The hope for a “free China” lives on in a Manhattan museum dedicated to China’s 1989 suppression of pro-democracy demonstrations around Tiananmen Square, exhibit organizers said on Thursday ahead of the 34th anniversary of the crackdown.
The June 4th Memorial Museum in New York would be the only such permanent exhibition in the world, following the 2021 closure of a similar museum in Hong Kong due to pressure from authorities.
Tanks rolled into the Beijing square before dawn on June 4, 1989, to end weeks of student and worker protests. Decades after Chinese leaders ordered the military assault, rights activists have said the demonstrators’ original goals — including a free press and freedom of speech — are further away than ever.
Photo: REUTERS
The small New York museum — in a cramped office space on the fourth floor of a Sixth Avenue office building — holds items from the Tiananmen events, including banners, letters and a blood-stained shirt, as well as photos and detailed news articles from the time.
Zhou Fengsuo (周鋒鎖), 55, an exiled former Tiananmen student leader who helped plan the museum, told a news conference that it was a place where the “hope for a free China” lives.
“Because there is a hope, no matter what kind of defeat there was, and how much struggle we had to go through, this dream lives here,” Zhou said.
Organizers were to hold an opening ceremony yesterday.
The Chinese embassy in Washington did not respond immediately to a request for comment.
China has never provided a death toll for the 1989 violence, but rights groups and witnesses have said it could run into the thousands.
Marking June 4 in China is taboo, and the government has ramped up censorship in recent years.
Public memorials of the crackdown were once allowed in Hong Kong, but Hong Kong police have barred a vigil there since 2020, citing COVID-19 concerns. It is unclear whether authorities there would allow public memorials this year.
Overseas activists are organizing events in cities including Taipei, Berlin, London and Washington.
Wang Dan (王丹), another former Tiananmen student leader who helped establish the museum, said he felt it was his obligation to show his respect to the demonstrators who died.
“Don’t give up,” Wang told reporters. “That’s my message to fellow Chinese people.”
EXPRESSING GRATITUDE: Without its Taiwanese partners which are ‘working around the clock,’ Nvidia could not meet AI demand, CEO Jensen Huang said Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) and US-based artificial intelligence (AI) chip designer Nvidia Corp have partnered with each other on silicon photonics development, Nvidia founder and CEO Jensen Huang (黃仁勳) said. Speaking with reporters after he met with TSMC chairman C.C. Wei (魏哲家) in Taipei on Friday, Huang said his company was working with the world’s largest contract chipmaker on silicon photonics, but admitted it was unlikely for the cooperation to yield results any time soon, and both sides would need several years to achieve concrete outcomes. To have a stake in the silicon photonics supply chain, TSMC and
‘DETERRENT’: US national security adviser-designate Mike Waltz said that he wants to speed up deliveries of weapons purchased by Taiwan to deter threats from China US president-elect Donald Trump’s nominee for US secretary of defense, Pete Hegseth, affirmed his commitment to peace in the Taiwan Strait during his confirmation hearing in Washington on Tuesday. Hegseth called China “the most comprehensive and serious challenge to US national security” and said that he would aim to limit Beijing’s expansion in the Indo-Pacific region, Voice of America reported. He would also adhere to long-standing policies to prevent miscalculations, Hegseth added. The US Senate Armed Services Committee hearing was the first for a nominee of Trump’s incoming Cabinet, and questions mostly focused on whether he was fit for the
IDENTITY: Compared with other platforms, TikTok’s algorithm pushes a ‘disproportionately high ratio’ of pro-China content, a study has found Young Taiwanese are increasingly consuming Chinese content on TikTok, which is changing their views on identity and making them less resistant toward China, researchers and politicians were cited as saying by foreign media. Asked to suggest the best survival strategy for a small country facing a powerful neighbor, students at National Chia-Yi Girls’ Senior High School said “Taiwan must do everything to avoid provoking China into attacking it,” the Financial Times wrote on Friday. Young Taiwanese between the ages of 20 and 24 in the past were the group who most strongly espoused a Taiwanese identity, but that is no longer
A magnitude 6.4 earthquake and several aftershocks battered southern Taiwan early this morning, causing houses and roads to collapse and leaving dozens injured and 50 people isolated in their village. A total of 26 people were reported injured and sent to hospitals due to the earthquake as of late this morning, according to the latest Ministry of Health and Welfare figures. In Sising Village (西興) of Chiayi County's Dapu Township (大埔), the location of the quake's epicenter, severe damage was seen and roads entering the village were blocked, isolating about 50 villagers. Another eight people who were originally trapped inside buildings in Tainan