小編快報
《柏林脈動》(The Berlin Pulse) 今天出刊了。這是德國一年一度的外交及國際關係專刊。作者群包括學者、智庫專家、政府官員。
這一期談歐洲問題的作者有波蘭外長、Moldova 總理、德國國防部長等等等。
今年《脈動》特別做了中國專題,作者有五位,分別是:
中國的全國人大外事委員會副主任委員傅瑩、日本眾議會議員Minora Kiuchi、巴黎的中國問題專家Francois Godement、曾任澳洲駐華大使,現任外交及貿易秘書長的Frances Adamson,以及台灣的龍應台。
德國編輯在文末放了一個德國的民意調查圖表,提問是:「面對中國,你認為德國應該更強力保護自己的政治利益,即使犧牲經濟利益?」
答案:贊成 76%
反對 19%
小編把龍應台文章翻譯成中文,跟讀者分享。英文原文附在後面。如果嫌我翻譯得不好,那那那,那表示你英文很好,你就看英文吧......
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兩千三百萬人在獨木舟上
——為什麼歐洲應該關切台灣的未來
反對黨公布2020總統候選人名單的那一天,我在台北和知識圈的朋友們午餐。那悲觀的,用問句來表達自己的悲觀,譬如,「你覺得台灣還有多少年?」那樂觀的,用黑色幽默來表達樂觀,譬如,「感謝老天。香港讓他們太忙了,沒時間管台灣。」
跟德國一樣,台灣對中國大陸和香港的貿易順差,在2018年是831億美元。百分之四十一的對外貿易針對中國,中國大陸市場對台灣的重要不言而喻。然而,隨著近年來台灣海峽兩岸的關係緊張,反對黨(國民黨) 憂慮市場的優勢無法持續,而執政黨(民進黨) 則選擇強化選民對北京的不信任來抵制中國的影響力。執政黨最近提出的國安新法可能將任何被認定為為中國宣傳者入罪。
和歐洲一樣,台灣人對中國的感受也是複雜的。 當中國代表的是活躍的經濟機會時,很多台灣人就容易所謂「親中」,當中國代表的是壓迫和可能的入侵時,很多台灣人就是所謂的「反中」。問題是,中國兩者兼備。後果就是,台灣內部的分歧遠遠超過了僅只是政治和經濟的層面。
如果你知道台灣是如何一路走來的,你會覺得它今天變成一個民主社會真是一個不得了的成就。沒有革命,一黨獨裁四十年的國民黨,不管你說它是自願還是被迫,放下了政權,分享權力。沒有流血,昔日牢裡的政治犯變成今日的立法者和政治領袖。1987年解嚴以後,政權的交替基本上公平而有序地進行了三十年。
台灣安靜地進行了三十年的民主,時間幾乎和它的國際孤立一樣長。美國不承認台灣的國家地位,但是,就如同當年對於德國,美國也扮演了安全守護者的角色。令人不安的是,在美國宣布要把軍售台灣常態化的同時,中國也宣布,它在台灣海峽及其領空,要把軍艦和戰機的演習常態化。
所以台灣民主的威脅其實是雙重的。比較明顯的是中國的威脅,這個威脅,往往超出台灣本身的控制能力。一個不那麼明顯的威脅,卻是內部自製的。台灣的政治人物和政黨熱切拿這個威脅做為政治資本,刺激集體恐懼來強化部落式的愛國主義。這種操作的成功,對台灣的民主制度和機構本身,是個真實的危險。
國際上那些純粹為了攻擊中國而故意把台灣捧在手心讚美的人,其實讓我坐立不安。一代又一代的台灣人為民主付出了代價,很大的代價,而得到今天的成果。這個成果,太珍貴了,不可以變成別人或別國為了自己的利益而拿來玩弄的籌碼或棋子。
德國的歷史是特殊的。德國的人民親身目睹了,如果不戒慎恐懼地去維護,一個開放合理的社會制度是如何容易地瓦解,一夜之間可以被獨裁取代。經歷了二戰,又擺脫了共產黨的歷史爭取到自由,德國可能比很多其他國家更容易理解台灣人的困境和追求。道德勇氣的來源往往是歷史的痛苦。身為歐盟的重要成員,德國有責任為世界的和平做出最大的努力,發揮最大的影響力。
但是,歐洲憑什麼一定要關心台灣呢?
首先,如果沒有台灣模式,全世界大概就都得接受一種說法,就是,儒家文化和民主制度是無法相容的,而所謂「中國模式」就是唯一邏輯、不可避免的現代中國。台灣的存在證明了一件事:未必如此。
第二,台灣本身的努力值得世界的尊敬。沒錯,如果中國是一艘航空母艦,那麼台灣只不過是一葉孤零零的獨木舟。可是在這個獨木舟上有兩千三百萬人正在追求一種有自由、有尊嚴的生活方式。如果台灣是歐盟的一個成員,就人口論,台灣就是二十八個成員國(英國脫歐後二十七國)中第七大國,比波蘭稍小,但比荷蘭和比利時大。以經濟購買力來看,台灣更是名列全球第二十二。所以,歐洲可以想像剝奪波蘭人或者荷蘭人對生活方式和政治體制的選擇權利嗎?
23 Million People on a Canoe
—Why Europe should care about Taiwan’s future
Lung Yingtai
On the day when the opposition party announced its presidential candidate for the 2020 election, I was sitting at a lunch table in Taipei listening to my intellectual friends uttering their concerns about the future of Taiwan. The pessimists phrased their pessimism in the form of questions such as “How many years do you think Taiwan has left?” The optimists expressed their optimism with dark humour, “Thank God they will be too busy with Hong Kong and the US for a while.”
Like Germany, Taiwan operates a trade surplus with mainland China and Hong Kong, amounting to $83.1 billion in 2018. With 41% of Taiwan’s exports going to China, Taipei’s economy depends on trade with the mainland. However, given the increasing tension across the Taiwan Strait, the opposition Kuomintang (KMT) in particular has been worrying whether Taiwan will be able to sustain these figures. The ruling Democratic Progressive Party, on the other hand, is capitalizing on voters’ intense distrust of Beijing, stepping up measures to “contain” China’s influence. Taipei recently drafted a national security law that would make it a punishable offense to spread “political propaganda” for China.
As in Europe, Taiwanese feel highly ambivalent about mainland China: When China signifies economic opportunities, most Taiwanese are 23 Million People on a Canoe Why Europe should care about Taiwan’s future “pro-China”; when China represents oppression and potential invasion, most Taiwanese are “anti-China”. The problem is that China resembles both. The result is a deep division among Taiwanese extending far beyond the political and economic spheres.
Given the circumstances under which Taiwan emerged and evolved, its evolution into an authentic democracy represents an extraordinary achievement. It was without a revolution that the KMT, which had ruled Taiwan for more than 40 years, put an end to martial law and, whether convinced or compelled to act, opened the country’s political system to sharing power. Without bloodshed, dissidents who had once sat in jails became legislators and political leaders. Since the lifting of martial law 1987, power has changed hands fairly and orderly, following the results of each election.
Taiwan has been a quiet democracy for more than thirty years, nearly as long as the four decades during which it has been isolated by the international community. The US does not formally recognize Taiwan but, as with Germany, acts as the country’s security guarantor. While Washington has indicated that arms sales to Taiwan will become more of a routine, China has devised a routine of its own by holding long-range combat drills and ordering its fighter jets to cross the maritime line.
However, the threat to Taiwanese democracy is twofold. The obvious one comes from China, and to a large extent lies beyond Taipei’s control. The less obvious threat is home-made, as the looming China threat tempts domestic politicians to mobilize the population’s collective fear to foment a tribal nationalism. Their success would pose a real danger to Taiwan’s democratic institutions.
Those who applaud Taiwanese democracy for the sole purpose of criticizing China make me nervous. Generations of Taiwanese fought and ultimately achieved a democracy – it is simply too precious for other people’s agendas, internal or external.
Germany has a unique history: its people have experienced first-hand how easily democratic institutions may fall apart when not meticulously guarded. Having received democracy as a gift following World War II and struggled to regain their freedom from Communist rule, Germans are in a unique position to understand both the predicament as well as the aspirations of the Taiwanese. Moral courage often comes from past sufferings. As a leading EU member state, Germany has a responsibility to maximize its own efforts as well as to influence others’ efforts for world peace.
But why should the world care about the future of Taiwan? First of all, save the Taiwan model, the world might have to accept the claim that democracy and Confucianism are incompatible, and that a communist China presents the only logical and inevitable path to modernity. Secondly, Taiwan deserves respect on its own merits. True, if China were an aircraft carrier, Taiwan would be a lone canoe. But standing on this canoe are 23 million people aspiring for a life with liberty and dignity. If it were an EU member, Taiwan would be the 7th largest of the Union’s 28 member-states (27 after Brexit), smaller than Poland but larger than the Netherlands or Belgium, with a developed economy ranking 22nd in the world by purchasing power parity. Do we really want to return to a world in which it is imaginable that countries such as Poland or the Netherlands should be deprived of their autonomy to determine their own way of life and political system?
The Berlin Pulse 2019
龍應台專文:https://www.koerber-stiftung.de/fileadmin/user_upload/koerber-stiftung/redaktion/the-berlin-pulse/pdf/2019/3_Koerber_TheBerlinPulse_YingTai.pdf
全本:https://www.koerber-stiftung.de/fileadmin/user_upload/koerber-stiftung/redaktion/the-berlin-pulse/pdf/2019/TheBerlinPulse_2019_FINAL.pdf
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很好很好的歌詞班讓大家有寫作的fun
謝謝耀輝老師~
🍵🍵🍵🍵🍵🍵🍵🍵🍵🍵🍵🍵🍵
《趁香港還有你們》
2018年年底,第八屆周耀輝歌詞創作班的同學方仲恩(方丈)遇上了加大碼紅的司機Johnathan。那時候,Johnathan 夜裏經常接載到疲憊不堪的乘客,而他們不時會分享自己生活的煩惱事。Johnathan除了是司機,也是聆聽者。因此,方丈寫下了《馬路的事》,送給Johnathan,也送給一群不分晝夜、不分遠近地接載乘客的司機。
今天,我們將《馬路的事》重新製作,作品由歌曲的原作者,K Tsang親自演唱及錄製。MV由第一屆歌詞班畢業生葉鈺瀛拍攝製作,並找來從事創作亦擁有的士牌照,身兼多職的電影電視學系畢業生陳俊立同學義務參與演出。
另外,我們邀請到一眾同學、浸大舊生同事以及周耀輝老師飾演後座乘客,呈現疫症中的日常百態。
疫症之中,我們向依然駕著的士、巴士、小巴、貨車、外送車、救護車等四出服務的司機們致敬。
感謝用「探射燈 撕裂灰暗」的你們。
周耀輝歌詞班(一世唔畢業)同學會
香港浸會大學創新服務學習中心
《馬路的事》
曲:K Tsang
詞:方仲恩
唱:K Tsang
編:K Tsang
音樂錄像導演:
葉鈺瀛(第一屆中文歌詞創作班畢業生)
美術道具:
黃妍芝 Gigi Wong (浸大傳理學院電影電視學系畢業生)
攝影組:
Donald Kwok
762 Chan Lok Yin
執行助理:
王家華(第八屆中文歌詞創作班畢業生)
王樂儀(第一屆中文歌詞創作班畢業生)
黃汶蕙(第四屆中文歌詞創作班畢業生)
特別鳴謝
的士司機:
陳俊立 Philip Chan(浸大傳理學院電影電視學系畢業生)
演員:
Peter Lui (第七屆中文歌詞創作班畢業生)
Wong Wing Yan (第七屆中文歌詞創作班畢業生)
小海豹 (第八屆中文歌詞創作班畢業生)
Chun Ming (第八屆中文歌詞創作班畢業生)
Jacky Wong (第八屆中文歌詞創作班畢業生)
Lou (第八屆中文歌詞創作班畢業生)
冰兒(第九屆中文歌詞創作班同學)
紫筠 (第九屆中文歌詞創作班同學)
Ping (第九屆中文歌詞創作班同學)
QuintuShek(第九屆中文歌詞創作班同學)
Dr. Lisa Lam (香港浸會大學通識教育處助理總監)
周耀輝
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《趁香港還有你們》計畫背景
2020年初,新學期才剛開始一星期,我們卻因為疫症來襲,迎來生活上大大小小的改變。而城中有著不同崗位的人,有的更辛勞、有的更前線,都在為著一點信念、一點盼望,知道只要繼續下去,前路總有美好。
為了一起繼續下去,浸會大學中文歌詞創作班的同學希望就自己所學到的,將三首曲詞作品重新錄製,送給默默耕耘中的醫護人員、司機及保安,和更多。
這三首作品來自《趁香港還有我們|紅日.黑夜》周耀輝歌詞創作班2018-2019畢業作品演唱會,並邀請多位師兄師姐一起重新拍攝音樂錄像。《馬路的事》是第二首。(第一首《安然淺笑》: https://youtu.be/0Ove3lYCtBA)
比起提供口罩、洗手液,或是一頓安樂茶飯、充足的睡眠時間,這些作品可能微小。然而,不論微小抑或巨大,艱難在前,我們彼此溫暖。
Project background:
In 2018, Dr Chow Yiu Fai incorporated service-learning into his lyrics-writing class which enabled the encounter between Fong Chung Yan, one of his students and Johnathan, a nightshift taxi driver. Fong came to know that Johnathan is no ordinary taxi driver: on top of taking his passengers safely to their destinations, he also listens to their stories: tired and sleepy midnight commuters tend to share the bits and pieces about their daily lives. Fong found Johnathan interesting and remarkable, and decided to write a song for him as well as other transportation professionals who work hard—and extra hard during the coronavirus outbreak. The song and its music video are the collective efforts of HKBU students, alumni and staff members, and the taxi driver in the MV happens to be a BU graduate who is a licensed taxi driver in real life too aside his other work engagements. This song is upbeat and rhythmic, reminding us of speed, hurriedness and the dynamics of both taxi drivers and our city. Let’s dedicate it to all the transportation professionals in Hong Kong. We love our roads, our streets, our home. Hong Kong: ADD OIL!
Project background:
Students of Dr Chow Yiu Fai’s lyrics-writing class (2018-19) interviewed people from all walks of life in our society and turned their inspiring stories into poetic lyrical lines. No one would have expected that some of these songs see even more relevance at this moment of crisis in our city, where people like medical professionals, taxi drivers and security guards are bearing more risks and working even harder during the coronavirus epidemic. With the collective efforts of talents from HKBU and beyond, three music videos will be made to dedicate our support and admiration for people serving Hong Kong in this difficult period of time. This is the second of three. (See the first one, a tribute to medical professionals on: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Ove3lYCtBA.) Together, we combat the virus, and we empower through disempowerment.
《馬路的事》歌詞
華麗街燈 分了心
和誰車廂控訴世態浮華漸變鮮紅
浮弱聲音 宣告內心
沉迷在萬紫千紅 沉迷到快發瘋
你在滲著眼淚 搏鬥著 睡眼惺忪
我是雨季的雪人 任五內放鬆
午夜尾座滿是 血與淚 任意掏空
每夜數著美夢失蹤
探射燈 撕裂灰暗
咪數錶 心跳拉近
隨意來
哈~
*貼背叫喊 痛快再擴散
人生怎不應作反
哈~
答案對錯 應季節變化
人生不需跟樣板*
搖動車窗 吹烈風
求助風吹抹去後座靈魂痛覺消融
其實今生 短若刺針
尋求著獨我風流 尋求凡事折衷
你受夠日與夜 廿四段 售罄光陰
我是拒載的壞人 抗拒被困身
這夜每段說話 像漂白 內裏灰暗
冷待腦內猛烈聲音
費力
呼 呼盡灰暗
費力吸 吸入心坎
全力來
哈~
Repeat*
哈~
鬥志進化 禁錮到退化
沉鬱可催谷致死
奔向快活誰會淪落筋竭又力疲
四季變化 控訴至爆發 紅的想烽煙四起
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民間人權陣線
反送中百萬人大遊行一周年聲明
(English version below)
致 香港市民和世界各地關心香港民主自由的同路人
一年前的今日,一百零三萬人在香港島參與民陣反送中大遊行,打破主權移交以來的記錄,亦使香港人走出雨傘運動以來的社運低潮,更再次令全球觸目香港的命途。
也許,不少市民參加去年百萬人大遊行的心態,可能是明知擋不住惡法,也要出來盡一分力、盡一次守護香港、捍衛自己基本人權的義務。林鄭政權在遊行當晚宣布送中惡法如期二讀,進一步激起民憤,也製造社會的絕望。
香港人絕處逢生,在於去年 6 月 12 日,成千上萬的年輕人奮不顧身,擋住立法會如期二讀。政權暫緩惡法,但精神的創傷、肉身的摧殘和人命的代價,依然沉重。
6 月 9 日是香港人抵抗惡法的集體回憶,但它同時是我們共負一軛的開端。過去一年,我們面對警暴、黑幫、惡法、白色恐怖,仍然負隅頑抗;無論是前線手足,抑或後勤專業,皆前仆後繼,延續反送中運動的生命力和意志。
人大港版國安法即將壓境,我們相信,香港人和全球各地支持民主自由的朋友,對香港的命運相當憂慮,甚至感到挫折。但我們過去一年的努力,已為香港創造不少奇蹟:和勇不分擋住惡法、創造黃色經濟圈打破親中資本霸權、新工會運動遍地開花、區議會選舉的勝利、以及香港在全球公民社會對抗威權的前沿地位。
二零二零年,全球因著武漢肺炎大流行,深刻體會專制政權如何破壞全球公共衛生安全;世界各地民眾反對種族主義和警察暴力的示威,也令香港人明白到抗爭之路,並不孤單。我們要信任自己、信任手足:在黑夜中堅持到底,就會見到天明。
毋忘六月,就是毋忘香港人抗爭的血淚史。民陣會繼續籌辦七一遊行,希望全港市民,守護記憶、頂住惡法,為香港和我們的未來奮鬥。
五大訴求,缺一不可!
抵抗惡法,戰鬥到底!
民間人權陣線
2020 年 6 月 9 日
—
Civil Human Rights Front
Statement to mark the first anniversary of the Anti-extradition Mass Protest
To: Hong Kong citizens and supporters of Hong Kong’s democracy and liberty all over the world
A year ago today, 1.03 million Hongkongers joined the anti-extradition mass protest organized by the Civil Human Rights Front on the Hong Kong Island. The huge turnout broke the record of all the mass rallies held after the handover, and symbolized a powerful resurgence of social movements from the doldrums after the Umbrella Movement. Once again, the fate of our city returns to international limelight.
Perhaps many citizens did not have high hopes on stopping the evil extradition bill when they joined the protest. Yet they wished to contribute their efforts, to protect the city, and to fulfill their duties in defending their basic human rights. On the night of the mass protest, Carrie Lam’s administration announced that the extradition bill would resume second reading in the Legislative Council as scheduled. This further fuelled the anger of the people, and destroyed any hope that remained.
Quite unexpectedly, thousands of youngsters valiantly blocked the resumption of the second reading on 12 June last year. The government finally yielded and suspended the bill. However, the psychological and physical injuries sustained by protesters have been and still are very heavy.
The mass protest on 9 June last year has been etched in the collective memory of Hongkongers. It also marks the beginning of our togetherness in defending our beloved city. In the past year, we have been steadfastly resisting police brutality, triads, evil laws and white terror. Both the front-liners and those providing logistics support are sparing no efforts in maintaining the vitality and willpower of the anti-extradition movement.
The National People’s Congress is imposing a Hong Kong version of the National Security Law on Hong Kong. Hongkongers and supporters of Hong Kong’s democracy and liberty around the world are deeply worried and frustrated about such a law. Yet, we have seen miracle after miracle coming out of our tireless efforts in the past year, including the concerted efforts of the valiant and the peaceful-rational in resisting the evil law, the creation of the Yellow Economic Circle to break the hegemony of PRC capital, the blooming of new labour unions, the landslide victories in District Council elections, and Hong Kong’s frontline role in the global fight of civil societies against autocracy.
The pandemic in 2020 reminds us how a totalitarian regime endangers global public health. The protests against racism and police brutality in different parts of the world tell us that we Hongkongers are not alone. Trust ourselves. Trust our fellow protesters (our “hands and feet”). Persevere in the dark, and we will see light!
Remember June is to remember the history of Hong Kong’s protests, a history of blood and tears. As in past years, Civil Human Rights Front will lodge an application for the July 1 mass rally. We call upon all Hongkongers to preserve our memory, to resist evil law, and to fight hard for Hong Kong and our future.
Five demands, Not one less
Resist evil law, Fight till the end
Civil Human Rights Front
9 June 2020
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