| Sun Yat-Sen - changing China from Penang
"Great men have been among us; hands
that penned and tongues that uttered wisdom" William Wordsworth
Although Sun Yat-Sen's fleeting presence in Penang
arguably made little impact to the state's history, it did however change
the history of China forever. The man often referred to as "The Father of
modern China" is a highly revered figure among Penang Chinese and not without
good reason. After nine unsuccessful uprisings, Sun arrived in Penang on
Nov 1910 and thereafter held several meetings, including the epoch-making
Penang Conference at 120 Armenian Street, which eventually led to the Wuchang
Uprising, the Xinhai Revolution, the collapse of the Qing Dynasty and the
establishment of the Republic of China.
Large scale efforts to preserve the legacy of Sun
are in the works. Back in 2002, the Penang Philomathic Union (founded by
Dr. Sun) started the Sun Yat-Sen Research Centre in Lorong Susu, off Macalister
Road. Come 2005, a spectacular museum will be opened, where the Philomathic
Union mansion stands on Macalister Road, to preserve, commemorate and perpetuate
the memory of this famous revolutionary who is considered by many to be the
most important figure in Chinese history of the 20th century. The date targeted
for the completion of the museum, 2005, is an auspicious date, for it was
exactly a century ago that Dr. Sun organised a revolutionary league, the
T'ung Meng Hui. It was also during this time that he set on perfecting his
political conceptions, which were based on the Three People's Principles:
nationalism (that is a Chinese government administered by none other than
the Chinese), democracy (that the government should be republican and
democratically elected), and the people's livelihood (fair distribution of
wealth and nationalisation of land).
Dr. Sun's greatest triumph was the establishment
of the Chinese Republic in 1912, with him installed as president. Sadly,
after his death in 1924, feuding warlords devastated his beloved country
and left it in ruins. But great men and noble ideas never die, and his
convictions and opinions lived on to become the basis of the future Nationalist
government established by Chiang Kai-shek in 1928, and eventually the China
that we know today.
According to sources, the soon-to-be opened museum will
include a café set in the style of the 1900s serving Chinese cuisine
and Penang delicacies; a souvenir boutique stocking a wide variety of books
and other materials not available elsewhere; a multi-media time tunnel journey
that will take the visitor through the various stages of the Chinese uprisings;
re-enactment of the Penang Conference; theatrette for musicals, dances and
other performances, and the Memorial Garden which will house a "Three People"
sculpture showing Dr. Sun and his two most impassioned Penangite disciples
-- Goh Say Eng and Ooi Kim Kheng.
In the meantime, the Sun Yat-Sen Research Centre,
at 26 Lorong Susu, is open to the public by appointment only. Call 04-2296118
for further information. To complete the historical journey, Sun aficionados
and history buffs might also want to visit the former Tung Meng Hooi central
office at 120 Armenian Street where the aforementioned Penang Conference
took place.
Compiled by
Raja Abdul Razak |