jalan Yap Kwan Seng, in [[Kuala Lumpur]] was named after him |
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** [[Chung Thye Phin]] 鄭大平/郑大平 (''1879-1935; Zengcheng, Guangdong; born in Malaysia''), Last Kapitan China, [[Perak]] |
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** Datuk Seri [[Lau Pak Khuan]] 劉伯群/刘伯群 (''1894-1971; Zengcheng, Guangdong; born in China''), Founding member of [[Malaysian Chinese Association]]; First Chinese to be conferred the "Datuk Seri" title by Malaysia Sultan; Led the unsuccessful bid for Chinese equal citizenship rights and official language status during drafting of Malaysia Constitution |
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** Tan Sri [[Wong Pow Nee]] 王保尼, (''1911-2002; born in Malaysia''), [[Chief Minister of Penang]], 1957–1969 |
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** Datuk [[Peter Lo Sui Yin]] 羅思仁/罗思仁 (''Longchuan, Guangdong''), [[Chief Minister of Sabah]], 1965–67 |
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** Datuk [[Yong Teck Lee]] 楊德利/杨德利 (''1958-; Longchuan, Guangdong''), [[Chief Minister of Sabah]], 1996–1998 |
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** Tan Sri [[Chong Kah Kiat]] 章家杰 (''1948-''), [[Chief Minister of Sabah]], 2001–2003 |
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** Tan Sri Datuk Amar [[Stephen Yong Kuet Tze]] 楊國斯/杨国斯 (''1921-2001; Dabu, Guangdong; born in Malaysia''), former Minister of Science, Technology & Environment |
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** [[Peter Chin Fah Kui]] 陳華貴/陈华贵 (''1945-; Bao'an, Guangdong; born in Malaysia''), Plantation Industries and Commodities Minister, Malaysia, 2004- |
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** [[Liow Tiong Lai]] 廖中莱 (''Dabu, Guangdong; born in Malaysia''), Health Minister, Malaysia, 2008- |
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** [[Teresa Kok]] 郭素沁 (''1964-; Huizhou, Guangdong; born in Malaysia''), Member of Parliament, 1999-; Won by the highest majority among 200 seats contested in the [[Malaysian general election, 2008|2008 General Elections]] |
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**[[Cheong Fatt Tze]]張弼士(1840-1916),a Hakka born in 1840 in Dabu, Guangdong Province. he was appointed the Chinese Consul, based in Penang in 1890. Minister for agriculture, industries, roads and mines for the provinces of Fujian and Guangdong for Qing Dynasty in 1899. He was member of the Legislative Assembly of Republic of China in 1912. A street in Penang, Malaysia was named after him. |
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Brothers Hsieh Yi-qiao and Hsieh Liang-mu raised the 100,000 [[Chinese Yuan]] needed for the [[Huanghuagang Uprising]] from the overseas Chinese community in [[Nanyang (region)|Nanyang]] (Southeast Asia) in 1911. At least 27 of the 85 (initially 72 because only 72 bodies could be identified) martyrs of Huanghuagang are Hakkas. Yao Yuping led the Guangdong Northern Expeditionary Force ({{lang|zh-hant|廣東北伐軍}}) to successive victories against the Qing Army which were vital in the successful defence of the [[Provisional Government of the Republic of China (1912)|Provisional Government]] in [[Nanjing]] and Puyi's early abdication.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://homemy.jyumzsf.com/Zuopin/201304/8188.html|title=Yao Yuping and the Xinhai Revolution|language=zh|publisher=Homemy.jumzsf.come|date=8 April 2013|access-date=28 December 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141108095028/http://homemy.jyumzsf.com/Zuopin/201304/8188.html|archive-date=8 November 2014|url-status=dead}}</ref> |
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* [[Thailand]] |
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** [[Thaksin Shinawatra]] 丘達新/丘达新 <ref>{{cite web | title = Thai PM seeks out roots in Meizhou | url=http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/english/doc/2005-07/04/content_456688.htm }}</ref><ref>{{cite web | title = 泰国总理他信:我是华裔客家人 | url=http://www.hsm.com.cn/news/2005/0701/68/596.shtml }}</ref> (''1949-; Fengshun, Guangdong; born in Thailand)'', founder [[Thai Rak Thai]] political party; only [[Prime Minister of Thailand]] to finish a term of office and be reelected, 2001–2006; exiled, 2008. |
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** [[Abhisit Vejjajiva]] (''1964-; born in United Kingdom''), Leader, [[Democrat Party (Thailand)]], 2005- ; former Opposition Leader; elected [[Prime Minister of Thailand]], 2008. |
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** [[Sudarat Keyuraphan]] (''1961-; born in Thailand''), Cabinet Minister, 2002–2006 |
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[[Liao Zhongkai]] and Deng Keng were Sun Yat-sen's main advisors on financial and military matters respectively. A big majority of the soldiers in the Guangdong Army ({{lang|zh-hant|粵軍}}) were Hakkas.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.renwuzhuanjiwang.com/c38007/w10242187.asp|title=5|publisher=Renwuzhuanjiwang.com|access-date=15 January 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141112121946/http://www.renwuzhuanjiwang.com/c38007/w10242187.asp|archive-date=12 November 2014|url-status=dead}}</ref> Other Hakkas for example, [[Eugene Chen]], was an outstanding foreign minister in the 1920s. Some of the best of Nationalist China generals: [[Chen Mingshu]], [[Chen Jitang]], [[Xue Yue]], [[Zhang Fakui]], and [[Luo Zhuoying]] amongst many others are Hakka as well. |
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* [[Indonesia]] |
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** [[Low Lan Pak]] 羅芳伯/罗芳伯 (''1738-1778; Meixian, Guangdong)'', Founder and President, Hakka [[Lanfang Republic]] (present Western Kalimantan, now part of Indonesia), 1777–1884 |
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** [[Hasan Karman]] 黄少凡 (''Meixian; Guangdong; born in Indonesia''), Mayor of Singkawang, West Kalimantan; Indonesia's first Chinese mayor |
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The Hakka occupied communist Bases reached a peak of more than 30,000 square kilometres and a population that numbered more than three million, covering mostly Hakka areas of two provinces: Jiangxi and Fujian. The Hakka city of [[Ruijin]] was the capital of the republic.<ref name="auto2">{{cite web | title = The Secret History of the Hakkas: The Chinese Revolution as a Hakka Enterprise | url = http://www.pdx.edu/intl/sites/www.pdx.edu.intl/files/Erbaugh%20Secret%20History%20of%20Hakkas%20CQ%20(2).pdf | access-date = 8 March 2015 | archive-date = 18 June 2015 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20150618034855/http://www.pdx.edu/intl/sites/www.pdx.edu.intl/files/Erbaugh%20Secret%20History%20of%20Hakkas%20CQ%20%282%29.pdf | url-status = dead }}</ref> |
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* [[Burma]] |
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** [[Khin Nyunt]] (''1939-; Meixian, Guangondg; born in Myanmar''), [[Prime Minister of Burma]], 2003–2004 |
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When it was overrun in 1934 by the Nationalist army in the [[Fifth encirclement campaign against the Jiangxi Soviet|Fifth]] of its [[Encirclement campaigns (Chinese Civil War)|Encirclement campaigns]], the Communists began their famous [[Long March]] with 86,000 soldiers, of which more than 70% were Hakkas. The Fifth Encirclement Campaign was led by Nationalist Hakka general, Xue Yue. During the retreat, the Communists managed to strike a deal with the Hakka warlord controlling Guangdong province, Chen Jitang, to let them pass through Guangdong without a fight. When the [[People's Liberation Army]] had its rank structure from 1955 to 1964, the highest number of generals, totalling 54, came from the small Hakka county of [[Xingguo County|Xingguo]] in Jiangxi province. The county had also previously produced 27 Nationalist generals. Xingguo county is thus known as the Generals' County.<ref name="auto2"/> |
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* [[Timor-Leste]] |
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** [[Pedro Lay]] (''born in East Timor''), Minister of Infrastructure, 2007- |
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** [[Gil Alves]] (''born in East Timor''), Minister of Tourism, Commerce & Industry, 2007- |
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During the same period, there were 132 Hakkas out of 325 generals in Jiangxi, 63 Hakkas out of 83 generals in Fujian, and 8 Hakkas out of 12 generals in Guangdong respectively, not mentioning those from Guangxi, Sichuan and Hunan. The number could have been significantly higher if the majority of the personnel who started the Long March had not perished before reaching its destination. Only less than 7,000 of the original 86,000 personnel had survived it.<ref name="auto2"/> |
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* [[Mauritius]] |
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** Sir [[Moilin Jean Ah-Chuen]] 朱梅麟 (''1909-1991; Meixian, Guangdong; born in Mauritius''), First Chinese member, Legislative Council, 1949; Minister of Local Government, 1967–1976; Second Hakka after Sun Yatsen to have his portrait printed on the bills of a country's currency <ref>{{cite web |url=http://tomchao.com/af/af49a.html |title=Mauritius Bank Notes}}</ref> |
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** [[Noel Lee Cheong Lem]] 李國華/李国华 (''1951-; Meixian, Guangdong; born in Mauritius''), Minister of Tourism, 1993–1995 |
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** [[Joseph Tsang Mang Kin]] 曾繁興/曾繁兴 (''1938-; Meixian, Guangdong; born in Mauritius''), Minister of Art and Culture, 1995–2000 |
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** [[Emmanuel Jean Leung Shing]] 陳念汀/陈念汀 (''1944-; Meixian, Guangdong; born in Mauritius''), Minister of Justice and Human Rights, 2000–2005 |
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** [[Sylvio Tang Wah Hing]] 鄧學升/邓学升 (''Meixian, Guangdong; born in Mauritius''), Minister of Youth and Sports, 2005–2007 |
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Prominent Hakka communist leaders include: Marshal [[Zhu De]], the founder of the Red Army, later known as the People's Liberation Army; [[Ye Ting]], Commander-in-chief, [[New Fourth Army]], one of the two main Chinese communist forces fighting the Japanese during the [[World War II]] (the other main communist force, [[Eighth Route Army]], was commanded by Zhu De); Marshal [[Ye Jianying]], governor of Guangdong; and [[Hu Yaobang]], where the memorial for his funeral sparked off a pro-democracy movement which led to the [[Tiananmen Square protests of 1989|Tiananmen Square protests]] in 1989. In Guangdong, China's most prosperous province, the "Hakka clique" ({{lang|zh-hans|客家帮}}) has consistently dominated the provincial government. Guangdong's Hakka governors include Ye Jianying, [[Ding Sheng (general)|Ding Sheng]], [[Ye Xuanping]] and [[Huang Huahua]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.suizhou.org/?viewthread-39809.html |title=֮_̳__˵ |author=Discuz! Team and Comsenz UI Team |publisher=Suizhou.org |access-date=15 January 2015 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120309001029/http://www.suizhou.org/?viewthread-39809.html |archive-date=9 March 2012 }}</ref> |
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* [[Australia]] |
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** [[Penny Wong]] 黃英賢/黃英贤 (''1968, born in Malaysia''), the current Australian [[Minister for Climate Change and Water]], Australia's first Asian Cabinet Minister, 2007- |
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** [[Alfred Huang]] 黃國鑫/黄国鑫 <ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.zaobao.com.sg/chinese/region/others/pages/australia_chinese010900.html |title=亚洲人在澳洲的骄傲 阿得雷德华人市长黄国鑫 }}</ref> (''Jiaoling, Guangdong, born in China''), Lord Mayor, [[Adelaide]], 2000–2003; Australia's first Chinese Lord Mayor |
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** [[Henry Tsang]] 曾筱龍/曾筱龙 (''1943-; Wuhua, Guangdong; born in China''), Deputy Lord Mayor, [[Sydney]], 1991–1999 |
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** [[Robert Chong]] 鐘富喜/钟富喜 <ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.actv.com.au/robertchong/ |title=Robert Chong }}</ref> (''Meixian, Guangdong; born in Malaysia''), Mayor, [[City of Whitehorse|Whitehorse]], [[Victoria (Australia)|Victoria]], 2001–2002, 2004 |
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Besides playing major roles in all the three major revolutions of China, Hakkas had also been prominently involved in many of the wars against foreign intrusion of China. During the [[First Opium War]], [[Lai Enjue]] led the Qing navy against the British at the [[Battle of Kowloon]] in 1839 and [[Yan Botao]] commanded the coastal defence at the [[Battle of Amoy]] in 1841. [[Feng Zicai]] and [[Liu Yongfu]] were instrumental in the defeat of the French at the [[Battle of Bang Bo]] which led to the French [[Retreat from Lạng Sơn]] and the conclusion of the war in 1885. When the Japanese invaded Taiwan, the Hakka militia forces led by [[Qiu Fengjia]], were able to put up a stiff resistance to the Japanese when the Qing army could not. During the [[Battle of Shanghai]] in the Second Sino-Japanese War in 1937, the heroism of [[Xie Jinyuan]] and his troops, known as the "Eight Hundred Warriors" ({{lang|zh-hant|八百壯士}}) in Chinese history, gained international attention and lifted flagging Chinese morale in their successful [[Defence of Sihang Warehouse]] against the better equipped Japanese. However, in the ensuing [[Battle of Nanjing]], seventeen Nationalist generals were killed in action, of which six were Hakkas. |
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* [[Guyana]] |
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** [[Arthur Chung|Arthur Raymond Chung]] 鐘亞瑟/钟亚瑟 (''1916-2008; Dabu, Guangdong''), First President, Guyana, 1970–80 |
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During the war against the Japanese, both the commander-in-chiefs of the two main Chinese communist forces, Eighth Route Army and New Fourth Army, are Hakkas: Zhu De and Ye Ting. On the Nationalist side, Xue Yue and Zhang Fakui were commander-in-chiefs for the 9th and 4th War Zones respectively. Called the "[[Patton]] of Asia" by the West and the "God of War" ({{lang|zh-hant|戰神}}) by the Chinese, Xue was China's most outstanding general during the war, having won several major battles that killed hundreds of thousands of Japanese troops. [[Luo Zhuoying]] was the commander-in-chief for the [[Chinese Expeditionary Force (Burma)|1st Route Expeditionary Forces, Burma]] (China's first participation of a war overseas), 1942. |
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* [[Trinidad and Tobago]] |
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** Sir [[Solomon Hochoy]] 何才 (''1905-1983; born in Jamaica''), First and only non-white, non-British Governor, 1960–1962 and Governor General, 1962–1972, [[Trinidad and Tobago]] |
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During the [[Japanese occupation of Hong Kong]] from 1941 to 1945, the [[Dong River Column]] guerrilla force ({{lang|zh-hant|東江縱隊}}) was a constant harassment to the Japanese troops. The force, whose members were mostly Hakkas and led by its commander [[Zeng Sheng]], was highly successful due to its strong Hakka network. Noteworthy accomplishments of the partisan guerrilla force included the aiding of British and Commonwealth ([[British Raj#Famines, epidemics, public health|British Raj Colonial rulers]]) prisoners of war to escape successfully from Japanese internment camps and the rescuing of twenty American pilots who parachuted into Hong Kong when they were shot down.<ref>{{Cite book | title = East River Column | jstor=j.ctt1xwfs6| last1=Sui-Jeung| first1=Chan| year=2009| publisher=Hong Kong University Press| isbn=9789622098503}}</ref> |
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===Government officials=== |
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* [[He Ruzhang]] 何如璋 (''1838-1891; Dabu, Guangdong''), China's first ambassador to Japan, Qing Dynasty, 1877–1882 |
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* [[Zhang Dingcheng]] 張鼎丞/张鼎丞 (''1898-1981; Yongding, Fujian''), Procurator-General, [[Supreme People's Procuratorate]], 1954–1975 |
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* [[Liu Fuzhi]] 劉復之/刘复之 (''1917-; Meixian, Guangdong''), Procurator-General, [[Supreme People's Procuratorate]], 1988–1993 |
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* [[Yong Pung How]] 楊邦孝/杨邦孝 (''1926-; Dabu, Guangdong; born in Malaysia''), Second Chief Justice, [[Singapore]], 1990–2006 |
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* [[Marie Madeleine Lee nee Ah Chuen]] 朱志筠 (''1927-; Meixian, Guangdong; born in Mauritius''), Mauritius' first ambassador to China, 1999–2000 |
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* [[Xiao Yang]] 肖扬 (''1938-; Heyuang, Guangdong''), President, [[Supreme People's Court of the People's Republic of China]], 1998–2008 |
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* [[Perng Fai-nan]] 彭淮南 (''1939-; born in Taiwan''), Governor, Central Bank of Taiwan, 1988-; Best Central Banker in the world, 2000, 2005. 2006, 2007, Global Finance |
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* [[Supachai Panitchpakdi]], (''1946-; born in Thailand''), First and only Asian Director-General of [[World Trade Organization]], 1999–2005 |
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* [[Zhang Jiuhuan]] 張九桓/张九桓 <ref>{{cite web | title = Guangxi Hakka Zhang Jiuhuan, China's Ambassador to Singapore | url=http://www.asiawind.com/forums/read.php?f=1&i=2815&t=2815 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web | title = 张九桓:桂东南小山村走出来的外交官 | url=http://www.bobai.cn/Article_Show.asp?ArticleID=2190 }}</ref> (''1947-; Bobai, Guangxi''), Ambassador of China to Nepal (1995–1998), Singapore (2000–2004), Thailand (2004-); Youngest-ever ambassador, [[People's Republic of China]] |
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* [[Yeung Kam John Yeung Sik Yuen]] 楊欽俊/杨钦俊 (''1950-; Meixian, Guangdong; born in Mauritius''), Chief Justice, Mauritius, 2008- |
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* [[Adrienne Louise Clarkson]] {{Post-nominals|post-noms=[[Queen's Privy Council for Canada|PC]] [[Order of Canada|CC]] [[Order of Military Merit (Canada)|CMM]] [[Order of Merit of the Police Forces|COM]] [[Canadian Forces Decoration|CD]]}} (née Adrienne Louise Poy) 伍冰枝 (''1939-; born in Hong Kong''), First Canadian-Chinese (and first visible minority) [[Governor General of Canada]] (1999–2005) |
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Overseas Hakkas have also been prominent politicians in the countries they had migrated to, many of which are leading political figures of the countries or the Chinese communities there. Since the 20th century, there have been twenty Hakkas who had become [[heads of state]] or [[heads of government]] in different countries. |
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===Entrepreneurs and corporate figures=== |
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* [[Cheong Fatt Tze]] 張弼士/张弼士 (''1840-1916; Dabu, Guangdong''), Powerful industralist in South-east Asia who contributed to the interests of Overseas Chinese during China's Qing Dynasty and Republican era |
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* [[Aw Boon Haw]] 胡文虎 (''1882-1954; Yongding, Fujian; born in Burma'') and [[Aw Boon Par]] 胡文豹 (''1888-1944; Yongding, Fujian; born in Burma''), Philanthropists of [[Tiger Balm]] fame |
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* [[Yong Koon]] 楊坤/杨坤, Founder, [[Royal Selangor]], Malaysia |
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* [[Lee Loy Seng]], [[Kuala Lumpur Kepong (KLK)]], Malaysia |
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* [[Raymond Chow]] 鄒文懷/邹文怀 (''1929-; Dabu, Guangdong; born in Hong Kong''); Founder, Golden Harvest; Producer who launched the careers of [[Bruce Lee]], [[Jackie Chan]] and [[Tsui Hark]] |
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* [[Woon Wing Yip]] 葉煥榮/叶焕荣 (''1940-; Dongguan, China; born in China''), Founder, The [[Wing Yip]] Supermarkets, United Kingdom; First Chinese tycoon in United Kingdom |
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* [[Prajogo Pangestu]] (Phang Jun Phen) 彭雲鵬/彭云鹏 (''1944-; born in Indonesia''), Timber tycoon, Indonesia |
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* [[Alan Yau]] 丘德威 (''1962-; born in Hong Kong''), Founder, [[Wagamama]] restaurant chain, [[Hakkasan]] and [[Yauatcha]], United Kingdom |
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* [[Khun Bantoon Lamsam]] 伍捷仆 (''Meixian, Guangdong''), Founder, [[Kasikorn Bank]] (Thai Farmers Bank), Thailand |
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* [[Robert Wan]] 温惠仁 <ref>{{cite web | title=大溪地珍珠王助华裔馆出版《海外华人百科全书》法文版 | url=http://www.zaobao.com.sg/chinese/region/singapore/pages/singapore_chinese260900.html}}</ref> (''Guangdong; born in Tahiti, French Polynesia''), Pearl producer (See [[Robert Wan Pearl Museum]]) |
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* [[Tan Sri Jeffrey Cheah]] 謝富年/谢富年 (''Dongguan, Guangdong; born in Malaysia''), Founder and chairman of The Sunway Group of Companies, Malaysia |
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* [[Michael Lee-Chin]] (''born in Jamaica''), Chairman and CEO, AIC Limited, one of Canada's largest mutual fund companies |
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* [[Dave Chong Min Kuin]] (born in 1956), Founder and Former Managing Director of NEC Infrontia Asia Pacific |
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{{Wikiquote}} |
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===Literary figures, artists, academics and scientists=== |
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* [[Huang Zunxian]] 黃遵憲/黄遵宪 (''1848-1905; Meixian, Guangdong''), Poet, writer and diplomat |
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* [[Yong Mun Sen]] (Yong Yen Lang) 楊曼生/杨曼生 (''1896-1962; Dabu, Guangdong; born in Malaysia''); Pioneer artist and the father of Malaysian painting |
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* [[Lo Hsiang-lin]] 羅香林/罗香林 (''1906-1978, Xingning, Guangdong''), Scholar on Hakka culture and language |
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* [[Teng Yu-hsien]] 鄧雨賢/邓雨贤 (''1906-1944; born in Taiwan''), Taiwanese composer |
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* [[Li Guohao (engineer)|Li Guohao]] 李國豪/李国豪 (''1913-2005; Meixian, Guangdong''), One of the top bridge experts in the world |
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* Ivan A. Taslimson (''Meixian, Guangdong; born in Indonesia''), Artist, scientist, inventor, US tech tycoon. Founder of Solstice Group |
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* [[Chung Li-ho]] 鐘理和/钟理和 (''1915-1960; born in Taiwan''), Famous Taiwanese novelist |
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* [[Han Suyin]] 韓素音/韩素音 (''1917-; Xinyang, Henan''), Author of books on modern China |
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* [[Lin Haiyin]] 林海音 (''1918-2001; Jiaoling, Guangdong; born in Japan''), Taiwanese novelist whose memoirs, 城南旧事 (My Memories of Old Beijing), was made into a movie of the same name |
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* [[Shing-Tung Yau]] 丘成桐 (''1949-; Jiaoling, Guangdong''), Chinese-American mathematician |
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==In popular culture== |
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===Actors, musicians and entertainers=== |
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* ''[[The Guest People]]'' ({{zh|客家之歌}}), a 1997 30-episode Singapore television drama about four young Hakka men who migrated from China to Singapore in the 1950s and were caught in the tumultuous anti-colonial period of the country's history. The Hakka-language version of the drama was broadcast in Taiwan. The drama was nominated for the Best Drama Series awards in the [[Asian Television Awards]] and the [[New York Television Festival]], 1998. |
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* Hong Kong |
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* ''[[1895 (2008 film)|1895]]'' or ''Blue Brave: The Legend of Formosa 1895'' ({{zh|1895乙未}}), a 2008 Taiwan Hakka-language film about the Hakka [[militias]] fighting the Japanese during the [[Japanese invasion of Taiwan (1895)|Japanese invasion of Taiwan]] in 1895. The edited version for television won the Best Drama Series award in the Asian Television Awards, 2009. |
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** [[Chor Yuen]] 楚原 (''1934-; Meixian, Guangdong; born in China''), Hong Kong film director |
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* ''[[:zh:大南迁|The Great Southern Migration]]'' ({{zh|大南迁 or 葛藤凹}}), a 2012 32-episode China television drama about the Hakkas' migration to [[Southern China]] during the late [[Tang dynasty]] in the 9th century. |
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** [[Leslie Cheung]] 張國榮/张国荣 <ref>{{cite web | title = 張綠萍談弟弟張國榮 | url=http://lesliecheung.cc/Special/Misc/articles/sister2.htm }}</ref> (''1956-2003; Meixian, Guangdong; born in Hong Kong''), Famous singer/actor |
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* ''[[To Be or Not to Be (TV series)|Hakka Women]]'' ({{zh|客家女人}}) or ''To Be or Not to Be'' ({{zh|来生不做香港人}}), a 2014 25-episode Hong Kong television drama about the lives of two Hakka sisters separated when young, one in Hong Kong and the other in China. |
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** [[Chow Yun-Fat]] 周潤發/周润发 <ref>{{cite web | title = Honorary Doctor of Letters - Mr CHOW Yun-fat | url=https://www.cityu.edu.hk/cityu/about/honorary/doc/chow-en.pdf |format=PDF}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | title = Martial parts - Artist: Yun-Fat, Chow | url=http://jam.canoe.ca/Movies/Artists/Y/Yun_Fat_Chow/2003/04/13/762802.html }}</ref> (''1955-; Bao'an, Guangdong; born in Hong Kong''), One of the most famous actors in Asia; Lead actor in several Hollywood movies |
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* ''[[Gold Leaf (TV series)|Gold Leaf]]'' ({{zh|茶金)}}, a 2021 Taiwanese period drama about the booming tea trade in Taiwan during the 1950 and a Hakka Taiwanese tea trader family owned tea exporting company. |
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** [[Leon Lai]] 黎明 (''1966-; Meixian, Guangdong; born in China''), Singer/actor; One of the "Four Great Heavenly Kings" of Chinese pop music |
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** [[Alex Man]] 萬梓良/万梓良 (''1957-; Bao'an, Guangdong; born in Hong Kong''), Actor; Best Actor, [[Golden Horse Awards]], 1988 |
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** [[Cherie Chung]] 鍾楚紅/钟楚紅 (''1960-; Boluo, Guangdong; born in Hong Kong''), Actress |
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** [[Jordan Chan]] 陳小春/陈小春 <ref>{{cite web | title = 金曲獎/陳小春當頒獎人 用功聽專輯 | url=http://www.nownews.com.tw/2001/05/01/37-443104.htm }}</ref>(''1967-, Huiyang, Guangdong; born in Hong Kong''), Actor/singer |
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** [[Eric Tsang]] 曾志偉/曾志伟 (''1953-; Wuhua, Guangdong; born in Hong Kong''), Actor/comedian |
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** [[Frances Yip]] 葉麗儀/叶丽仪 (''1947-; Huiyang, Guangdong; born in Hong Kong''), Singer |
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** [[Deanie Ip]] 葉德嫻/叶德娴 (''1947-; Huiyang, Guangdong; born in [[Dapengcheng]]''), Singer/actress |
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** [[Teresa Cheung Tak Lan]] 張德蘭/张德兰 (''Dabu, Guangdong; born in Hong Kong''), Popular Hong Kong singer in the 1970s-1980s |
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** [[Chan Wai-Man]] 陳惠敏/陈惠敏 <ref>{{cite web | title = Chan Wai Man's Biography | url=http://www.fortunecity.com/lavender/westside/70/chanwaimanbio.htm }}</ref> (''1946-; born in Hong Kong''); Actor who is well-known for triad chief roles |
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** [[Shing Fui-On]] 成奎安 (''1955-2009; Xingning, Guangdong; born in Hong Kong''), Actor who is well-known for bad guy roles |
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** [[Angeline Leung]] 梁韵蕊 (''Meixian, Guangdong''), Winner, [[Miss Hong Kong pageant]], 1982 |
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** [[Shallin Tse]] 謝寧/谢宁 (''1963-; Meixian, Guangdong; born in China''), Winner, [[Miss Hong Kong pageant]], 1985 |
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** [[Shirley Yeung]] 楊思琦/杨思琦 (''1978-; Meixian, Guangdong; born in Hong Kong''), Winner, [[Miss Hong Kong pageant]], 2001 |
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** [[Fiona Yuen]] 袁彩雲 (''1976-; born in Germany''), Second runner-up, [[Miss Hong Kong pageant]], 1996 |
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** [[Kate Tsui]] 徐子珊 (''1979-; Huizhou, Guangdong; born in Hong Kong''), Winner, [[Miss Hong Kong pageant]], 2004 |
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** [[Shermon Tang]] 鄧上文/邓上文 (''1983-; born in Hong Kong''), Miss Photogenic, [[Miss Hong Kong pageant]], 2005 |
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* Taiwan |
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** [[Hou Hsiao-Hsien]] 侯孝賢/侯孝贤 (''1947-; Meixian, Guangdong; born in China''), Award-winning film director and a leading figure of [[Taiwan]]'s [[Cinema of Taiwan#New Wave Cinema, 1982–1990|New Wave cinema movement]] |
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** [[Edward Yang]] 楊德昌/杨德昌 (''1947-2007; Meixian, Guangdong; born in China''), Film director; Best Director, [[Cannes Film Festival]], 2000 |
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** [[Luo Dayou]] 羅大佑/罗大佑 (''1954-; Meixian, Guangdong; born in Taiwan''), Influential singer-songwriter who revolutionized Chinese pop and rock music in the 1980s |
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** [[Hebe Tien]] 田馥甄 (''1983-; born in Taiwan''), Member of [[S.H.E]], Taiwanese female pop group |
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** [[Ella Chen]] 陳嘉樺 (''1981-; born in Taiwan''), Member of [[S.H.E]], Taiwanese female pop group |
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** [[Joe Zhang Shu Wei]] 張書偉 (''1980-; born in Taiwan''), Members of [[ENERGY]], Male pop group |
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**[[Chen Qiao En]] 陳喬恩/陈乔恩 (''1979-; born in Taiwan''), Leading actress of Taiwan idol dramas, co-leader of [[7 Flowers]], Taiwanese female pop group |
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** [[Shino Lin]] 林曉培/林晓培 (''born in Taiwan''), Singer |
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** [[Julia Peng]] 彭佳慧 (''1972-; Meixian, Guangdong; born in Taiwan''), Singer |
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** [[Alec Su]] 蘇有朋/苏有朋 <ref>{{cite web | title = 苏有朋出演《原乡人》 将返台抢当客家一哥 | url=http://gb1.chinabroadcast.cn/19720/2008/04/28/3465@2035972.htm }}</ref> (''1973-, born in Taiwan''), Actor/singer |
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** [[Bowie Tsang]] 曾寶儀/曾宝仪 (''1973-; Wuhua, Guangdong''), Compere/singer/actress |
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** [[Chen Chien-Chou]] 陳建洲/陈建洲 (Blackie 黑人) (''1977-; Meixian, Guangdong; born in Taiwan''), Compere; Former national basketballer, [[Chinese Taipei national basketball team]] |
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* China |
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** [[Huang Wanqiu]] 黄婉秋 (''1943-; Meixian, Guangdong''), Lead actress of the classic movie, "Third Sister Liu" 刘三姐 |
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** [[Li Ai]] 李艾 (''Meixian, Guangdong''), Supermodel and one of China's most recognizable media personalities; Host, "[[China's Next Top Model]]" |
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* Singapore |
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** [[Fann Wong]] 范文芳 (''1971-; born in Singapore''), Actress/singer/model |
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** [[Adrian Pang]] 彭耀順/彭耀顺 (''1966-; born in Malaysia''), Actor; Best Actor for Comedy Performance, [[Asian Television Awards]], 2002 |
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** [[Xie Shaoguang]] 謝韶光/谢韶光 (''1960-; born in Singapore''), Actor; Best Actor, [[Asian Television Awards]], 1998; Five-time winner of Singapore's best television actor award |
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** [[Felicia Chin]] 陳靚瑄/陈靓瑄 (''1984-; born in Singapore''), Actress; Female winner, Star Search, 2003; Member of the Singapore national softball team at the age of 15{{Citation needed|date=December 2008}} |
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** [[Wong Lilin]] 黃麗玲/黄丽玲 (''born in Singapore''), Actress |
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** [[Michelle Chong]] 莊米雪/庄米雪 (''1977-; born in Singapore''), Actress/compere |
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** [[Maggie Teng]] 鄧妙華/邓妙华 (''born in Singapore''), Singer; First Singaporean to break into Taiwan pop music industry in the 1980s{{Citation needed|date=December 2008}} |
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** [[Lee Wei Song]] 李偉菘/李伟菘 (''1966-; born in Singapore'') and [[Lee Shih Shiong]] 李偲菘 (''1966-; born in Singapore''), Well-known songwriters{{Citation needed|date=December 2008}} |
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** [[Ho Yeow Sun]] 何耀珊 (''born in Singapore''), Singer; First and only Asian singer to top the US Billboard Dance Chart and the UK MusicWeek Chart; Performed the Olympic Hymn, which was sung in Mandarin for the first time, accompanied by a choir of [[Overseas Chinese]] from 16 different nationalities for 2008 [[Beijing Olympics]] |
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** [http://www.yewhongchow.com/ Yew Hong Chow] 遊宏釗/游宏钊, Classical musician and harmonica virtuso |
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* Malaysia |
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** [[Eric Moo]] 巫啟賢/巫启贤 (''1963-; born in Malaysia''), Award winning singer/composer/producer |
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** [[Michael Wong (singer)|Michael Wong]] 王光良 (''1970-; born in Malaysia'') and [[Victor Wong (singer)|Victor Wong]] 黄品冠 (''1972-; Jieyang, Guangdong; born in Malaysia''), Singer-songwriters of "Guang Liang Pin Guan" 光良品冠 / "Wu Yin Liang Pin" 无印良品 fame |
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** [[Penny Tai]] 戴佩妮 (''1978-; Haifeng, Guangdong; born in Malaysia''), Singer-songwriter; Best Composer, [[Golden Melody Awards]], 2006 |
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** [[Z-Chen]] 張智成/张智成 (''1973-; born in Malaysia''), Singer; Known as "The Little Prince of R&B" |
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** [[Gary Chaw]] 曹格 (''1979-; born in Malaysia''), Singer; Winner, Best Male Mandarin Singer, [[Golden Melody Awards]], 2008 |
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** [[Wong Sze Zen]] (''born in Malaysia''), Miss Malaysia/World, 2003 |
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** [[Lim Pey Yeng]] 林佩盈 (''born in Malaysia''), First Runner Up, Miss Astro Chinese International Pegeant 2000, Famous TV / Event Host |
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* Indonesia |
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** [[Wendy Setiawan]] (''1973-; born in Indonesia''), Cover Girl first winner, 1989, Mode Magazine |
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** [[Delon Thamrin]] (''1978-; born in Indonesia''), Runner-up, [[Indonesian Idol]] Season 1, 2004 |
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== |
==See also== |
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*[[Hakka architecture]] |
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* China |
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*[[Hakka cuisine]] |
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** [[Lu Qin]] 呂欽/吕钦 (''1962-; Huiyang, Guangdong''), [[Xiangqi]] grandmaster; Winner, World Xiangqi Individual Championships, 1990, 1995, 1997, 2001 and 2005 |
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*[[Hakka hill songs]] |
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** [[Ye Qiaobo]] 葉喬波/叶乔波 (''1964-; Hexian, Guangxi''), Winner, [[World Sprint Speed Skating Championships for Women|World Sprint Speed Skating Championships]], 1992, 1993 |
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*[[Hakka Chinese|Hakka language]] |
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** [[Xie Yuxin]] 謝育新/谢育新 (''1968-; Xingning, Guangdong''), National footballer, 1987–1996; First Chinese to play professional football overseas, 1987; Was the youngest footballer and youngest scorer, China national football team |
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*[[Hakka opera]] |
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** [[Sun Caiyun]] 孫彩雲/孙彩云 (''1973-; Shenzhen, Guangdong''), World record-holder, Pole Vault, 1992–1995 |
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*[[Larut War]] |
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** [[Yang Jinghui]] 楊景輝/杨景辉 (''1983-; Guangzhou, Guangdong''), Gold medalist, Diving, 2004 [[2004 Summer Olympics|Athens Olympics]] |
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*[[Lee Youn Chin]] |
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** [[Chen Hong (badminton)|Chen Hong]] 陳宏/陈宏 (''1979-; Changting, Fujian''), Number 1 [[badminton]] player on the world ranking list from 2002 to 2003. |
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*[[Punti–Hakka Clan Wars]] |
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** [[Lin Dan]] 林丹 (''1983-; Longyan, Fujian''), Individual and Team gold medalist, 2008 [[Beijing Olympics]]; Winner, [[World Badminton Championships]], 2006, 2007, 2009 |
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*[[Tea-picking opera]] |
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** [[Zhang Xiangxiang]] 張湘祥/张湘祥 (''1983-; Longyan, Fujian''), Gold medalist, Weightlifting, 2008 [[Beijing Olympics]] |
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** [[He Wenna]] 何雯娜 (''1989-; Longyan, Fujian''), Gold medalist, Gymnastics (Trampoline), 2008 [[Beijing Olympics]] |
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* Taiwan |
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** [[Chu Mu-yen]] 朱木炎 (''1982-''), Gold medalist, Taekwondo, 2004 [[2004 Summer Olympics|Athens Olympics]]; Champion, [[World Taekwondo Championships]], 2003 |
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* Hong Kong |
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** [[Lee Wai Tong]] 李惠堂 (''1905-1979; Wuhua, Guangdong; born in Hong Kong''), One of the greatest Asian footballer |
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== |
==Further reading== |
||
===People and identity=== |
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* [[Lam Yiu-Kwai]] 林耀桂 (''1877-1966; Huiyang, Guangdong; born in China''), Creator of dragon-styled Chinese martial art, [[Dragon Kung Fu]], which has its origins from [[Hakka Kuen]] |
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*{{cite book|last1=Char|first1=Tin-Yuke|date=1969|title=The Hakka Chinese – Their Origin & Folk Songs|publisher=Jade Mountain Press|author-link=Tin-Yuke Char}} |
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* [[Gregory Yong]] 楊瑞元/杨瑞元 (''1925-2008; born in Malaysia''), [[Archbishop Emeritus]], Singapore, 1977–2000 |
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*{{cite book|last1=Eberhard|first1=Wolfram|date=1974|title=Studies in Hakka Folktales|publisher=Taipei: Chinese Association for Folklore}} |
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* [[Jimmy Choo]] 周仰杰 (''1961-; born in Malaysia''), Renowned designer of shoes and handbags, United Kingdom |
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*{{cite book|last1=Kiang|first1=Clyde|date=July 1991|title=The Hakka Search for a Homeland|publisher=Allegheny Press|isbn=9780910042611}} |
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* [[Chin Lik Keong]] 曾力强, Creator of [[I Liq Chuan]] 意力拳 Chinese martial art |
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*{{cite book|editor1-last=Constable|editor1-first=Nicole|date=1996|title=Guest People: Hakka Identity in China and Abroad|publisher=University of Washington Press|isbn=9780295984872}} |
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* Andrew Ngui [http://www.ngui.org], [[Graphic Designer]], born in Singapore. |
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*{{cite book|last1=Leong|first1=Sow-Theng|editor1-last=Wright|editor1-first=Tim|date=1997|title=Migration and Ethnicity in Chinese History: Hakkas, Pengmin and Their Neighbors|publisher=Stanford University Press|isbn=9780804728577}} |
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* [[Shaun Wong]] (''1994-; born in Australia''), Well known Hakka in Australia. |
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*{{cite book|last1=Chung|first1=Yoon-Ngan|date=2005|title=The Hakka Chinese: Their Origin, Folk Songs and Nursery Rhymes|publisher=Poseidon Books|isbn=978-1921005503}} |
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*{{cite book|last1=Leo|first1=Jessieca|date=September 2015|title=Global Hakka: Hakka Identity in the Remaking|publisher=BRILL|isbn=9789004300262}} |
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== |
===Politics=== |
||
*{{cite journal|last1=Erbaugh|first1=Mary S.|date=December 1992|title=The Secret History of the Hakkas: The Chinese Revolution as a Hakka Enterprise|journal=The China Quarterly|volume=132|issue=132|pages=937–968|doi= 10.1017/S0305741000045495|jstor=654189|s2cid=154584671 }} |
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* [[Hakka architecture]] |
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*{{cite book|last1=Spence|first1=Jonathan D.|date=December 1996|title=God's Chinese Son: The Taiping Heavenly Kingdom of Hong Xiuquan|publisher=W. W. Norton & Company|isbn=9780393315561|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/godschinesesonta0000spen}} |
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* [[Hakka (language)|Hakka language]] |
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*{{cite book|last1=Zhang|first1=Delai|date=2002|title=The Hakkas of Sabah: A Survey of Their Impact on the Modernization of the Bornean Malaysian State|publisher=Sabah Theological Seminary|isbn=9789834084004}} |
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* [[Hakka cuisine]] |
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*{{cite book|last1=Yong|first1=Kee Howe|date=July 2013|title=The Hakkas of Sarawak: Sacrificial Gifts in Cold War Era Malaysia|publisher=University of Toronto Press|isbn=9781442615465}} |
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* [[Hakka Hill Songs|Hakka hill songs]] |
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*{{cite book|last1=Lee|first1=Wei Ling|editor1-last=Yap|editor1-first=Koon Hong|date=January 2015|title=A Hakka Woman's Singapore Stories: My Life as a Daughter, Doctor and Diehard Singaporean|publisher=[[Straits Times Press]]|isbn=9789814642477}} |
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* [[Hakka Kuen]] |
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*{{cite book|last1=Liu|first1=L. Larry|date=January 2015|title=Hakkas in Power: A Study of Chinese Political Leadership in East and Southeast Asia, and South America|publisher=Create Space Independent Publishing Platform|isbn=9781505429435}} |
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* [[Meizhou]] |
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* [[Punti-Hakka Clan Wars]] |
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* [[Japanese invasion of Taiwan (1895)|Japanese invasion of Taiwan]] |
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* [[Battle of the Burning Village]] |
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* [[Larut War]] |
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== |
===Language=== |
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*{{cite book|last1=Lee|first1=T.H.|date=1955|title=Hakka Lessons for Malayan Students|publisher=Government Federation of Malaya}} |
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{{Reflist}} |
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*{{cite book|last1=Tsang|first1=Joseph Mang Kin|date=January 2003|title=The Hakka Epic|publisher=President's Fund for Creative Writing in English|isbn=9789990397406}} |
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* ''The Hakka Dialect. A Linguistic Study of its Phonology, Syntax and Lexicon'', by Mantaro J. Hashimoto. (Cambridge University Press, 1973). |
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*{{cite book|last1=Chen|first1=Matthew Y.|last2=Lian|first2=Hee Wee|last3=Yan|first3=Xiuhong|date=2004|title=The Paradox of Hakka Tone Sandhi|publisher=Dept of Chinese Studies, National University of Singapore|isbn=9789810519438}} |
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* ''The secret history of the Hakkas: the Chinese revolution as a Hakka enterprise'' by [[Mary Erbaugh|Mary S. Erbaugh]], The China Quarterly, No. 132, December 1992, pp. 937–968. |
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*{{cite book|last1=Hashimoto|first1=Mantaro J.|date=June 2010|title=The Hakka Dialect: A Linguistic Study of its Phonology, Syntax and Lexicon|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=9780521133678}} |
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* ''God's Heavenly Son: The Taiping Heavenly Kingdom of Hong Xiuquan'', by Jonathan D. Spence. (pub. W.W. Norton, reprint) 1997. (ISBN 978-0-393-31556-1) |
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== |
===Religion=== |
||
*{{cite book|last1=Constable|first1=Nicole|date=August 1994|title=Christian Souls and Chinese Spirits: A Hakka Community in Hong Kong|publisher=University of California Press|isbn=9780520083844}} |
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{{interwiki|code=hak}} |
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*{{cite book|last1=Lutz|first1=Jessie G.|last2=Lutz|first2=Rolland Ray|date=January 1998|title=Hakka Chinese Confront Protestant Christianity, 1850-1900: With the Autobiographies of Eight Hakka Christians, and Commentary|publisher=Routledge|isbn=9780765600387}} |
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{{Commons category|Hakka}} |
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*{{cite book|last1=Christofferson|first1=Ethan|date=September 2012|title=Negotiating Identity: Exploring Tensions between Being Hakka and Being Christian in Northwestern Taiwan|publisher=Wipf & Stock Publishers|isbn=9781610975032}} |
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* [http://www.asiawind.com/hakka/ Hakka Culture Information] |
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* [http://www.sungwh.freeserve.co.uk/hakga Hakka Information] |
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* [http://www.worldhakka.org/ http://www.worldhakka.org] |
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* [http://www.jyu.edu.cn/kejia/index1.htm The Institute of Hakka Research at Jiaying University] |
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* {{zh icon}} [http://www.hakka.gov.tw Council for Hakka Affairs] |
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* [http://selectbooks.com.sg/titles/19645.htm Guest People: Hakka Identity in China and Abroad (Book)] |
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* [http://www.asiawind.com/forums/read.php?f=1&i=608&t=608 Hakka Population and Distribution] |
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* {{zh icon}}[http://literature.ihakka.net 台灣客家文學館] Taiwan Hakka literature museum |
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* {{zh icon}}[http://lit.hakka.gov.tw 台灣客家文學館] Taiwan Hakka literature museum |
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===Food=== |
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* {{zh icon}}[http://cls.hs.yzu.edu.tw/hakka/default.htm 台灣客家文學館] Taiwan Hakka literature museum |
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*{{cite book|last1=Anusasananan|first1=Linda Lau|date=October 2012|title=The Hakka Cookbook: Chinese Soul Food from around the World|publisher=University of California Press|isbn=9780520273283}} |
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* [http://www.hakkathailand.com/home/default_English.php?lang=English/ The HAKKA Association of Thailand] |
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* [http://www.hakkastudy.in.th/ Hakka Cultural Study in Thailand] |
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* [http://www.dhapa.com/ Hakka People in India] |
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===Family stories=== |
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*{{cite book|last1=Tan|first1=Amy|date=October 1995|title=The Hundred Secret Senses|publisher=Penguin Books|isbn=9780399141157|title-link=The Hundred Secret Senses}} The book was shortlisted for the 1996 [[Orange Prize for Fiction]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.orangeprize.co.uk/show/feature/Orange-past-winners|title=Orange past winners|access-date=11 May 2008}}</ref> |
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*{{cite book|last1=Lee|first1=J.P.|date=January 2004|title=Breaking the Curse of the Green Dragon (A Hakka Story)|publisher=Instrument of Truth|isbn=9789810480424}} |
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*{{cite book|last1=Chin|first1=Woon Ping|date=June 2008|title=Hakka Soul: Memories, Migrations and Meals|publisher=University of Hawaii|isbn=9780824832896}} |
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*{{cite book|last1=Huang|first1=Suhua|date=April 2012|title=A Faithful Reading Partner: A Story from a Hakka Village|publisher=AuthorHouse|isbn=9781468562675}} |
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*{{cite book|last1=Lampotang|first1=Peggy|date=January 2014|title=The Coral Heart: A Shopkeeper's Journey|publisher=Atelier d'ecriture|isbn=9789990336924}} |
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*{{cite book|last1=Sze|first1=Elsie|date=February 2014|title=Ghost Cave: A Novel of Sarawak|publisher=Hong Kong Women in Publishing Society|isbn=978-1496073945}} |
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*{{cite book|last1=Hsiung|first1=C. Fong|date=September 2014|title=Picture Bride|publisher=Mawenzi House/TSAR Publishers|isbn=9781927494394}} |
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*{{cite book|last1=Lin Ung|first1=Charlene|date=March 2015|title=Nam Moi: A Young Girl's Story of Her Family's Escape from Vietnam|publisher=Createspace Independent Publishing Platform|isbn=9781508700791}} |
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*{{cite book|last1=Madison|first1=Paula Williams|date=April 2015|title=Finding Samuel Lowe: China, Jamaica, Harlem|publisher=Amistad|isbn=9780062331632}} |
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==References== |
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{{Reflist|30em}} |
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==External links== |
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{{Commons category-inline}} |
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{{Han subgroups}} |
{{Han subgroups}} |
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{{Hong Kongers}} |
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{{Authority control}} |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Hakka People}} |
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[[Category:Hakka| ]] |
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[[Category:Hakka people| ]] |
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[[Category:Ethnic groups in Fujian]] |
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[[Category:Ethnic groups in Taiwan]] |
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[[Category:Hakka people| ]] |
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[[zh-min-nan:Kheh-ka]] |
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[[Category:Subgroups of the Han Chinese]] |
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[[hak:Hak-kâ]] |
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[[nl:Hakka (volk)]] |
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[[ja:客家]] |
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[[no:Hakkaer]] |
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[[pl:Hakka (grupa etniczna)]] |
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[[pt:Hacá]] |
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[[ru:Хакка (народность)]] |
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[[simple:Hakka people]] |
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[[vi:Người Khách Gia]] |
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[[zh-yue:客家]] |
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[[zh:客家]] |
Latest revision as of 21:54, 26 December 2024
This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. The specific problem is: Significant unsourced material, often poorly organized and ungrammatical. (April 2024) |
Total population | |
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80 million[2] | |
Regions with significant populations | |
China, Taiwan, Southeast Asia, Europe, Americas | |
Languages | |
Religion | |
Chinese folk religion, Confucianism, Taoism, Mahayana Buddhism, Christianity, Islam |
Hakka people | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Chinese name | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Chinese | 客家 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Literal meaning | guest families | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Vietnamese name | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Vietnamese | người Khách Gia, người Hẹ |
The Hakka (Chinese: 客家), sometimes also referred to as Hakka-speaking Chinese,[1][3] or Hakka Chinese,[4] or Hakkas, are a southern Han Chinese subgroup whose principal settlements and ancestral homes are dispersed widely across the provinces of southern China and who speak a language that is closely related to Gan, a Han Chinese dialect spoken in Jiangxi province. They are differentiated from other southern Han Chinese by their dispersed nature and tendency to occupy marginal lands and remote hilly areas. The Chinese characters for Hakka (客家) literally mean "guest families".[5]
The Hakka have settled in Guangdong, Fujian, Jiangxi, Guangxi, Sichuan, Hunan, Zhejiang, Hainan, and Guizhou in China, as well as in Taoyuan City, Hsinchu County, Miaoli County, Pingtung County, and Kaohsiung City in Taiwan. Their presence is especially prominent in the Lingnan or Liangguang area, comprising the Cantonese-speaking provinces of Guangdong and Guangxi. Despite being partly assimilated to the Cantonese-speaking population, they retain a significant presence there.
Like the other southern Han Chinese subgroups, Hakka mainly comprise Central Plains Chinese refugees fleeing social unrest, upheaval, and invasions. However, the Hakka were different in being late arrivals, moving from Central China into Southern China when the earlier groups of Han Chinese settlers in the south had already developed distinctive local identities and languages.[6][7] Their migration path was also different, and they entered Guangdong, Guangxi and Fujian via Jiangxi province, instead of traversing Hunan or moving along the Fujian coast.
Today, substantial numbers of Hakka Chinese have migrated overseas to various countries throughout the world.[8][2]
Origin and identity
[edit]Migrations
[edit]The Hakka arrived in southern China much later than other southern Han Chinese populations. These earlier waves of southern Han Chinese immigrants occupied the coastal areas and fertile lowlands and had already formed distinctive cultural identities and dialects. Consequently, the Hakka were forced to locate their settlements on marginal territories and relatively infertile land.
The Hakka arrived in the Lingnan region by traversing Jiangxi and Fujian. During their journey through Jiangxi they intermarried with the Yao and She, two non-Han ethnic minorities. In Fujian, they developed the habit of living in communal fortresses. Intermarriage with aboriginal groups and the adoption of habits that diverged from the Han, such as communal fortress living, increased the Cantonese distaste for the Hakka and aroused suspicion.
During the 16th century, in response to an economic boom, the Hakkas moved into hilly areas to mine for zinc and lead and also moved into the coastal plains to cultivate cash crops. After an economic downturn, many of these ventures failed, and many Hakka had to turn to pillaging to survive.[9][10][7]
Genetic findings
[edit]Studies show extensive gene flows and a very close relationship between the Hakka and the surrounding Han Chinese populations in the south.[11][12][13] According to a 2009 study published in the American Journal of Human Genetics, Hakka are principally of Han Chinese descent,[11][12][13] exhibiting an average genetic difference of 0.32% with other tested Han Chinese persons.[11] Nonetheless, compared with other southern Han Chinese groups, the Hakka genetic profile exhibits a slight skew towards northern Han people.[11][13] This is in line with their migratory history as later arrivals to the south than the other Han Chinese groups.
Cultural identity
[edit]The Hakka identify as Han Chinese and genetic studies show they are principally of Han ancestry,[12] despite a recorded history of intermarriage with minority groups such as the Yao and the She. Furthermore, the Hakka language belongs to the Sinitic group of languages, being linguistically proximate to the Gan dialect of Jiangxi. The Hakka also exhibit traditional Confucian values, such as a respect for family, ancestor veneration, and a commitment to both learning and the ideals of a Confucian gentleman. Finally, they carry Han Chinese surnames and use Han Chinese naming conventions. Lingnan Hakka place names indicate a long history of the Hakka being culturally Han Chinese.[14] Like the Cantonese, they fiercely insisted on their Han identities and were principal movers of the Anti-Qing movement.
However, the Hakka differed in their lifestyles and their preferred mode of habitation - living in large communal fortress-like buildings (known as tulou) instead of residing in courtyard houses (or siheyuan). They also settled in marginal or hardscrabble hill land avoided by other Han Chinese subgroups, and in this regard, were considered similar to non-Han aborigines. They also exhibited gender egalitarianism to a greater degree than other southern Chinese.
Unlike other Han Chinese groups, the Hakkas are not named after a geographical region, e.g. a province, county or city. The Hakka people have a distinct identity from the Cantonese people. As 60% of the Hakkas in China reside in Guangdong province, and 95% of overseas Hakkas ancestral homes are in Guangdong. Hakkas from Chaoshan, Guangzhou, and Fujian may self-identify as only Chaoshanese, Cantonese and Hokkiens.
Distant origins
[edit]It is commonly held that the Hakkas are a subgroup of the Han Chinese that originated in the central plains.[15][16] To trace their origins, a number of theories so far have been brought forth among anthropologists, linguists and historians:[17]
- the Hakkas are Han Chinese originating solely from the Central Plain;[17]
- the Hakkas are northern Han Chinese from the Central Plain with some inflow of Han Chinese from the south;[17]
- the Hakkas are southern Han Chinese with some inflow of northern Han Chinese from the Central Plain.[17]
The theories indicating a descent from both northern and southern Han are the most likely and are together supported by multiple scientific studies into the genetics.[16][17][11] Furthermore, research into the mitochondrial DNA of the Hakka indicates that the majority of their matrilineal gene pool consists of lineages prevalent in the southern Han.[17] Clyde Kiang stated that the Hakkas' origins may also be linked with Han's ancient neighbors, the Dongyi and Xiongnu people.[18] However, this is disputed by many scholars and Kiang's theories are considered to be false.[19]
Hakka Chinese scientist and researcher Dr. Siu-Leung Lee stated in the book by Chung Yoon-Ngan, The Hakka Chinese: Their Origin, Folk Songs And Nursery Rhymes, that the potential Hakka origins from the Northern Han and Xiongnu and that of the indigenous Southern She and Yue tribes, "are all correct, yet none alone explain the origin of the Hakka", pointing out that the problem with DNA profiling on limited numbers of people within population pools cannot correctly ascertain who is really the Southern Chinese, because many Southern Chinese are also from Northern Asia; Hakka or non-Hakka.[20] It is known that the earliest major waves of Hakka migration began due to the attacks of the two aforementioned tribes during the Jin dynasty (266–420).[21]
Definitional problems and disambiguation
[edit]The study of this population group is complicated by linguistic uncertainty and nomenclatural ambiguity in the historical record. The term Hakka (客家) is sometimes broadly used to refer to other southern Han Chinese groups during their southward migration. Imperial census statistics did not distinguish what varieties of Chinese the population spoke. Some family genealogies also employ the term Hakka (客家) to refer to their southward migration, even though they belonged to the earlier groups of Han Chinese settlers and did not speak a Gan-affiliated language. These clans would be properly regarded as belonging to local dialect groups due to the timing of their arrival, the language they spoke, the customs they practiced, and the route of their traversal. These families were not part of the groups of settlers today associated with the Hakka, who arrived in southern China at a much later date through Jiangxi province and who spoke a Gan-affiliated language.
For example, the study by Lo Hsiang-lin, K'o-chia Yen-chiu Tao-Liu / An Introduction to the Study of the Hakkas (Hsin-Ning & Singapore, 1933) used genealogical sources of family clans from various southern counties, leading to the inclusion of native southern Han Chinese families into the Hakka category.
Language
[edit]Hakka Chinese is the native Chinese variety of the Hakka people. Hakka Chinese is the closest Chinese variety to Gan Chinese in terms of phonetics, with scholars studies consider the late Old Gan together with Hakka Chinese and the Tongtai dialect of Jianghuai Mandarin to have been the lingua franca of the Southern dynasties.[22] Northern Hakka varieties have partial mutual intelligibility with southern Gan. Accordingly, Hakka is sometimes classified as a variety of Gan. Some studies posit that Hakka people and Gan people have close genetic relations and shared areal features.[23]
In Taiwan, the Ministry of Education named "Taiwanese Hakka Chinese" as one of the languages of Taiwan.[24]
Culture
[edit]Hakka culture has been largely shaped by the new environment, which they had to alter many aspects of their culture to adapt, which helped influence their architecture and cuisine. When the Hakka expanded into areas with pre-existing populations in the South, there was often little agricultural land left for them to farm. As a result, many Hakka men turned towards careers in the military or in public service.
Architecture
[edit]Hakka people built several types of tulou and peasant fortified villages in the mountainous rural parts of far western Fujian and adjacent southern Jiangxi and northern Guangdong regions. A representative sample of Fujian tulou (consisting of 10 buildings or building groups) in Fujian was inscribed in 2008 as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.[25]
Another very popular architectural style in northern east Guangdong, such as Xingning and Meixian, is Wrapped Dragon Village (Chinese: 圍龍屋; pinyin: wéilóngwū).
Cuisine
[edit]Hakka cuisine is known for the use of preserved meats and tofu, as well as stewed and braised dishes. Some of the popular dishes are Yong Tau Foo and Lei Cha. These dishes are popular in Taiwan, Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand, and Singapore. The taste profile is generally light, tending even towards blandness, with a preference for allowing the taste of the ingredients, especially the herbs, to emerge through any seasoning.
Lei cha is a traditional Southern Chinese tea-based beverage or rice gruel that forms a part of Hakka cuisine. Ingredients include green tea, basil, sawtooth coriander, mug wort, and a kind of herb known as "Fu Yip Sum". Generally regarded as laborious and difficult to make. Usually eaten with side dishes.
Yong tau foo is a Hakka Chinese food consisting primarily of tofu that has been filled with either a ground meat mixture or fish paste. It can be eaten dry with sauce or served in a soup base.
Suanpanzi is another popular Hakka dish which literally means "abacus seeds". It consists of mainly yam or tapioca beaten in to the shape of abacus beads. The dish is served with minced pork or chicken and with light seasoning.
Music
[edit]Hill song
[edit]Hakka hill songs are traditionally used by hillside farmers in parts of Taiwan and China, mainly for entertainment in the farming fields and courting practices. They are characterized by the strong, resonating melody and voice, which echo around hills and can be heard for up to a mile around the area. Hill songs can be considered a form of communication, as its participants often use it to communicate love songs or news.
Hakkapop
[edit]Hakkapop is a genre of Hakka pop music made primarily in China, Taiwan, Malaysia and Indonesia.
Views on gender
[edit]Historically, Hakka women did not bind their feet when the practice was commonplace in other parts of China.[26] Hakka women are known for their independent nature and willingness to engage in hard work typically reserved for men in other dialect groups.
This may have been driven by historical necessity rather than cultural differences, since the Hakka employed marginal hill lands which were less fertile than the river valley occupied by other Han subgroups, such as the Cantonese, the Teochew and the Hoklo people.
Media
[edit]In 1950, China Central People's Broadcasting Station recruited the first Hakka broadcaster, Zhang Guohua, based on a radius of two kilometers from the Meixian government. On April 10, 1950, the Voice of Hakka (客家之聲) started broadcasting. It broadcast nine hours of Hakka Chinese programs every day through shortwave radio and online radio, targeting countries and regions where Hakka people gather, such as Japan, Indonesia, Mauritius, Reunion Island, Australia, Hong Kong and Taiwan.
In 1988, Meizhou Television Station (梅州電視臺) was founded. In 1994, Hakka Public Channel, also known as Meizhou TV-2 had started broadcasting. Hakka Chinese began to appear in television programs. In 2021, it was renamed Hakka Life Channel (客家生活頻道).
In 1991, Meizhou People's Broadcasting Station (梅州人民廣播電臺), also known as Meizhou Wired Broadcasting Station (梅州有線廣播電臺) officially started broadcasting. Meizhou Radio News: FM94.8 or urban FM101.9. Meizhou Radio Traffic Channel: FM105.8 MHz. Meizhou Radio Private Car Channel: FM94.0 or urban FM103.9. Until now, Hakka Chinese is still used for news program, radio drama program, emotional program, entertainment program and cultural program.
In 1999, 3CW Chinese Radio Australia (3CW澳大利亞中文廣播電臺) was launched. It used Mandarin, Cantonese and Hakka.
In 2001, Meizhou Television Station merged with Meizhou People's Broadcasting Station and was renamed Meizhou Radio and Television Station (MRT, 梅州廣播電視臺). In 2004, the station had officially completed its establishment.
In 2003, Taiwan Broadcasting System (TBS, 臺灣公共廣播電視集團) established a Hakka satellite cable channel "Hakka TV". In Taiwan, there are seven Hakka Chinese radio channels.
In 2005, Meixian Radio and Television Station (梅縣廣播電視臺) was reorganized after the separation of the National Cultural System Reform Bureau. It is a public institution under the jurisdiction of the Meixian County Party Committee and County Government. The channel can be watched in Meizhou and surrounding area with an audience of over 4 million people.
In 2012, Voice of Hong Kong (香港之聲) started broadcasting. Hakka Chinese is used on Sihai Kejia Channel.
In 2019, Shenzhou Easy Radio (神州之聲) added a Hakka Chinese radio break which broadcasts to the southeast coast of mainland China, Taiwan, Southeast Asia, the South Pacific and Japan. On Radio The Greater Bay (大灣區之聲), Sihai Kejia Channel has also joined.
In 2023, The Xuexi Qiangguo (學習強國) Platform under the supervision of the Publicity Department of the Chinese Communist Party added automatic broadcasting in Hakka Chinese.[citation needed]
Religion
[edit]The religious practices of Hakka people are largely similar to those of other Han Chinese. Ancestor veneration is the primary form of religious expression.[27] One distinctively Hakka religious practice involves the worship of dragon deities.[28]
Discrimination
[edit]Imperial era - Qing dynasty
[edit]People of Hakka ancestry comprised the notable mainstay of the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom, although other dialect groups also enlisted. The leader of the Xiang Army, Zeng Guofan, had a special contempt for Hakka women, referring to them as "hillbilly witches".
In retaliation for killing three Hunanese officers, the Xiang Army exterminated the entire Hakka population of Wukeng and Chixi during military counter-attacks on the Hakkas in the year 1888. The army also massacred tens of thousands of other Hakkas in Guanghai, a region of Taishan, Guangdong. Many of the killings in Guanghai took place in the Dalongdong area.[29]
The Taiping rebellion caused millions of casualties on both sides. In retaliation, after defeating the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom, the Xiang Army targeted Hakka villages and is estimated to have killed ~30,000 Hakkas every day during the height of the retaliation.[30]
Discrimination against Hakka by the Cantonese
[edit]Cantonese people have had a history of friction with Hakka, despite the both of them being Han subgroups speaking varieties of Chinese that exhibit relatively high mutual intelligibility (both dialects tracing straightforward descent from Middle Chinese). The Cantonese regarded the Hakka as displaying non-Han habits and as opportunists intruding on Cantonese territory. The conflict between the two groups led to one of the largest inter-ethnic genocides in history.
Mass killings of Hakkas in China
[edit]The Red Turban rebels, who were mostly of Cantonese ancestry, carried out a genocidal campaign against the Hakkas during a revolt against the Qing dynasty. The Cantonese Red Turbans killed 13 Hakka village chiefs and 7,630 other Hakkas while on their way to Heshan, and after conquering it, they killed another 1,320 Hakkas.
The bloody Punti–Hakka Clan Wars, saw reciprocal massacres by both groups, but the Hakka bore the brunt of the casualties. This war eventually killed some 500,000 Hakkas (or quite possibly even more). During these killings, the Cantonese generally collaborated with the Xiang people, since both dialect groups had an axe to grind against the Hakka.
In retaliation for a Hakka massacre of Cantonese people, Cantonese peasants butchered 500 Hakkas in a village located in the rural Enping county forcing the surviving Hakkas to flee, but these refugees, who numbered some 4,000 Hakka, were later all caught and killed by Cantonese peasants, who spared neither women nor child. Government officials mobilized officers and men from the local Cantonese peasants to regain the Guanghai area which was occupied by the Hakkas. The number of Hakkas killed was tens of thousands in the Dalongdong area of Guanghai alone.
Discrimination and hatred of Hakka outside Guangdong
[edit]The Cantonese murdered more than 70 Hakka fellow provincials in Shanghai under the justification of a Hakka conspiracy that the Jiaying group was surrendering the city to foreign control.[31] On 27 August 1925, villages in a county belonged to the Hakka minority were attacked, Chiang's Punti (Cantonese) men and soldiers did not hesitate to rape their women and pillage their homes.[32]
Inter-ethnic hatred between the two groups also rose to a boil in Malaysia. Memories of conflict and old grudges sparked another round of conflict between the Hakkas and Cantonese in Perak, Malaya, leading to the Larut Wars.
Upon arriving in Madagascar, the Cantonese colluded to prevent any Hakka migration to Madagascar.
By Guangxi people
[edit]More than 100,000 Hakkas were slaughtered by the locals in Guangxi province during another clan war. In October 1850, the Cantonese and Hakkas were hacking and killing each other for over 40 days in Guigang.[citation needed]
Attacks against Hakka by the Lingao people
[edit]Between 1925 and 1926, thousands were killed and wounded when the ethnic hatred of the Hakkas by the natives of Lingao turned violent in northwestern Hainan.[33]
Hakka in mainland China
[edit]Hakka populations are found in 13 out of the 27 provinces and autonomous regions of mainland China.
Guangdong
[edit]Hakkas who live in Guangdong comprise about 60% of the total Hakka population. Worldwide, over 95% of the overseas-descended Hakkas came from this Guangdong region, usually from Meizhou and Heyuan as well as other towns such as Shenzhen, Jieyang, Dongguan and Huizhou. Hakkas live mostly in the northeast part of the province, particularly in the so-called Xing-Mei (Xingning–Meixian) area. Unlike their kin in Fujian, Hakka in the Xingning and Meixian area developed a non-fortress-like unique architectural style, most notably the weilongwu (圍龍屋; wéilóngwū or Hakka: Wui Lung Wuk) and sijiaolou (四角樓; sìjǐaolóu or Hakka: Si Kok Liu).
Fujian
[edit]Tradition states that the early Hakka ancestors traveling from north China entered Fujian first, then by way of the Ting River they traveled to Guangdong and other parts of China, as well as overseas. Thus, the Ting River is also regarded as the Hakka Mother River.
The Hakkas who settled in the mountainous region of south-western Fujian province developed a unique form of architecture known as the tulou (土樓), literally meaning earthen structures. The tulou are round or square and were designed as a combined large fortress and multi-apartment building complex. The structures typically had only one entrance-way, with no windows at ground level. Each floor served a different function: the first floor contained a well and livestock, the second food storage and the third and higher floors living spaces. Tulou were built to withstand attack from bandits and marauders.
Today, Western Fujian is inhabited by 3 million Hakkas, scattered around villages in 10 counties (county-level 'cities' and districts) in Longyan and Sanming prefectures, 98% of whom are Hakkas living in Changting, Liancheng, Shanghang, Wuping, Yongding, Ninghua, Qingliu and Mingxi counties.[34]
Jiangxi
[edit]Jiangxi contains the second largest Hakka community. Nearly all of southern Jiangxi province is Hakka, especially in Ganzhou. In the Song dynasty, a large number of Han Chinese migrated to the delta area as the Court moved southward because invasion of northern minority. They lived in Jiangxi and intermixed with the She and Yao minorities. Ganzhou was the place that the Hakka have settled before migrating to Western Fujian and Eastern Guangdong. During the early Qing dynasty, there was a massive depopulation in Gannan due to the ravage of pestilence and war. However, Western Fujian and Eastern Guangdong suffered population explosion at the same time. Some edicts were issued to block the coastal areas, ordering coastal residents to move to the inland. The population pressure and the sharp contradiction of the land redistribution drove some residents to leave. Some of them moved back to Gannan, integrating with other Hakka people who lived there already for generations. Thus, the modern Gannan Hakka community was finally formed.[35]
Sichuan
[edit]The Kangxi Emperor (r. 1662–1722) after a tour of the land, decided the province of Sichuan had to be repopulated after the devastation caused by Zhang Xianzhong. Seeing the Hakka were living in poverty in the coastal regions in Guangdong province, the emperor encouraged the Hakkas in the south to migrate to Sichuan province. He offered financial assistance to those willing to resettle in Sichuan: eight ounces of silver per man and four ounces per woman or child.
Sichuan was originally the origin of the Deng lineage until one of them was hired as an official in Guangdong during the Ming dynasty but during the Qing plan to increase the population in 1671 they came to Sichuan again. Deng Xiaoping was born in Sichuan.[36]
Hunan
[edit]Hakka people are mainly concentrated in Liuyang and Liling villages.
Henan
[edit]As with those in Sichuan, many Hakka emigrated to Xinyang Prefecture (in Southern Henan Province), where Li Zicheng carried out a massacre in Guangzhou (now in Huangchuan) on 17 January 1636.
Hakka in Hong Kong
[edit]During the 15th century to 19th century, Hong Kong was in the imperial district of Xin'an (now Shenzhen) County.[37] The 1819 gazetteer lists 570 Punti and 270 Hakka contemporary settlements in the whole district.[38] However, the area covered by Xin'an county is greater than what was to become the British imperial enclave of Hong Kong by 1898. Although there had been settlers originating from the mainland proper even before the Tang dynasty, historical records of those people are non-extant, only evidence of settlement from archaeological sources can be found.[39] The New Territories lowland areas had been settled originally by several clan lineages in Kam Tin, Sheung Shui, Fanling, Yuen Long, Lin Ma Hang and Tai Po and hence termed the Punti before the arrival of the Hakka, and fishing families of the Tanka and Hoklo groups to the area.[40] Since the prime farming land had already been farmed, the Hakka land dwellers settled in the less accessible and more hilly areas. Hakka settlements can be found widely distributed around the Punti areas, but in smaller communities. Many are found on coastal areas in inlets and bays surrounded by hills.
Hakka-speaking communities are thought to have arrived in the Hong Kong area after the rescinding of the coastal evacuation order in 1688,[41] such as the Hakka speaking Lee clan lineage of Wo Hang, one of whose ancestors is recorded as arriving in the area in 1688.
As the strong Punti lineages dominated most of the north western New Territories, Hakka communities began to organise local alliances of lineage communities such as the Sha Tau Kok Alliance of Ten or Shap Yeuk as Patrick Hase writes.[41] Hakka villages from Wo Hang to the west and Yantian to the east of Sha Tau Kok came to use it as a local market town and it became the center of Hakka dominance. Further, the Shap Yeuk's land reclamation project transforming marshland to arable farmland with the creation of dykes and levees to prevent storm flooding during the early 19th century shows an example of how local cooperation and the growing affluence of the landed lineages in the Alliance of Ten provided the strong cultural, socioeconomic Hakka influence on the area.
Farming and cultivation have been the traditional occupations of Hakka families from imperial times up until the 1970s. Farming was mostly done by Hakka women while their menfolk sought labouring jobs in the towns and cities. Many men entered indentured labour abroad as was common from the end of the 19th century to the Second World War. Post war, males took the opportunity to seek work in Britain and other countries later to send for their families to join them once they sent enough money back to cover travel costs.
As post war education became available to all children in Hong Kong, a new educated class of Hakka became more mobile in their careers. Many moved to the government planned new towns which sprung up from the 1960s. The rural Hakka population began to decline as people moved abroad, and away to work in the urban areas. By the end of the 1970s, agriculture was firmly in the decline in Hakka villages.[42] Today, there are still Hakka villages around Hong Kong, but being remote, many of their inhabitants have moved to the post war new towns like Sheung Shui, Tai Po, Sha Tin and further afield.
Hakka in Taiwan
[edit]The Hakka population in Taiwan is around 4.6 million people today.[43] Hakka comprise about 15 to 20% of Taiwanese people and form the second-largest ethnic group in the country. They are descended largely from Hakka who migrated from southern and northern Guangdong and western Fujian.[7] The early Hakka immigrants were the island's first agriculturalists and formed the nucleus of the Chinese population, numbering tens of thousands at the time.[44] They resided in "savage border districts, where land could be had for the taking, and where a certain freedom from official oppression was ensured."[45] Back then the Hakka on Taiwan had gained a reputation with the authorities of being turbulent and lawless.[46]
In the past the Hakka in Taiwan owned matchlock muskets. Han people traded and sold matchlock muskets to the Taiwanese aborigines. The Aboriginals used their matchlock muskets to defeat the Americans in the Formosa Expedition. During the Sino-French War the Hakka and Aboriginals used their matchlock muskets against the French in the Keelung Campaign and Battle of Tamsui.
Liu Mingchuan took measures to reinforce Tamsui, in the river nine torpedo mines were planted and the entrance was blocked with ballast boats filled with stone which were sunk on 3 September, matchlock armed "Hakka hill people" were used to reinforce the mainland Chinese battalion, and around the British Consulate and Customs House at the Red Fort hilltop, Shanghai Arsenal manufactured Krupp guns were used to form an additional battery.[47]
Lin Ch'ao-tung (林朝棟) was the leader of the Hakka militia recruited by Liu Ming-ch'uan.[48]
The Hakka used their matchlock muskets to resist the Japanese invasion of Taiwan and Hakka Han people and Aboriginals conducted an insurgency against Japanese rule. The Hakka rose up against the Japanese in the Beipu uprising.
Taiwan's Hakka population concentrates in Hsinchu and Hsinchu County, Miaoli County and around Zhongli District in Taoyuan City and Meinong District in Kaohsiung and in Pingtung County, with smaller presences in Hualien County and Taitung County. In recent decades,[when?] many Hakka have moved to the largest metropolitan areas, including Taipei and Taichung.
On 28 December 1988, 14,000[failed verification] Hakka protestors took to the streets in Taipei to demand the Nationalist government to "return our mother tongue", carrying portraits of Sun Yat-sen.[49] The movement was later termed "1228 Return Our Mother Tongue Movement".
Hakka-related affairs in Taiwan are regulated by the Hakka Affairs Council. Hakka-related tourist attractions in Taiwan are Dongshih Hakka Cultural Park, Hakka Round House, Kaohsiung Hakka Cultural Museum, Meinong Hakka Culture Museum, New Taipei City Hakka Museum, Taipei Hakka Culture Hall and Taoyuan Hakka Culture Hall.
Hakka diaspora
[edit]Southeast Asia
[edit]Vietnam
[edit]There are two groups of Hakka in Vietnam. One is known as Ngái people and lives along the border with China in Northern Vietnam. Another group are Chinese immigrants to Southern Vietnam, known as Người Hẹ and is located around Ho Chi Minh City and Vũng Tàu.
Cambodia
[edit]About 65% of the Hakka trace their roots back to Meizhou and Heyuan prefectures in Guangdong Province. About 70% of the Hakkas are found in Phnom Penh where they dominate professions in the field of Traditional Chinese Medicine and shoemaking. Hakkas are also found in Takéo Province, Stung Treng and Rattanakiri who consist of vegetable growers and rubber plantation workers. Hakka communities in the provinces migrated to Cambodia through Tonkin and Cochinchina in the 18th and 19th centuries.[50]
Thailand
[edit]There are no records as to when Hakka descendants arrived in Thailand. In 1901, Yu Cipeng, a Hakka member of The League Society of China came to visit Thailand and found that the establishment of many varied organizations among the Hakka was not good for unity. He tried to bring the two parties together and persuaded them to dissolve the associations in order to set up a new united one. In 1909 The Hakka Society of Siam was established and Chao Phraya Yommarat (Pan Sukhum), then interior minister, was invited to preside over the opening ceremony for the establishment of the society's nameplate, located in front of the Chinese shrine "Lee Tee Biao". Yang Liqing was its first president.[51]
Singapore
[edit]In 2010, 232,914 people in Singapore reported Hakka ancestry. Singapore's most prominent Hakka is its founding prime minister, Lee Kuan Yew.
Malaysia
[edit]Hakka people form the second largest subgroup of the ethnic Chinese population of Malaysia, particularly in the peninsula, with several prominent Hakka figures emerging during colonial British rule. There are 1,729,000 people of Hakka ancestry in Malaysia as of 2016.[52] Chung Keng Quee, "Captain China" of Perak and Penang, was the founder of the mining town of Taiping, the leader of the Hai San, a millionaire philanthropist and an innovator in the mining of tin, having been respected by both Chinese and European communities in the early colonial settlement. Another notable Hakka was Yap Ah Loy, who founded Kuala Lumpur and was a Kapitan Cina of the settlement from 1868 to 1885, bringing significant economic contributions and was also an influential figure among the ethnic Chinese.
In the district of Jelebu, Negeri Sembilan, Hakka people make up more than 90% of the Chinese subgroup with dialect itself acting as a lingua franca there. This has contributed greatly to the fact that the place is commonly known among Hakka Chinese as "Hakka Village". The greatest concentration of Hakkas in northern peninsular Malaysia is in Ipoh, Perak and in Kuala Lumpur and its satellite cities in Selangor. Concentrations of Hakka people in Ipoh and surrounding areas are particularly high. The Hakkas in the Kinta Valley came mainly from the Jiaying Prefecture or Meixian, while those in Kuala Lumpur are mainly of Huizhou origin.[53]
A large number of Hakka people are also found in Sarawak, particularly in the city of Kuching and Miri, where there is a notable population of Hakka people who speak the "Ho Poh"[clarification needed] variant of Hakka.
In Sabah, most of the ethnic Chinese are of Hakka descent. In the 1990s, the Hakkas formed around 57% of the total ethnic Chinese population in Sabah.[54] Hakka is the lingua franca among the Chinese in Sabah to such an extent that Chinese of other subgroups who migrate to Sabah from other states in Malaysia and elsewhere usually learn the Hakka dialect, with varying degrees of fluency.[55]
In 1882 the North Borneo Chartered Company opted to bring in Hakka labourers from Longchuan County, Guangdong. The first batch of 96 Hakkas brought to Sabah landed in Kudat on 4 April 1883 under the leadership of Luo Daifeng (Hakka: Lo Tai Fung). In the following decades Hakka immigrants settled throughout the state, with their main population centres in Kota Kinabalu (then known as Jesselton) and its surroundings (in the districts of Tuaran, Penampang, Ranau, Papar, Kota Belud as well as a lesser extent to Kota Marudu), with a significant minority residing in Sandakan (mainly ex-Taiping revolutionists) and other large populations in other towns and districts, most notably in Tawau, Tenom, Kuala Penyu, Tambunan, Lahad Datu, Semporna, Sipitang, Beaufort, Keningau and Kudat. The British felt the development of North Borneo was too slow and in 1920 they decided to encourage Hakka immigration into Sabah. In 1901, the total Chinese population in Sabah was 13897; by 1911, it had risen 100% to 27801.[56] Hakka immigration began to taper off during World War 2 and declined to a negligible level in the late 1940s.
Indonesia
[edit]Migration of Hakka people to Indonesia happened in several waves. The first wave landed in Riau Islands such as in Bangka Island and Belitung as tin miners in the 18th century. The second group of colonies were established along the Kapuas River in Borneo in the 19th century, predecessor to early Singapore residents. In the early 20th century, new arrivals joined their compatriots as traders, merchants and labourers in major cities such as Jakarta, Surabaya, Bandung, Medan, etc.
Some research shows that the establishment of the Silk Road created commercial trade for the Hakka people in the south or along the way, and created conditions for overseas migration. The book "An Overview of Hakka Migration History: Where are you from?" published by My China Roots & CBA Jamaica mentions that the Hakka people traded with the caravans and stayed overseas to facilitate business, and added descendants Immigrants, Indonesia, Calcutta, Toronto, and Jamaica all still retain a long history of Hakka culture and organization.[57]
In Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore, Hakka people are sometimes known as Khek, from the Hokkien pronunciation kheh. However, the use of the word 'Khek' is limited mainly to areas where the local Chinese population is mainly of Hokkien origin. In places where other Chinese subgroups predominate, the term 'Hakka' is still the more commonly used.
Bangka (in Indonesia)
[edit]Hakka also live in Indonesia's largest tin producer islands of Bangka Belitung Islands province. They are the second majority ethnic group after Malays. The Hakka population in the province is also the second largest in Indonesia after West Kalimantan's and one of the highest percentages of Chinese living in Indonesia.
The first group of Hakka in Bangka and Belitung reached the islands in the 18th century from Guangdong. Many of them worked as tin mining labourers. Since then, they have remained on the island along with the native Malay. Their situation was much different from those of Chinese and native populations of other regions, where legal cultural conflicts were prevalent since the 1960s until 1999, by which Indonesian Chinese had finally regained their cultural freedoms. Here they lived together peacefully and still practiced their customs and cultural festivals, while in other regions they were strictly banned by government legislation prior to 1999.[58] Hakka on the island of Bangka spoke Hopo dialect mixed with Malay, especially in younger generations. Hakka spoken in Belinyu area in Bangka is considered to be standard.
West Kalimantan (in Indonesia)
[edit]Hakka people in Pontianak live alongside Teochew speaking Chinese. While the Teochews are dominant in the centre of Pontianak, the Hakka are more dominant in small towns along the Kapuas River in the regencies of Sanggau, Sekadau and Sintang. Their Hakka dialect is originally Hopo which influenced by Teochew dialect and also has vocabulary from the local Malay and Dayak tribes. The Hakka were instrumental in the Lanfang Republic.
The Hakka in this region are descendants of gold prospectors who migrated from China in the late 19th century.
The Hakka in Singkawang and the surrounding regencies of Sambas, Bengkayang, Ketapang and Landak speak a different standard of Hakka dialect to the Hakkas along the Kapuas River. Originally West Borneo has diverse Hakka origin but during the 19th century, a large people came from Jiexi so more Hakkas in the region speak Hopo mixed with Wuhua and Huilai accents that eventually formed the dialect of Singkawang Hakka.[59]
Jakarta (in Indonesia)
[edit]Hakka people in Jakarta mainly have roots from Meizhou, who came in the 19th century. Secondary migration of the Hakkas from other provinces like Bangka Belitung Islands and West Borneo came later.
East Timor
[edit]There was already a relatively large and vibrant Hakka community in East Timor before the 1975 Indonesian invasion. According to an estimate by the local Chinese Timorese association, the Hakka population of Portuguese Timor in 1975 was estimated to be around 25,000 (including a small minority of other Chinese ethnicities from Macau, which like East Timor was a Portuguese colony). According to a book source, an estimated 700 Hakka were killed within the first week of invasion in Dili alone. No clear numbers had been recorded since many Hakka had already escaped to neighbouring Australia. The recent re-establishment of Hakka associations in the country registered approximately 2,400 Hakka remaining, organised into some 400 families, including part-Timorese ones.
The Timorese Hakka diaspora can currently be found in Darwin, Brisbane, Sydney and Melbourne in Australia; in Portugal; in Macau; and in other parts of the world in smaller numbers. They often are highly educated and many continue their education in either Taiwan or the People's Republic of China, while a majority of the younger generation prefer to study in Australia. The Australian government took some years to assess their claims to be genuine refugees and not illegal immigrants, as partially related to the political situation in East Timor at the time. As Asian countries were neither willing to accept them as residents nor grant them political asylum to the Timorese in general, they were forced to live as stateless persons for some time. Despite this condition, many Hakka had become successful, establishing restaurant chains, shops, supermarkets and import operations in Australia. Since the independence of East Timor in 2000, some Hakka families had returned and invested in businesses in the newborn nation.[citation needed]
South Asia
[edit]India
[edit]There used to be 1500 Hakkas largely at Tangra and Bombay, arriving after the great British Raj violence and chaos.
However, from the 1960s, after armed fighting broke out, there has been a steady migration to other countries, which accelerated in the succeeding decades. The majority moved to Britain and Canada, while others went to the United States, Australia, Taiwan, Austria and Sweden. The predominant dialect of Hakka in these communities is Meixian.
Hakkas are the largest Chinese community in India after Chinese Cantonese people of Indian ancestry. During the time he held office in Calcutta until the late 2000s, Yap Kon Chung, the Hakka ambassador, protected and helped the Chinese residents in India. Specifically, during the Sino-Indian war of 1962, oppression of Sino-Indian residents accused of Anti-Indian sentiment by the Indians was escalated. Yap then made appeals to Prime Minister Nehru to bridge a bond between the Indians and Chinese persons. During his office, he was also the principal at a highly regarded school as well as a political facilitator who helped many families migrate to other countries such as Britain, Canada, the United States and parts of Europe until he himself migrated to Toronto, Canada to join his family. Yap died surrounded by family on 18 April 2014, at the age of 97.[citation needed]
Africa
[edit]South Africa
[edit]Some Hakka people, notably from Taiwan[citation needed], migrated to South Africa.
Mauritius
[edit]The vast majority of Mauritian Chinese are Hakkas. Most Mauritian Hakkas who emigrated to Mauritius in the mid-1940s came from Northeastern Guangdong, especially from the Meizhou or Meixian region.
As of 2008, the total population of Sino-Mauritian, consisting of Hakka and Cantonese, is around 35,000.
Réunion
[edit]Many Chinese people in Réunion are of Hakka origin.[60] They either came to Réunion as indentured workers or as voluntary migrants.[60]
Americas
[edit]United States
[edit]Hakka from all over the world have also migrated to the USA. One group is the New England Hakka Association, which reminds its members not to forget their roots. One example is a blog by Ying Han Brach called "Searching for My Hakka Roots". Another group is the Hakka Association of New York, which aims to promote Hakka culture across the five boroughs of New York City.[61] In the mid-1970s, the Hakka Benevolent Association in San Francisco was founded by Tu Chung. The association has strong ties with the San Francisco community and offers scholarships to their young members. There are significant Hakka American communities in San Francisco, San Jose, Seattle and Los Angeles.
There are around 20,000 Taiwanese Hakkas in the United States.[citation needed]
Canada
[edit]There are several Hakka communities across Canada. One group that embraces on Hakka culture in this diverse country is the Hakka Heritage Alliance. Also see Jamaica.
Jamaica
[edit]Most Chinese Jamaicans are Hakka; they have a long history in Jamaica. Between 1854 and 1884, nearly 5,000 Hakkas arrived in Jamaica in three major voyages. The Hakkas seized the opportunity to venture into a new land, embracing the local language, customs and culture. During the 1960s and 1970s, substantial migration of Jamaican Hakkas to the US and Canada have occurred.[62] The Hakkas in Jamaica came mainly from Dongguan, Huiyang and Bao'an counties of Guangdong Province.[53]
Suriname
[edit]The Chinese in Suriname are homogeneous as a group and the great majority can trace their roots to Huidong'an (惠东安). One famous Hakka is President Henk Chin A Sen.[53]
Guyana
[edit]Chinese people are a small minority at Guyana. Guyana's most prominent Hakka Chinese is its first president, Arthur Chung.
Oceania
[edit]Australia
[edit]Hakka people first arrived in Australia in the 1880s. Hakka arrivals were halted along with other Chinese immigrants during the White Australia policy era from 1901 to 1973 and resumed thereafter. Some estimate that there are now 100,000 Hakka people in Australia.[63]
New Zealand
[edit]There are people of Hakka descent in New Zealand.[64][65]
Tahiti
[edit]Hakka people first arrived in Papara, Tahiti in 1865.[66]
Population
[edit]At a 1994 seminar of the World Hakka Association held in Meixian, statistics showed that there were 6,562,429 Hakkas living abroad.[21]
In 2000, the worldwide population of Hakka was estimated at 36,059,500 and in 2010 it was estimated at 40,745,200.[citation needed]
Another estimate is that approximately 36 million Hakka people are scattered throughout the world. More than 31 million lives in over 200 cities and counties spread throughout five provinces of China (Guangdong, Jiangxi, Guangxi, Fujian, Hunan) as well as Hong Kong.[67]
Region | Hakka | Chinese | Total | Percentage | Majority | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Taiwan | 4,202,000 | 22,813,000 | 23,374,000 | 18.4% | Second largest | Hakka Affairs Council, Taiwan, 2014[68] |
Hong Kong | 1,250,000 est | 6,643,000 | 7,300,000 | 18.8% | Second largest | Prof Lau Yee Cheung, Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2010 [69] |
Singapore | 232,914 | 2,794,000 | 3,771,700 | 8.3% | Fourth largest | Singapore census, 2010[70] |
Malaysia | 1,650,000 | 6,550,000 | 30,116,000 | 25.2% | Second largest | Malaysia census, 2015[71][72] |
Thailand | 1,502,846 | 9,392,792 | 67,091,371 | 16.0% | Second largest | The World Factbook, 2012[73] |
Hakkaology
[edit]Hakkaology (客家學) is the academic study of the Hakka people and their culture. It encompasses their origins, identity, language, traits, architecture, customs, food, literature, history, politics, economics, diaspora and genealogical records.
The study of the Hakka people first drew attention to Chinese and foreign scholars, adventurers, missionaries, travellers and authors of the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom era. Ernest John Eitel, a prominent German missionary, was one of those who took a great interest in this area.[74] Theodore Hamberg, who also wrote an early English-language account of the Taiping Rebellion, is also considered a forefather of Hakka studies in the West.[citation needed]
Many foreign scholars were full of admiration of the Hakka people. According to prominent sinologist Victor Purcell, the Hakkas "have a stubbornness of disposition that distinguishes them from their fellow Chinese".
Political and military leadership
[edit]It has been suggested that Hakkas have had a significant influence, disproportionate to their smaller total numbers, on the course of modern Chinese and overseas Chinese history, particularly as a source of revolutionary, political, military leaders, as well as presidents, prime ministers.[26]
Hakkas started and formed the backbone of the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom,[75] the largest uprising in the modern history of China. The uprising, also known as Jintian Uprising, originated at the Hakka village of Jintian in Guiping, Guangxi province. It was led by the failed Qing scholar, Hong Xiuquan, who was influenced by Protestant missionaries. Hong's charisma tapped into a consciousness of national dissent which identified with his personal interpretations of the Christian message. His following, who were initially Hakka peasants from Guangxi, grew across the southern provinces.
The Taiping army, which included women in their ranks, captured towns and cities from the defenders, the Taiping troops killed all Manchu children because the Taiping troops with fatal rocks smashed Manchu children's heads[76] Four of the six top Taiping leaders are Hakkas: Hong Xiuquan, Feng Yunshan, Yang Xiuqing and Shi Dakai. Hong Rengan, the Premier of the Kingdom, was the first person in China to advocate a federal government and reform. The kingdom lasted from 1851 to 1864.
Hakkas continued to play leading roles during the Xinhai Revolution that overthrew the Qing dynasty and the republican years of China. When Sun Yat-sen was a child, he used to listen to an old Taiping soldier telling them stories about the heroics of the Taipings.[77] This influenced Sun and he proclaimed that he shall be the second Hong Xiuquan. Sun was to become the Father of modern China and many of his contemporaries were his fellow Hakkas.[78]
Zheng Shiliang, a medical student and classmate of Sun, led the Huizhou Uprising (惠州起義) in 1900. Huizhou is an area in Guangdong province where most of the population are Hakkas. Deng Zhiyu led the Huizhou Qinühu Uprising (惠州七女湖起義) in 1907. All of the Four Martyrs of Honghuagang (紅花崗四烈士) are Hakkas – one of which was Wen Shengcai who assassinated the Manchu general, Fu Qi, in 1911.
Brothers Hsieh Yi-qiao and Hsieh Liang-mu raised the 100,000 Chinese Yuan needed for the Huanghuagang Uprising from the overseas Chinese community in Nanyang (Southeast Asia) in 1911. At least 27 of the 85 (initially 72 because only 72 bodies could be identified) martyrs of Huanghuagang are Hakkas. Yao Yuping led the Guangdong Northern Expeditionary Force (廣東北伐軍) to successive victories against the Qing Army which were vital in the successful defence of the Provisional Government in Nanjing and Puyi's early abdication.[79]
Liao Zhongkai and Deng Keng were Sun Yat-sen's main advisors on financial and military matters respectively. A big majority of the soldiers in the Guangdong Army (粵軍) were Hakkas.[80] Other Hakkas for example, Eugene Chen, was an outstanding foreign minister in the 1920s. Some of the best of Nationalist China generals: Chen Mingshu, Chen Jitang, Xue Yue, Zhang Fakui, and Luo Zhuoying amongst many others are Hakka as well.
The Hakka occupied communist Bases reached a peak of more than 30,000 square kilometres and a population that numbered more than three million, covering mostly Hakka areas of two provinces: Jiangxi and Fujian. The Hakka city of Ruijin was the capital of the republic.[81]
When it was overrun in 1934 by the Nationalist army in the Fifth of its Encirclement campaigns, the Communists began their famous Long March with 86,000 soldiers, of which more than 70% were Hakkas. The Fifth Encirclement Campaign was led by Nationalist Hakka general, Xue Yue. During the retreat, the Communists managed to strike a deal with the Hakka warlord controlling Guangdong province, Chen Jitang, to let them pass through Guangdong without a fight. When the People's Liberation Army had its rank structure from 1955 to 1964, the highest number of generals, totalling 54, came from the small Hakka county of Xingguo in Jiangxi province. The county had also previously produced 27 Nationalist generals. Xingguo county is thus known as the Generals' County.[81]
During the same period, there were 132 Hakkas out of 325 generals in Jiangxi, 63 Hakkas out of 83 generals in Fujian, and 8 Hakkas out of 12 generals in Guangdong respectively, not mentioning those from Guangxi, Sichuan and Hunan. The number could have been significantly higher if the majority of the personnel who started the Long March had not perished before reaching its destination. Only less than 7,000 of the original 86,000 personnel had survived it.[81]
Prominent Hakka communist leaders include: Marshal Zhu De, the founder of the Red Army, later known as the People's Liberation Army; Ye Ting, Commander-in-chief, New Fourth Army, one of the two main Chinese communist forces fighting the Japanese during the World War II (the other main communist force, Eighth Route Army, was commanded by Zhu De); Marshal Ye Jianying, governor of Guangdong; and Hu Yaobang, where the memorial for his funeral sparked off a pro-democracy movement which led to the Tiananmen Square protests in 1989. In Guangdong, China's most prosperous province, the "Hakka clique" (客家帮) has consistently dominated the provincial government. Guangdong's Hakka governors include Ye Jianying, Ding Sheng, Ye Xuanping and Huang Huahua.[82]
Besides playing major roles in all the three major revolutions of China, Hakkas had also been prominently involved in many of the wars against foreign intrusion of China. During the First Opium War, Lai Enjue led the Qing navy against the British at the Battle of Kowloon in 1839 and Yan Botao commanded the coastal defence at the Battle of Amoy in 1841. Feng Zicai and Liu Yongfu were instrumental in the defeat of the French at the Battle of Bang Bo which led to the French Retreat from Lạng Sơn and the conclusion of the war in 1885. When the Japanese invaded Taiwan, the Hakka militia forces led by Qiu Fengjia, were able to put up a stiff resistance to the Japanese when the Qing army could not. During the Battle of Shanghai in the Second Sino-Japanese War in 1937, the heroism of Xie Jinyuan and his troops, known as the "Eight Hundred Warriors" (八百壯士) in Chinese history, gained international attention and lifted flagging Chinese morale in their successful Defence of Sihang Warehouse against the better equipped Japanese. However, in the ensuing Battle of Nanjing, seventeen Nationalist generals were killed in action, of which six were Hakkas.
During the war against the Japanese, both the commander-in-chiefs of the two main Chinese communist forces, Eighth Route Army and New Fourth Army, are Hakkas: Zhu De and Ye Ting. On the Nationalist side, Xue Yue and Zhang Fakui were commander-in-chiefs for the 9th and 4th War Zones respectively. Called the "Patton of Asia" by the West and the "God of War" (戰神) by the Chinese, Xue was China's most outstanding general during the war, having won several major battles that killed hundreds of thousands of Japanese troops. Luo Zhuoying was the commander-in-chief for the 1st Route Expeditionary Forces, Burma (China's first participation of a war overseas), 1942.
During the Japanese occupation of Hong Kong from 1941 to 1945, the Dong River Column guerrilla force (東江縱隊) was a constant harassment to the Japanese troops. The force, whose members were mostly Hakkas and led by its commander Zeng Sheng, was highly successful due to its strong Hakka network. Noteworthy accomplishments of the partisan guerrilla force included the aiding of British and Commonwealth (British Raj Colonial rulers) prisoners of war to escape successfully from Japanese internment camps and the rescuing of twenty American pilots who parachuted into Hong Kong when they were shot down.[83]
Overseas Hakkas have also been prominent politicians in the countries they had migrated to, many of which are leading political figures of the countries or the Chinese communities there. Since the 20th century, there have been twenty Hakkas who had become heads of state or heads of government in different countries.
In popular culture
[edit]- The Guest People (Chinese: 客家之歌), a 1997 30-episode Singapore television drama about four young Hakka men who migrated from China to Singapore in the 1950s and were caught in the tumultuous anti-colonial period of the country's history. The Hakka-language version of the drama was broadcast in Taiwan. The drama was nominated for the Best Drama Series awards in the Asian Television Awards and the New York Television Festival, 1998.
- 1895 or Blue Brave: The Legend of Formosa 1895 (Chinese: 1895乙未), a 2008 Taiwan Hakka-language film about the Hakka militias fighting the Japanese during the Japanese invasion of Taiwan in 1895. The edited version for television won the Best Drama Series award in the Asian Television Awards, 2009.
- The Great Southern Migration (Chinese: 大南迁 or 葛藤凹), a 2012 32-episode China television drama about the Hakkas' migration to Southern China during the late Tang dynasty in the 9th century.
- Hakka Women (Chinese: 客家女人) or To Be or Not to Be (Chinese: 来生不做香港人), a 2014 25-episode Hong Kong television drama about the lives of two Hakka sisters separated when young, one in Hong Kong and the other in China.
- Gold Leaf (Chinese: 茶金), a 2021 Taiwanese period drama about the booming tea trade in Taiwan during the 1950 and a Hakka Taiwanese tea trader family owned tea exporting company.
See also
[edit]- Hakka architecture
- Hakka cuisine
- Hakka hill songs
- Hakka language
- Hakka opera
- Larut War
- Lee Youn Chin
- Punti–Hakka Clan Wars
- Tea-picking opera
Further reading
[edit]People and identity
[edit]- Char, Tin-Yuke (1969). The Hakka Chinese – Their Origin & Folk Songs. Jade Mountain Press.
- Eberhard, Wolfram (1974). Studies in Hakka Folktales. Taipei: Chinese Association for Folklore.
- Kiang, Clyde (July 1991). The Hakka Search for a Homeland. Allegheny Press. ISBN 9780910042611.
- Constable, Nicole, ed. (1996). Guest People: Hakka Identity in China and Abroad. University of Washington Press. ISBN 9780295984872.
- Leong, Sow-Theng (1997). Wright, Tim (ed.). Migration and Ethnicity in Chinese History: Hakkas, Pengmin and Their Neighbors. Stanford University Press. ISBN 9780804728577.
- Chung, Yoon-Ngan (2005). The Hakka Chinese: Their Origin, Folk Songs and Nursery Rhymes. Poseidon Books. ISBN 978-1921005503.
- Leo, Jessieca (September 2015). Global Hakka: Hakka Identity in the Remaking. BRILL. ISBN 9789004300262.
Politics
[edit]- Erbaugh, Mary S. (December 1992). "The Secret History of the Hakkas: The Chinese Revolution as a Hakka Enterprise". The China Quarterly. 132 (132): 937–968. doi:10.1017/S0305741000045495. JSTOR 654189. S2CID 154584671.
- Spence, Jonathan D. (December 1996). God's Chinese Son: The Taiping Heavenly Kingdom of Hong Xiuquan. W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 9780393315561.
- Zhang, Delai (2002). The Hakkas of Sabah: A Survey of Their Impact on the Modernization of the Bornean Malaysian State. Sabah Theological Seminary. ISBN 9789834084004.
- Yong, Kee Howe (July 2013). The Hakkas of Sarawak: Sacrificial Gifts in Cold War Era Malaysia. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 9781442615465.
- Lee, Wei Ling (January 2015). Yap, Koon Hong (ed.). A Hakka Woman's Singapore Stories: My Life as a Daughter, Doctor and Diehard Singaporean. Straits Times Press. ISBN 9789814642477.
- Liu, L. Larry (January 2015). Hakkas in Power: A Study of Chinese Political Leadership in East and Southeast Asia, and South America. Create Space Independent Publishing Platform. ISBN 9781505429435.
Language
[edit]- Lee, T.H. (1955). Hakka Lessons for Malayan Students. Government Federation of Malaya.
- Tsang, Joseph Mang Kin (January 2003). The Hakka Epic. President's Fund for Creative Writing in English. ISBN 9789990397406.
- Chen, Matthew Y.; Lian, Hee Wee; Yan, Xiuhong (2004). The Paradox of Hakka Tone Sandhi. Dept of Chinese Studies, National University of Singapore. ISBN 9789810519438.
- Hashimoto, Mantaro J. (June 2010). The Hakka Dialect: A Linguistic Study of its Phonology, Syntax and Lexicon. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521133678.
Religion
[edit]- Constable, Nicole (August 1994). Christian Souls and Chinese Spirits: A Hakka Community in Hong Kong. University of California Press. ISBN 9780520083844.
- Lutz, Jessie G.; Lutz, Rolland Ray (January 1998). Hakka Chinese Confront Protestant Christianity, 1850-1900: With the Autobiographies of Eight Hakka Christians, and Commentary. Routledge. ISBN 9780765600387.
- Christofferson, Ethan (September 2012). Negotiating Identity: Exploring Tensions between Being Hakka and Being Christian in Northwestern Taiwan. Wipf & Stock Publishers. ISBN 9781610975032.
Food
[edit]- Anusasananan, Linda Lau (October 2012). The Hakka Cookbook: Chinese Soul Food from around the World. University of California Press. ISBN 9780520273283.
Family stories
[edit]- Tan, Amy (October 1995). The Hundred Secret Senses. Penguin Books. ISBN 9780399141157. The book was shortlisted for the 1996 Orange Prize for Fiction.[84]
- Lee, J.P. (January 2004). Breaking the Curse of the Green Dragon (A Hakka Story). Instrument of Truth. ISBN 9789810480424.
- Chin, Woon Ping (June 2008). Hakka Soul: Memories, Migrations and Meals. University of Hawaii. ISBN 9780824832896.
- Huang, Suhua (April 2012). A Faithful Reading Partner: A Story from a Hakka Village. AuthorHouse. ISBN 9781468562675.
- Lampotang, Peggy (January 2014). The Coral Heart: A Shopkeeper's Journey. Atelier d'ecriture. ISBN 9789990336924.
- Sze, Elsie (February 2014). Ghost Cave: A Novel of Sarawak. Hong Kong Women in Publishing Society. ISBN 978-1496073945.
- Hsiung, C. Fong (September 2014). Picture Bride. Mawenzi House/TSAR Publishers. ISBN 9781927494394.
- Lin Ung, Charlene (March 2015). Nam Moi: A Young Girl's Story of Her Family's Escape from Vietnam. Createspace Independent Publishing Platform. ISBN 9781508700791.
- Madison, Paula Williams (April 2015). Finding Samuel Lowe: China, Jamaica, Harlem. Amistad. ISBN 9780062331632.
References
[edit]- ^ a b Rubinstein, Murray A. (2004), "Rethinking Taiwanese and Chinese Identity: Melissa J. Brown's Is Taiwan Chinese?" (PDF), iir.nccu.edu.tw, vol. 40, Institute of International Relations, pp. 454–458, ISSN 1013-2511, OCLC 206031459, archived from the original (PDF) on 27 July 2011
- ^ a b "客家文化探密:怀念先人 感念生活 客家人闹元宵". news.sina.com.cn.
- ^ "Hakka culture GuangdongCulture". Newsgd.com. Retrieved 15 January 2015.
- ^ Yen, Ching-hwang (21 July 2008). The Chinese In Southeast Asia and Beyond: Socioeconomic and Political Dimensions. World Scientific. p. 379. ISBN 978-981-4471-99-2.
- ^ LaCroix, Frederick E. (2009). The sky rained heroes: A journey from war to remembrance. Austin: Synergy Books. p. 56. ISBN 978-0-9821601-3-8.
- ^ Li, Hui; Pan, Wu-Yun; Wen, Bo; Yang, Ning-Ning; Jin, Jian-Zhong; Jin, Li; Lu, Da-Ru (September 2003). "Origin of Hakka and Hakkanese: a genetics analysis". Acta Genetica Sinica. 30 (9): 873–880. PMID 14577381.
- ^ a b c "The Hakka: The Jews of Asia". Edu.ocac.gov.tw. Archived from the original on 9 September 2019. Retrieved 15 January 2015.
- ^ "Welcome to Longyan Municipal People's Government, PRC". English.longyan.gov.cn. Archived from the original on 6 April 2014. Retrieved 15 January 2015.
- ^ Kuo, Huei-Ying. Networks beyond Empires: Chinese Business and Nationalism in Hong Kong ….
- ^ "The Hakka People". 全球華文網路教育中心. Archived from the original on 9 September 2019. Retrieved 25 September 2011.
- ^ a b c d e Chen, Jieming; Zheng, Houfeng; Bei, Jin-Xin; Sun, Liangdan; Jia, Wei-hua; Li, Tao; Zhang, Furen; Seielstad, Mark; Zeng, Yi-Xin; Zhang, Xuejun; Liu, Jianjun (1 December 2009). "Genetic Structure of the Han Chinese Population Revealed by Genome-wide SNP Variation". The American Journal of Human Genetics. 85 (6): 775–785. doi:10.1016/j.ajhg.2009.10.016. PMC 2790583. PMID 19944401.
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taste which alone are sufficient to demonstrate that the ancestors of the Hakka had long been in the ranks of the Han-Chinese civilization. In the Hakka region, more than elsewhere in Ling-nan, are such excellent old names as Fu-yung-chang (Hibiscus Range), Chin-p'ing Shan (Brocade-screen Mountains), Sung-yuan-ch'i (Pine-springs)
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External links
[edit]Media related to Hakka people at Wikimedia Commons