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THE HONGKONG TELEGRAPH,
ADDRESS BY DR. LIM BOON
-KENG.
An interesting address was de- Vered by Dr. Lim Boon-keng, M.B.E., in the central hall of Ruffles Institution. Singapore, on Jan. 28, when there were present « large gathering of students, past and present boys of the school and many of Dr. Lim Boon- keng's personal friends and one time school-mintes.
The Hon'ble Mr. M. B. Shelley, Acting Director of Education. presided. In introducing the speaker, the Chairman said that
it was not the lot of every man in he received us a distinguished, guest in the hall of his alma mater and he felt that I was a source of great pride to the school and to all old Rafflesians that Dr. Lim Boon-kong stood in that enviable position. It was with a deep feel ing that the occasion was in a broad way a memorable one that;
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1926.
"When I had the good fortune three years Inter to get the Queen's Scholarship," he said. "I resolved to stady medicine. My people preferred to see me study lasy....
In due course I went
cducntion:
to Edinburgh. When I came back after five years in England I felt the growing need in Singapore of Not only the giving of Instructions but the education of the whole individual. I felt that in addition to school educa-laughter). # tion there had to be home en- rouragement and this made me feel that the different classes in the Colony required home educa- tion."
Confining himself to the Chinese
he asked Dr. Lim Boon-keng to population of the Colony, the give them his address.
speaker outlined the teachings. of and other Kreat
Stating that they could well | Confucius
Four thousand years ago," said the speaker, "Malaya was a great wilderness-Asia was
1:
"ENGLAND ARTICULATE.”
Savage Club was held recently The 68th annual dinner of the
at the Hotel Victoria, London. Mr. Norman O'Neill presided.
CHINESE & EDUCATION. accounts of his experiences in his man, he cannot be a patriotle to. He appealed to the Chinese schoolboy days, and his struggle British subject, Without being community of the Colony to attend for knowledge and perfection. first a Chinese he is nothing to this.want. British people rave He referred to the great asale. I believed that the a great deal of thought to home tance which Mr. Hullet, the then feeling I had was right and I say education and he thought that A TRIBUTE TO MR. KIPLING. bead master, had given him and to-duy, all the best Straits Chinese people were boginning to the great influence Mr. Hullet had Chinese, the most patriotic I may do it, but not to any extent. They instilled into him. "The late Mr. include myself amongst them are still trusted in schools. He did Hullet," he eald, "has set as those who are not ashamed of not believe that even the best of example which all teachers should their Chinese origin. "02" follow."
"Well, Government to-day is what his mother could do for him schools could do for the child realising this fact.
Vernacular at home.
Mr. R. Storry-Deana, M.F., who, schools are springing up for
proposed the toast of "The Arts Malays: in the case of Malays it to you," said the Doctor, "but it gard to painting and sculpture ho "I would like to speak politics and Science," said that with re- in more essential than in the case is not wise to do so. The only was a little old fashioned, He bad of Chinese, because the Malay cul thing I will say to you is this, never been able to understand ture is not as well developed as The Chinese politicians are not all that the ugly was beautiful, nor that of the Chinese.
Chinese bad and are not all rogues or
to believe that a woodland nymph culture is so well developed that bandits. China is in a peculiar
was a disproportionate old hag it is the most unique in the world, condition which you will only He preferred Rodin and Glibert to China," added the speaker, "sunderstand if you
to back in: "Epstein and company." the only country in the world that European history." He proceed
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, in res- can do without a Government"ed to describe the state of the ponding, wald he shared Mr.
European countries after Speaking on the same point he Napoleonic
theStorry-Deans's views as to art and wars. 'The same sculpture, and as to science, she' emphasized the unity in the vil-thing, he said, was. luppening in came forward with valuable gifts lages of China, where every man China. knew his duty to father and that things would right them-held polson gases, bombing aero- He was of the opinion in one hand while in the other she. mother, a duty involving many selves in time.
planes, and a thousand other hor- obligations.
Speaking of Amoy University, tore, Dr. Lim Boon-keng said that they In a reference to his graut fol- were aiming at making the univer-flow-workmen, Mr. Rudyard Kip- sity the ideal centre of education, ling, who lay between life and at wilderness, with three spots They wanted to turn out not only death, he said that if he wore to of civilisation. China was one of very able, professional men but pass, England would lose some- these three places. In China, also men who would be good thing very essential, something civilisation became based mainly citizens and a,help to their fellow irreplaceable, something which an a moral basis and that is the beings. Much progress had been distinguished feature of Chinese made in the universitye pro-le well remembered the day when was England articulate to an ex- civilisation.
tent possessed by no other man. that he must do his duty to noble ideals. The Amoy UniverKipling came into literature. The
To reulise fessors, he said, werden with another man is one of the hardest sity is a little pearl amid all the critics were deploring the fact Proceeding, he said that the "Out of the tombstones have literary crop springing out of the lessons that a man can learn."dirt," observed the speaker. that English literature was dead- and that there was no sign of a lesson was the golden rule. One arisen colleges and laboratories old soil. At that time he himself where it was, exactly the same graves to build the university" could read it in all the gospels and we had to move about 14,000 only in different words.
was practising in a small way as (Applause).
a doctor, and at a draper's cloac by there was an assistant whose name was H. G. Wells. There was also a raw-boned Irishman roaming about London. name was Bernard Shaw. There was also a young man named At last, he began the Sherlock Thomas Hardy, and a young jour- Holmes stories, which opened nalist struggling for a living writ- some sort of audience to him, anding paragraphs in Nottingham, he would like to say that the whose name was Barrie.
So it greatest theatrical representation was all along the line. These of Holmes ever made was by their men were rising up, and if at the ust, M. Gemier, the great French present time it was said that the actor. Those stories wore writ- soil was unfertile, they should deavouring to work up a practies guises and in different forms the ten at a time when he was en- never forget that in different
as an oculist in Wimpole-street,old crop would always come out. where he had a consulting-room-- In a series of personal reminis. And a waiting-room. (Laughter.) centes Sir Arthur recalled the
magine that he was very much
Chinese thinkers of old. Chinese moved to come hack after so many a a people," he said, "have a years into the rooms which be background of history of at least knew so well many years ago, Dr. 9,000 years. In those 3,000 years Lim Boon-kenp
his they have evolved a civilisation delivered address to an audiende which was which is peculiar in many not slow in demonstrating their respects but which is essentially appreciation of the very entertain-identical with the best that has ing and instructive lecture. been approved in.
He stated at the outset that if civilisation which is based on the Europe-a he made use of certain Ameri-organisation of society with the canismas in the course of his talk, family as a basis. If you remove he would ask them to forgive him. the ideals of such a people where "Everything American is very will they be?. The education that strong In China," he said. is given them only provides the "American people have long fore-machinery of a language
the seen
necessity of helping These, ideals, if you can place China in educational work so that them upon some motive, upon the bulk of our young men to-day some annction in the soul of the have had their education in individual, will be
very fine America."
indeed."
་
Dr. Lim Boon-keng went on to say that, looking back, he found that the great topics the ancient teachers wrote about were the same as those of to-day. Love of mankind and unity of all nations. These were the topics A Schoolboy's "Psychology.
Chinese Patriotism. of the League of Nations. In Proceeding, Dr. Lim Bean-keng At first. he continued, he had Manila he was 'asked his opinion recalled an incident which hap-to work against much opposition. of the League of Nations and he pened in the year '85. His reason He held that the Chinese had to said that he was reluctant to for this reference, he said, was have, as a background, a Chinese speak but since they wished his because he thought that many of training in, the ancient moral cul-ppinion he told them, "I do not those present were teachers and ture of the Chinese people so that like these great men from all his object was to enable them to they might read the great works nations assembling to discuss the grasp something of a schoolboy's
pease of the world with two psychology at school. He recall-
pistols in their pockets," ed the announcement made in the school when the Queen's Scholar ships were introduced and his immediate resolutio.. to win the scholarship. This resolution, made at the age of fourteen, had been a great help to him always. He had learned many things, one of the foremost of which was the realisation of what it meant to be Dr. Lim Boon-keng proceeded to give some amusing
student.
of the great thinkers and be the better for it. They had to learn the spirit which would nove Chinese society as a whole. He was violently attacked by certain persong on the ground that his attitude was not patriotic as a British Subject in the Straits Settlements. He thought that these persons, were wrong, say that unless a Chinese in Sin- gapore or in the FLS. is a real Chinese, in sentiment, in spirit, in his knowledge of things as
"I
Need for Home Education.
he sent it to them, and generally it was on his side of the net. It was ten years before he got his head above water. --
His
In China about 2.500 years ago it was during the long waiting time when, while attempting to there was something like League of Nations. The man who he then conceived the idea of writhe used to black his own boots the hours that he began to write, and combine writing with medicine, drew up the document was recom- ing self-contained stories in con-and pour water on his top hat to mended by another for punish-tradistinction to the serial stories induce a gloss which would ex- ment because he said that the of which the magazines were all cite some sort of confidence in docement was the prelude to ed. If the Strand Magazine had his patients. (Laughter.) He question of education of Chinese due to his sturies but to the fact ping-pong" with the editors, who Returning to the a phenomenal success it was not remembered how he used to "play in Singapore, he felt that home that they realized the disadvan-knocked his MSS. back to him as education was not being attended tage of serial stories.
(Continued on Previous Column).
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