CO129-595-1 Anti-British feeling in China- memorandum by J V Braga 15-2-1946 - 15-8-1946 — Page 23

CO129 Colonial Office Hong Kong Records 理藩院香港檔案 All

they have been out East, much as the newcomers from England treat us.

The Dutchmen are far more strict, but still we like them; they are

not arrogant like so many of the British bosses, nearly all of whom

sooner or later get 'bitten by the Hong Kong bug'."

2.3

Incident 2: I was examining a schedule with a view to booking a

passage at the Hong Kong office of a well-known shipping Company, when

an elderly American-born Chinese lady entered. The manager of the

Passenger Department, an Englishman, happened to be the first person

she approached. "I should like to book a firstclass passage to X,"

she said. Without a word, the manager brusquely handed her a schedule.

"Please, can you tell me when the next steamer walls?" she enquired.

"Can't you see for yourself?" he barked. "Please, sir, I am an old

woman, and I do not understand these things very well." To my amaze-

ment, he shouted, "If you don't understand, why do you come to me?

For God's sake, go and ask someone else who does. You have come in

just a few minutes before lunch hour. Do you think I'm going to

remain here just for you?"

Whether the manager felt that, being a Chinese, she should

have approached one of his Asiatic subordinates I do not know, but I

an certain he would never have attempted treating in that ranner any

European in similar circumstances. The poor soul walked away, and I

followed. Tears of distress stood in her eyes as she said, "Why

should he got so angry? He treated me that way only because I'm a

poor, old Chinese woman, Please, I do not want to go there again.

"And nor do I, Krs. Lee," I replied. In a few minutes we were in the

office of a foreign steamship company where we secured bookings.

=

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