The Mystery and Mastery of Tan Yeok Nee (Part 9)
In the mid 19th-century the Qing government’s first-hand knowledge of the outside world was notoriously thin. The last post told the story of their tardy awakening to the reality of the burgeoning wealth among Asia’s overseas Chinese communities and described how an imperial consulate came to be first established in Singapore. Some contend that the Qing consulate was there to show “care and concern for the overseas Chinese, cracking down on illegal sale of cheap labours, protecting women, and tacking (sic) the pirates problem in the region”. The Qing History Society (Singapore) goes on to suggest that the first Qing Consul to Singapore, Zuo Bin Long, “served selflessly for the overseas Chinese, work (sic) hard to protect and ensure their welfare, as well as promoting education and setting up schools for them”. It is easy to be skeptical, even cycnical, when it comes to the mandate of individual consulate officials. But more generally, it is hard to believe that the Manchu Qing were pr...