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Hong Kong - The Warren of the
World, by Tom Carter
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Hong Kong! The legendary
Chinese city of life and lights, where millionaires rub shoulders with
fresh-off-the-boat immigrants, skyscrapers overshadow shanties and class
division are as dramatic as the neon that illuminates it all.
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Located on the southernmost
banks of the Chinese mainland and pressed against the South China Sea,
there truly is nowhere else in the world like Hong Kong, for Hong Kong
is the World.
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It is the best of Beijing
and Bangkok, London and Las Vegas, New York and New Delhi; one of the
most densely populated dependencies (a landmass of only 1,000 square
kilometers for seven million residents), with one of the world's largest
revolving multinational communities. Indeed, a stroll around Tsim Sha
Tsui (pronounced jimsawjoy), the city's tourist and trade center on
the southern Kowloon peninsula, reveals the entire human race in one
square block radius: white people in pastel shorts walking side by side
with majestically robed Africans, turbaned sheiks haggling with short-tempered
Cantonese vendors, and street-corner Hindu hustlers harassing, well,
everyone.
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The nucleus of TST's
international community is found on south Nathan Road, which buzzes
24 hours a day not unlike a third-world beehive. The thoroughfare is
lit up with electronics, hazy with Indian incense and resonant with
200bpm Arabic music. It is a warren of the world, a global party, and
everyone is invited. As a tailor from Pakistan profoundly puts it, it's
the politicians who draw the borders, otherwise we are all friends here.
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And speaking of borders,
Victoria Harbor seems a good excuse to divide the colorful crowds of
Kowloon with the white-collared world of Hong Kong Island, the territory's
banking and finance center. It is across these deep, reflective waters,
which at night appear as a veritable liquid rainbow beneath the neon
of corporate office towers and designer department stores, where the
former crown colony's elite live, work, shop and play. English-speaking
Hong Kong, which transferred sovereignty from Britain to the People's
Republic in 1997, is 9 percent Chinese save for a wealthier class, namely
from South Asian countries and the west, who contribute to the Special
Administrative Region's economic might with an unparalleled per capita
GDP (310,000 yuan compared to Shanghai's diminutive 47,000 yuan) that
rivals most of west Europe and is the highest in China.
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Hong Kong also happens
to boast the most millionaires in the entire Asian continent. They are
strikingly handsome or unabashedly beautiful. They attire themselves
in dark designer suits with razorblade creases and immaculately shined
shoes, or dangerously short skirts and even more dangerous stiletto
heels. Every automobile in Hong Kong Island not a red taxi is a Ferrari,
new-model Jaguar or a white-walled vintage Mercedes. And lest we forget
that they drive on what Americans considerto be the wrong side of the
road in the British-influenced Hong Kong, look the wrong way before
crossing the street and one could get rolled over by a Rolls.
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But all that is gold
does not necessarily glitter. Beyond Central's escarpment of skyscrapers
and scattered about the region's subtropical perimeter lay over 20 lesser
islands that seem to jump back centuries. Lantau Island on the West
Lamma Channel preciously hides the rustic minority village of Tai O
and the Tanka people, descendants of Hong Kong's first settlers.
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In stark contrast to
Hong Kong Island and Kowloon, there is no place in Tai O for finance,
fashion or frenzy, where Ferraris are replaced by fishing boats, peasant
bags are more useful than Gucci bags, and flip-flops take preference
over Prada. The sleepy fishing community of slat-wood, tin-roofed shanties
is built completely atop stilts and interconnected by arched bridges
occupied by old timers in reed hats whipping their cane rods into the
placid delta waters.
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Of course, most visitors
to Hong Kong will invariably choose Mong Kok to minorities and 500 dollar
dim sum to five-dollar fish balls. The compulsion of capitalism, the
passion to purchase and the addiction of appearance-it is what Hong
Kong has come to be known for, and frankly, to what it owes most of
its charm. "Our lives are just like anyone else's," chirps a manicured
blonde, the wife of a Hong Kong banker, shopping in an upscale boutique
in the Soho district, "but with a few more attached.
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"Regional cuisineHK is
the dining table of the world: from traditional Cantonese dim sum to
Indian curry, New York delis to Mexican tacos, Thai cuisine to Krispy
Kreme, not to mention an overflow of McDonalds (150!) and 7-11 (600!).
But be prepared for the prices¨CYIKES.
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TransportationIf you
don't drive a BMW, don't despair. Hong Kong's public transportation
is highly efficient, with the Mass Transit Railway (MTR) and Kowloon-Canton
Railway (KCR) spanning throughout the New Territories, Kowloon, Lantau
and Hong Kong islands. Double-decker trams and buses ply above ground
while jetfoils and HK's beloved Star Ferry continuously whisk commuters
across Victoria Harbor. Or just hop in one of the thousands of red taxis.
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AccomodationFor budget-conscious
travelers ,
there is no better (or cheaper) place to absorb HK's multicultural ambiance
than the infamous Chungking or Mirador mansions on south Nathan Road
in Tsim Sha Tsui. Dorm beds in any of the mansion's hundreds of claustrophobic
guesthouses starting at 60 yuan.
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Source:
Free Articles from ArticlesFactory.com
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