Opinion: 'Glory be to thee, Hong Kong!' What is so dangerous about the song, "Glory to Hong Kong"? NPR's Scott Simon explains that the Chinese government is cracking down on any singing, quoting, or use of the song.

Opinion: 'Glory be to thee, Hong Kong!'

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(SOUNDBITE OF THOMAS DGX YHL SONG, "GLORY TO HONG KONG")

SCOTT SIMON, HOST:

This is "Glory To Hong Kong."

(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "GLORY TO HONG KONG")

UNIDENTIFIED CHOIR: (Singing) We pledge to no more tears on our land.

SIMON: Singing this song or listening to it or merely quoting the lyrics in conversation could soon get people in Hong Kong sent to prison, even for life. "Glory To Hong Kong" has lyrics that declare break now the dawn, liberate our Hong Kong. May people reign proud and free, now and evermore. Glory be to thee, Hong Kong.

Hong Kong, of course, was returned to China from British rule in 1997. "Glory To Hong Kong" was written during the 2019 Hong Kong protests by a pop rock musician who wishes only to be known as Thomas dgx yhl. He told Hong Kong's Stand News website that he was inspired by anthems in composing the song, including "God Save The King" and "Battle Hymn Of The Republic." By the way, Stand News was shut a year after running the interview.

This week Hong Kong's appeals court judge Jeremy Poon ruled that "Glory To Hong Kong" should not be performed, broadcast or reproduced. A spokesperson for China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs approved, saying, it is only legitimate and necessary for the Hong Kong special administrative region to stop anyone from using and disseminating relevant songs to incite secession and insult the national anthem. But Sarah Brooks, Amnesty International's China director, told us, singing to protest songs should not be a crime. It fundamentally violates international human rights.

"Glory To Hong Kong" has already been banned from Hong Kong schools, and a man was arrested outside the city's British consulate in 2022 for playing the song on a harmonica after the death of Queen Elizabeth. The court has also suggested that internet companies might, quote, "stop facilitating the acts being carried out on their platforms." So far, internet companies have not removed "Glory To Hong Kong" from their platforms. After this week's court ruling, do you think they would risk losing the right to do business there?

But you might wonder, too, if trying to stop "Glory To Hong Kong" from being sung and heard will only make the song more compelling and powerful. People who are barred from assembling to sing the song in public could begin to whisper the lyrics, one to another, urgently from behind their hands. They might tell one another in hushed urgent, voices, our voice grows evermore. For Hong Kong, may glory reign.

(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "GLORY TO HONG KONG")

UNIDENTIFIED CHOIR: (Singing) Let blood rage afield. Our voice grows evermore. For Hong Kong, may glory reign.

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