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Loletta Chu Lo Ling-ling

Yvonne Lai

CHARITY BEGINS AT HOME I was brought up in Myanmar [then Burma] as third-generation Myanmar-Chinese. The country is over 90 per cent Buddhist and the people are very kind; they practise charity in their daily lives. With that and my mother's influence, my sisters and I have always been aware of the act of giving. I have some family members still there; I try to go back once every year or two. I speak the language and I do feel a strong affinity to the place. I like going back also because of photography. Myanmar is a very scenic destination.

MODEL CITIZENS I [won the] Miss Hong Kong [beauty pageant] in 1977. During that time I had the opportunity to do some charity work and serve the community, after which I founded the Wai Yin [Association] together with other pageantry finalists; there was no reason not to continue [charity] work after official Miss Hong Kong duties were over. Wai Yin has been going for 27 years. We meet regularly ... there's a lot of camaraderie between members; I have gained friends and learned how to develop my leadership skills.

MOTHER KNOWS BEST I became a mother at 20 and a lot of questions were left unanswered at the time. When you see things that your child is doing, you have to [decide] very quickly what's right and what's wrong. It made me become more assertive about my values. When they were teenagers, I took my boys [Chu had three sons with former husband Timothy Fok Tsun-ting, a member of the Legislative Council], along with my sisters and their children, to Myanmar and Sri Lanka to do volunteer work. For three summers, they taught English at orphanages and homes. Some of the orphans were in their 20s, so my kids felt a bit awkward teaching someone older than them, but it was a good experience.

Judging from how I turned out, I think Hong Kong has a good educational system [Chu attended the Hong Kong International and King George V schools]. As for my three boys, the primary education they enjoyed at St Paul's co-ed gave them a good foundation for their studies abroad. The decision to let them go was not hard. The boys had had very pampered lives in Hong Kong - life's too good here - and I realised the benefits of the boarding-school experience. Of course, I was a bit concerned that having left very young, they would prefer life outside Hong Kong but it hasn't turned out that way so far; the older ones have returned. They see the importance of working in China now, so they actually go to the mainland more often than abroad.

EYE OF THE BEHOLDER I got interested in photography at 14 years old but I didn't get the chance to pursue it until 1994 - after motherhood. I'm not always inspired by beautiful scenery. [Once], when I was set- ting up to take a picture of a dying lotus in a dead pond, people around me could not understand what I was aiming at but I saw the potential of it. Beauty isn't just about a flower blooming at its peak. I've documented sporting events, such as the Olympics and the East Asian Games; they are important historical events which I'd like to keep a record of. I also photograph theatre performances and the religious festivals of different ethnic groups in Myanmar.

In 2001, [my teacher] pushed me to enter my work in the Photographic Society of America's annual global competition. After exhibitions and judging in 16 cities, I came third overall. My foundation in using 35mm film was very important; so was my experience in the darkroom, developing and printing. I converted to digital seven or eight years ago mainly for convenience - the gratification is quite instant.

FIRST LOOK [Representatives of the Seeing is Believing charity] contacted me in the autumn last year to ask if I would donate some work to their exhibition/auction ['Beautiful nature, blessed sight']. The deadline for submission was September so I couldn't have generated a new series for it but none of the photos has been seen by the public. I gave 40 [to] the exhibition and an accompanying book with stories I wrote. The cost of the book is the same as a pair of cataract surgeries [in the mainland].

OBJECT OF ATTENTION When you are under constant public scrutiny, you at least have to be very well groomed, right? [laughs]. I don't concern myself with what my public image is - because it wouldn't be healthy for my mental development to constantly question how people see me. I like to see myself as being a useful person on this planet.

'Beautiful nature, blessed sight' will be held between March 10 and 16 (10am to 9pm), at Park Court, Level 1, Pacific Place, Admiralty. To order the book, bid for the photos or get more information, visit www. standardchartered.com.hk/sib/bnbs or call 3983 9866 or 3983 9693.

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