BEIJING, April 3 -- In a city as busy and noisy as Hong Kong,
one may wonder if there is any place of quiet. It turns out that there is - a
place of permanent peace.
The first time I passed the Hong Kong Cemetery (also known as Hong Kong
Happy Valley Cemetery) was in late December, two weeks after I first arrived in
Hong Kong. On a bus to Causeway Bay, I caught a fleeting glimpse of the forest
of tombstones. Against the leaden sky, the granite stones, standing in the
pouring rain, exuded a profound sense of melancholy.
The sight was so incongruous against its glitzy surroundings of glass and
steel, that it begged for further exploration.
So, nearly two months later on a sunny February morning, I went again -
this time accompanied by Joseph Ting Sun-pao, a highly-regarded historian and
former director of the Hong Kong Museum of History.
For me, the tour promised endless excitement, but for Ting it was just
another visit to his usual haunt. After years of research, poking around the
gravestones and tirelessly transcribing the epitaphs, Ting has just put to print
his latest work - A Preliminary Study - Prominent Figures in the Hong Kong
Cemetery at Happy Valley.
"Believe me, there is no better place to study the contemporary history of
Hong Kong than at the graveyards," says Ting.
The Hong Kong Cemetery, founded in 1845, is one of its oldest Christian
cemeteries, offering a full picture of the two opium wars.
One coffin-shaped gravestone has a rudder-and-anchor sculpture on it indicating clearly to whom it belongs.