For decades听climbers have flocked to Hong Kong鈥檚 Lion Rock, a 1,624-foot mountain on the Kowloon peninsula听whose contour resembles听a crouching lion. Its main 300-foot, multi-pitch route circumnavigates the neck to ascend the lion鈥檚听mane. It鈥檚 an aesthetic line, but the formation has become a surprising hot spot during the now monthslong protests that have overrun Hong Kong.
The movement began in opposition to听听proposed by the government of Hong Kong in April. The bill would have allowed the Hong Kong government to听deport听fugitives to听jurisdictions it didn鈥檛 have extradition agreements with, including mainland China.听It was seen by many as further听encroachment by China听on the city鈥檚 semiautonomous status outlined by the 听policy that鈥檚听been in place since听1997. said the bill听could be used to听target dissidents and curtail civil liberties. By June, peaceful protests turned into that has rocked the city and shocked the world.听The extradition bill was suspended in September, but demonstrations have continued, morphing into a pro-democracy movement. During that time, clashes between听activists and听police have grown in intensity. 听a police officer shot and wounded a protester while trying to detain another man. In another incident, a man was set on fire after he confronted demonstrators.听As clashes between protesters听and police escalate, authorities have warned that the city is on the
Meanwhile, protests have also spread to the city鈥檚 crags. Mr. Wong鈥攁n outdoor sports instructor in his thirties听who asked not to be identified by his real name鈥攈as been part of Hong Kong鈥檚听burgeoning climbing community since the sport took off there in 2015. Now听he鈥檚 leading听a group of nearly a dozen climbers who make听banners featuring anti-government slogans and suspend them from cliffs near the city. Wong is in charge of the team assigned to hang them from Lion Rock.听
鈥淎s a rock climber, that鈥檚 the only thing I can do to support those who take over the street,鈥 Wong says.听
The team听hikes听to the top of the ridge late at night,听then rappels down with the banner, anchoring听it to the bolts as they go. 鈥淭he task is risky,鈥 he says. Climbers on the crag have to remember the locations of the bolts by heart as they听execute the operation听without headlamps听to avoid police detection.听
So far, Wong鈥檚 team has hung听banners on three different occasions.听
On June 15, when some two million people听marched in protest,听Wong鈥檚 team put up a yellow banner with red and black words that read 鈥淔ight for HK.鈥澨齇n August听23, an estimated 210,000 people formed a 25-mile that followed subway stations in 11 of the city鈥檚 18 districts and wound its way up Lion Rock. That night, Wong led a few climbers to put up two black banners that read听鈥淧olice Triads Abuse Violence鈥 and 鈥淢urderous Regime.鈥澨
On September 13, thousands of protesters gathered on top of Lion Rock during , a harvest celebration popular throughout听China. They lit up the ridge with torches, laser pens, and headlamps, while chanting 鈥淕lory to Hong Kong,鈥 the uprising鈥檚 unofficial anthem. Wong鈥檚 team drummed up morale by unfolding a 100-foot black banner with the words 鈥淚mplement Real Double Suffrage.鈥澨齌he slogan echoes a听banner put up on Lion Rock during the 2014 which demanded universal suffrage in Hong Kong.听
Lion Rock has long been听a symbol of resiliency and the can-do spirit that fueled Hong Kong鈥檚 rise to prosperity and its transformation into a global financial hub. Those ideas are echoed in the popular expression听听which comes from Below the Lion Rock, a TV drama that ran intermittently from 1972 through 2016.听
Since the Umbrella Movement, a number of young people and opposition parties have argued that fighting for social justice is the Lion Rock spirit of their time. Climbers who support the protests told 国产吃瓜黑料 that the听crag鈥檚 status as a cultural icon fueled their decision to use it as a place to voice themselves, even though the banners were removed immediately by authorities.听
Wong compared it to making an appeal for social justice on the Washington Monument. 鈥淧eople will take it seriously because of the rich history already ingrained in it,鈥 he said.
鈥淟ion Rock nowadays also represents democracy and freedom,鈥 said听Crystal Tsang, a climbing friend of Wong鈥檚.听
However, protesters aren鈥檛 the only ones aware of . A day after the Mid-Autumn Festival, 听went to the top of the听mountain听via a hiking trail. They removed the black banner hung by Wong鈥檚 team a day earlier and instead waved Chinese听national flags听and unfolded red banners reading 鈥淐elebrating the 70th听Anniversary of the Founding of the People鈥檚 Republic of China鈥澨齛nd 鈥淪topping Violence, Ending the Chaos, and Restoring Order.鈥 Several pro-government demonstrators declined to discuss the protests on Lion Rock with 国产吃瓜黑料.
As the dissent听continues, climbers听beneath Lion Rock still don听shirts featuring pro-democracy slogans and blast 鈥淕lory to Hong Kong鈥 on loudspeakers while hiking up to the crag. Along the way, they exchange smiles and greet each other with an expression that鈥檚 become a mantra among protesters:听鈥淗ong Kong, keep it up.鈥澨