Social gathering and entertainment with factory sisters during her youth

As a youth, she loved cruising and having mah-jong games or parties with friends and workmates when she had leisure time. When she joined Fung Lee at 18, she made friends with some boat people who knew how to steer a boat. On holidays, they would set sail from the public pier in Tsim Sha Tsui to Deep Water Bay or Repulse Bay. She said the bay scenery was much prettier than what it is today because the sky was bluer and the cloud whiter. She could not swim but she kept herself afloat with a kickboard. Sailing was an expensive activity. A boat trip needed several dozen dollars. At the time, she earned a monthly wage of about $1,000.

The grandmother of one of her friends was a boatwoman who took passengers from Mong Kok Ferry Pier on Nelson Street to the performance boats in the Yau Ma Tei Typhoon Shelter. The beautifully decorated performance boat had a young lady who played the yangqin and sang at the bow. A 2-hour cruise charged an expensive fee of $7 or $8. Sometimes, To Sui Wan had mah-jong games with friends on the grandmother’s boat. Each player had to pay her $40 each time. They usually set off at 11pm and had mah-jong games for five or six hours. They directly went to work in the morning after the game. On one occasion, when they arrived at the seashore at 11pm, the grandmother was off with her customers so they rented a room in a guesthouse and played mah-jong games overnight. For several decades, the scene of mah-jong games on the boat always come to her mind. Memories of her youth amused her, but she would describe her childhood as ‘silly’. Her family did not know what she did in her leisure time.

In the 1970s, To Sui Wan lived in a 7-storey low-cost housing estate. Many tenants had parties in their spacious units and opened it to strangers for a fee of $5. To Sui Wan would occasionally attend such home parties. Some parties only charged the males but not the females. To Sui Wan never attended such parties although they were free of charge. She would only attend parties held by people she knew. In those days, parties were held for the purpose of preying on young female factory workers. The organizers waited outside the factory and invited them to the parties when they left the factory after work. Such parties were held for wicked purpose, some young girls were raped when they lost their consciousness after drinking drugged beverages. The low-cost housing was a black spot of crime. The residents of the district always discussed news of raping. Some of her friends knew the dance hostess managers or gangsters. They told her about these incidents so that she would not be cheated. She learnt about such events in Hong Kong when she studied in Guangzhou from her teachers. She was told to be alert and to protect herself. To Sui Wan chose her friends carefully. At first, she socialized with her workmates and made good friends with eight workmates. Seven of them were workers and one was managress. Their ages ranged from 18 to 20 and To Sui Wan was the youngest. In comparison with other friends, she was closest with them. They would help, take care of and refer jobs to each other. After she left the knitting industry and joined the garment factories, she seldom met them. When they all got married, they met even rarely. Now, they only meet in feast gatherings.

Interviewee
Date
Subject Industry
Duration 23m8s
Language Cantonese
Material Type
Collection
Source Hong Kong Memory Project Oral History Interview
Repository Hong Kong Memory Project
Note to Copyright Copyright owned by Hong Kong Memory Project
Accession No. LKF-TSW-SEG-013
Share Share