New $70m Hakka hub seeks to preserve heritage

New m Hakka hub seeks to preserve heritage


SINGAPORE – A 168-year-old Hakka clan association wants to move beyond preserving heritage to developing business connections and future leaders to attract younger members.

The official opening of the Char Yong (Dabu) Association’s seven-storey, 18,250 sq ft premises in Geylang on July 3 marked the start of its broader transformation.

Its $70 million home will serve as a hub for Hakka heritage and community activities for all ages. Apart from housing a museum, library and cooking studio, it will also offer entrepreneurship and professional development programmes.

“Our transformation does not mean abandoning heritage, but cultural preservation, Hakka values and ancestral connections are now complemented by our business and professional development agenda,” the association’s president, 75-year-old Ivan Ho, told The Straits Times.

The BCA Green Mark Platinum-certified building, which took 2½ years to complete, is designed in the form of a tulou – the traditional circular earthen homes of the Hakka people – stretched out to symbolically welcome visitors.

Speaking at the official opening, Minister for Digital Development and Information Josephine Teo said the association has long been strengthening bonds among its members, serving the wider community and evolving with the times.

“What is passed down is more than tradition – it is a spirit,” she said in Mandarin, adding that the Hakka ethos of valuing education, diligence and thrift forms an enduring legacy worthy of being preserved across generations.

“In today’s rapidly changing world, community organisations must remain firmly rooted in their heritage while keeping pace with the times,” said Teo, who has Hakka ancestors from Dabu.




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