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Hong Kong culture
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Letters | Hong Kong losing the Star Ferry would be like Sydney demolishing its Opera House

  • Readers discuss the value of the Star Ferry to Hong Kong, the challenges the city’s next chief executive will face, and irresponsible hikers

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Hong Kong’s Star Ferries sit idle in Hong Kong on March 14 as services are reduced amid the city’s worst Covid-19 outbreak. Photo: AFP
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For people who live in Hong Kong or even those who have visited it, the Star Ferry is a prominent, unique and historic part of the city (“Hong Kong must save its sailing icon, the Star Ferry”, April 26). Losing it is the equivalent of demolishing the Sydney Opera House or the Tower of London.

Surely the government should be able to see that it’s a tourist landmark and financially worthy of preservation. Which Asian city doesn’t have high-rises, shopping, markets and temples? What they don’t have is this particular deep-seated cultural emblem, making the contrast with the modern backdrop a thing of beauty.

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My father and grandfather both have fond memories of riding that ferry. I took the Star Ferry to and from school when I was young, often by myself, looking forward to seeing which “Star” would pull up to take us across the harbour that day. The view and feeling, especially on the bottom deck, was always a highlight.

Our family has enjoyed taking the Star Ferry, especially now with young children. We always rave about it to family and friends abroad, telling them it’s a Hong Kong must-do.

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The experience is a reminder that we aren’t just merely in another cookie-cutter concrete jungle, but situated on a fragrant harbour, only a century ago deemed the most famous port in the world, the gateway, the Pearl of the Orient, where cultures continuously meet and thrive.

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