The Prague Post - On China's doorstep, Macau weaves an identity as integration looms

EUR -
AED 4.329958
AFN 78.262878
ALL 96.510399
AMD 449.749866
ANG 2.110926
AOA 1081.164321
ARS 1708.526646
AUD 1.755295
AWG 2.122536
AZN 2.002743
BAM 1.955614
BBD 2.374974
BDT 144.096277
BGN 1.957651
BHD 0.444422
BIF 3487.267885
BMD 1.179023
BND 1.513956
BOB 8.166188
BRL 6.517521
BSD 1.179188
BTN 105.94291
BWP 15.500458
BYN 3.441872
BYR 23108.845194
BZD 2.371564
CAD 1.612166
CDF 2593.849819
CHF 0.929194
CLF 0.02718
CLP 1066.249012
CNY 8.286761
CNH 8.262956
COP 4395.573531
CRC 588.943911
CUC 1.179023
CUP 31.244102
CVE 110.2545
CZK 24.279202
DJF 209.535757
DKK 7.469958
DOP 73.912961
DZD 152.766814
EGP 56.059013
ERN 17.685341
ETB 183.46175
FJD 2.675439
FKP 0.873224
GBP 0.872459
GEL 3.165635
GGP 0.873224
GHS 13.118695
GIP 0.873224
GMD 87.837591
GNF 10306.018491
GTQ 9.03414
GYD 246.695459
HKD 9.165787
HNL 31.08204
HRK 7.533368
HTG 154.395296
HUF 389.380536
IDR 19729.648193
ILS 3.762614
IMP 0.873224
INR 105.887326
IQD 1544.752883
IRR 49666.332221
ISK 148.003117
JEP 0.873224
JMD 188.092087
JOD 0.835948
JPY 184.187254
KES 152.035126
KGS 103.105407
KHR 4726.529817
KMF 492.831017
KPW 1061.10694
KRW 1690.889467
KWD 0.362148
KYD 0.982702
KZT 606.052282
LAK 25519.461392
LBP 105594.695721
LKR 365.025236
LRD 208.709238
LSL 19.625031
LTL 3.481348
LVL 0.713179
LYD 6.381392
MAD 10.758475
MDL 19.781032
MGA 5392.463572
MKD 61.570808
MMK 2476.185985
MNT 4193.376428
MOP 9.44526
MRU 46.694553
MUR 54.175888
MVR 18.215971
MWK 2044.696599
MXN 21.149805
MYR 4.757943
MZN 75.351066
NAD 19.625031
NGN 1709.913101
NIO 43.395867
NOK 11.78155
NPR 169.508857
NZD 2.019548
OMR 0.453026
PAB 1.179183
PEN 3.967922
PGK 5.092515
PHP 69.329486
PKR 330.316442
PLN 4.216362
PYG 7991.238942
QAR 4.298091
RON 5.092789
RSD 117.419139
RUB 93.034231
RWF 1717.429155
SAR 4.422164
SBD 9.613034
SCR 17.034663
SDG 709.18174
SEK 10.810465
SGD 1.513889
SHP 0.884572
SLE 28.384982
SLL 24723.521121
SOS 672.733078
SRD 45.198428
STD 24403.389742
STN 24.497667
SVC 10.318017
SYP 13038.141198
SZL 19.609132
THB 36.639339
TJS 10.836622
TMT 4.13837
TND 3.430573
TOP 2.838804
TRY 50.540104
TTD 8.021202
TWD 37.061163
TZS 2912.185773
UAH 49.745262
UGX 4256.594617
USD 1.179023
UYU 46.085611
UZS 14211.646532
VES 339.66328
VND 30987.66448
VUV 142.475539
WST 3.287835
XAF 655.891754
XAG 0.016386
XAU 0.000263
XCD 3.186368
XCG 2.125198
XDR 0.816027
XOF 655.894535
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.137445
ZAR 19.612064
ZMK 10612.618455
ZMW 26.619352
ZWL 379.644833
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • NGG

    0.2500

    77.49

    +0.32%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    13.47

    +0.45%

  • GSK

    0.1100

    48.96

    +0.22%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0300

    15.53

    -0.19%

  • RIO

    -0.0800

    80.89

    -0.1%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    81.26

    0%

  • BCC

    1.4800

    74.71

    +1.98%

  • BTI

    0.2000

    57.24

    +0.35%

  • BP

    -0.2700

    34.31

    -0.79%

  • BCE

    0.2800

    23.01

    +1.22%

  • CMSC

    0.0100

    23.02

    +0.04%

  • CMSD

    0.1200

    23.14

    +0.52%

  • AZN

    0.3100

    92.45

    +0.34%

  • RELX

    -0.0400

    41.09

    -0.1%

  • VOD

    0.0400

    13.1

    +0.31%

On China's doorstep, Macau weaves an identity as integration looms
On China's doorstep, Macau weaves an identity as integration looms / Photo: Eduardo Leal - AFP

On China's doorstep, Macau weaves an identity as integration looms

Seated in the audience at Macau's Dom Pedro V Theatre in the 1970s, 16-year-old Miguel de Senna Fernandes understood not a word of the "strange language" spoken on stage -- but right away he was mesmerised.

Text size:

That day sparked his lifelong love for Patua, a creole language from Macau's 442-year colonial history that mixes Portuguese, Cantonese and other influences, now rarely spoken and classified by UNESCO as "critically endangered".

"It's a Macau-born thing... For so many centuries, the old Maquista used this language as a means of communication aside from Portuguese," said Fernandes, 63, a lawyer who writes and directs Patua plays.

Twenty-five years after colonial ruler Portugal handed control back to Beijing, residents like Fernandes are making a case for Macau's cultural distinctiveness, even as the city is being subsumed into China's regional development blueprint, dubbed the Greater Bay Area (GBA).

Macau's breakneck reinvention over this period, which saw its skyline and economy shaped by glittering casinos, has also prompted a younger generation to ask who they are and what they stand for.

Before the Portuguese flag came down, colonial government minister Jorge Rangel successfully lobbied Beijing to include a clause in Macau's post-handover constitution to protect historical sites and relics.

Those with Portuguese or mixed ancestry make up roughly five percent of Macau's population, but their outsized influence can still be felt -- from cuisine to street names and architecture.

Rangel said the GBA's growth will be a "permanent challenge for us".

"(Macau) is a small entity within such a huge area, with a small population, with a different way of life," he said, adding that Macau must convince China of its usefulness.

Fernandes, whose plays are performed three nights a year to an audience of around 1,000, said he was well aware that Patua culture "will be fading".

"You have this Greater Bay Area that just sucks up everything," he said. "But if the next generation has a glimpse of the awareness that we can be unique, we might have a chance to survive."

- No longer 'invisible' -

Compared with Hong Kong and Taiwan, Macau's cultural output has been relatively "invisible" and lacks its own distinct flavour, according to cultural critic Lei Chin-pang.

"For people from Hong Kong or mainland China, there is not much interest in Macau except as a place nearby to have fun," Lei said.

Film director Tracy Choi is looking to change that.

Born and raised in Macau, she went abroad for university in the mid-2000s just as the city liberalised its gaming market.

She returned to find her home unrecognisable, not just in appearance but also in people's lifestyles and values.

"Those massive casinos were just being completed," said 36-year-old Choi. "The Macau from that point onward was totally detached from the Macau of my childhood."

That was the direct inspiration for "Sisterhood", Choi's 2016 debut feature, about two young women working in a Macau massage parlour in the final months of colonial rule.

"I chose (to depict) the profession of masseuse because they represented the Macau people of a bygone era," she said, recalling when some of these women -- friends of her mother -- would come over for mahjong.

Choi said her films were a counterweight to stereotypical depictions of Macau residents as rich and leisurely, adding the past decade saw more creative works on local identity.

"Sisterhood" was hailed as a breakthrough, but there was still a "long way to go" for Macau's film industry, as its population of 690,000 limited box office returns, Choi said.

"We are still searching for a direction forward, which lets us talk about Macau in the way we want, while making it accessible to other markets," she said.

Choi's next film, featuring a lesbian protagonist contending with pressures to "be ordinary" in a small community, is also a statement on what a future Macau identity can be.

"The Macau people of tomorrow should have more of a say, have more room for personal expression," she said.

- Integrate 'everywhere' -

As Macau turns 25 as a Chinese city, the history of the handover means little to Cecilia Cheang, who was born in Macau but studies at a Hong Kong university.

When she was young, her parents took her to the lavish hotels popping up but rarely discussed the city's past.

Cheang, 20, sometimes posts about Macau on Xiaohongshu, China's Instagram-like platform -- which performs well among her 20,000 followers.

"(Xiaohongshu favours) glamorous girls and extravagant lifestyle, and I feel like Macau is very much associated with this," she said.

Many Macau residents now consider cross-border trips part of their weekly routine as Beijing pushes for closer ties within the region.

A frequent traveller in southern China, Cheang thinks of herself as being from Macau but also as a GBA person.

That means being able to "go all around, leave whenever you want to leave, go anyplace", which she said suited her career as an aspiring singer-songwriter.

"I feel like, in terms of cultural exchange and cooperation... It's easier to integrate into everywhere and to get the gist of everywhere."

L.Bartos--TPP