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October 06, 2014

New Symbol of Hong Kong Protests: ‘Umbrella Man’

A new symbol for the pro-democracy movement, called Umbrella Man, emerged on Sunday night in Hong Kong.

CARLOS BARRIA / REUTERS

By KEITH BRADSHER

OCTOBER 5, 2014

The pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong have a new symbol: a roughly 12-foot-high figure of wood blocks holding a bright yellow umbrella in its outstretched right hand. The students call it Umbrella Man.

Umbrellas emerged as a symbol of the demonstrations after dozens of students wielded them on the night of Sept. 28 to fend off pepper spray as they jostled with the police.

The statue’s main creator, a 22-year-old recent college graduate, transported it to the protest in a van and carefully moved it into position on the wide avenue in front of the Hong Kong government’s headquarters. But he was clearly nervous about the political implications of the fragile statue and would only identify himself by a nickname, Milk. He said he came up with the idea soon after the sit-ins began a week ago and built it with the help of three or four friends.

For many onlookers, especially the older ones, the statue immediately evoked the 33-foot Goddess of Democracy sculpture created by Beijing students in the spring of 1989 and exhibited in Tiananmen Square in the days before a military assault killed hundreds of people. People’s Liberation Army troops toppled and destroyed the statue during the crackdown.

Milk, who wore a dark blue T-shirt, said he understood the comparison, but insisted that it had not occurred to him as he was making “Umbrella Man.”

“I didn’t realize that,” he said. “It has a different meaning to me, just freedom and peace.”

Milk said that he was uncomfortable with the attention the statue instantly received, and that his goal had been partly artistic. “I’m not trying to achieve anything. Art is just an expression,” he said. “The movement needs something just to stand here.”

Told that he would inevitably be compared to Ai Weiwei, the dissident artist in Beijing, Milk cringed slightly and said again that he did not want to give his real name.

Protesters seemed enthusiastic about the sculpture. “I think it is creative and meaningful. It represents us and our cause,” said Tinnie Lau, a 24-year-old administrative worker.

Milk said that he was an only child who had spent his entire life in Hong Kong and had studied videography in college.

Friends strung ropes around the body of the statue to help stabilize it because it seemed prone to falling forward. Milk explained apologetically that the statue had been slightly damaged in the van on the way to the protest site. “The structure,” he said, “is a little bit unstable.”

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