Berliner Boersenzeitung - Forced out of business in China, a bookseller turns the page

EUR -
AED 4.323747
AFN 82.401757
ALL 97.851872
AMD 451.913873
ANG 2.106773
AOA 1079.460903
ARS 1481.400456
AUD 1.783571
AWG 2.121841
AZN 1.99945
BAM 1.963365
BBD 2.376809
BDT 143.494736
BGN 1.956279
BHD 0.443691
BIF 3449.095807
BMD 1.177166
BND 1.504027
BOB 8.134516
BRL 6.496899
BSD 1.177161
BTN 101.708467
BWP 15.710468
BYN 3.852426
BYR 23072.449768
BZD 2.364561
CAD 1.600769
CDF 3397.300382
CHF 0.932903
CLF 0.028463
CLP 1116.612708
CNY 8.428286
CNH 8.41836
COP 4753.454377
CRC 594.688904
CUC 1.177166
CUP 31.194894
CVE 110.800752
CZK 24.583691
DJF 209.205341
DKK 7.465109
DOP 71.094576
DZD 152.57916
EGP 57.78914
ERN 17.657487
ETB 160.916502
FJD 2.632963
FKP 0.870751
GBP 0.867041
GEL 3.190714
GGP 0.870751
GHS 12.254419
GIP 0.870751
GMD 84.756028
GNF 10189.547331
GTQ 9.035005
GYD 246.153696
HKD 9.239751
HNL 31.018032
HRK 7.53563
HTG 154.468472
HUF 398.659405
IDR 19155.54827
ILS 3.927396
IMP 0.870751
INR 101.682644
IQD 1542.087204
IRR 49573.390859
ISK 142.225376
JEP 0.870751
JMD 188.827582
JOD 0.834607
JPY 172.460685
KES 152.438768
KGS 102.852629
KHR 4732.206716
KMF 494.999615
KPW 1059.510475
KRW 1618.202982
KWD 0.359158
KYD 0.980976
KZT 633.518355
LAK 25385.580079
LBP 105415.198088
LKR 355.145976
LRD 236.610476
LSL 20.612237
LTL 3.475865
LVL 0.712055
LYD 6.368156
MAD 10.581249
MDL 19.905615
MGA 5214.844345
MKD 61.798908
MMK 2470.989634
MNT 4221.758486
MOP 9.517374
MRU 46.874455
MUR 53.38453
MVR 18.125533
MWK 2044.139545
MXN 21.833016
MYR 4.976466
MZN 75.291275
NAD 20.61203
NGN 1804.714347
NIO 43.260903
NOK 11.891968
NPR 162.737509
NZD 1.947905
OMR 0.452575
PAB 1.177161
PEN 4.185952
PGK 4.883767
PHP 66.816123
PKR 335.757126
PLN 4.2521
PYG 8816.97318
QAR 4.285589
RON 5.069579
RSD 117.171534
RUB 92.282278
RWF 1693.35301
SAR 4.416341
SBD 9.752931
SCR 16.650449
SDG 706.93426
SEK 11.210009
SGD 1.503002
SHP 0.925068
SLE 27.075412
SLL 24684.582983
SOS 672.699284
SRD 42.904165
STD 24364.955464
STN 24.955915
SVC 10.299818
SYP 15305.463097
SZL 20.741205
THB 37.902501
TJS 11.294861
TMT 4.131852
TND 3.387296
TOP 2.757038
TRY 47.604591
TTD 7.988748
TWD 34.432691
TZS 3034.145492
UAH 49.22269
UGX 4226.374642
USD 1.177166
UYU 47.322946
UZS 15050.064671
VES 140.629647
VND 30782.885787
VUV 141.331468
WST 3.103114
XAF 658.508321
XAG 0.029987
XAU 0.000348
XCD 3.181349
XCG 2.121465
XDR 0.817575
XOF 661.566854
XPF 119.331742
YER 283.638352
ZAR 20.648428
ZMK 10595.90245
ZMW 27.339926
ZWL 379.046909
  • RYCEF

    -0.1200

    13.3

    -0.9%

  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    22.43

    -0.18%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    22.89

    -0.13%

  • SCU

    0.0000

    12.72

    0%

  • RBGPF

    -1.0000

    68

    -1.47%

  • SCS

    0.2100

    10.68

    +1.97%

  • VOD

    -0.0200

    11.3

    -0.18%

  • NGG

    -1.6300

    72.65

    -2.24%

  • RELX

    0.4100

    53.09

    +0.77%

  • BCC

    1.2000

    88.35

    +1.36%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    13.21

    0%

  • RIO

    0.2900

    64.62

    +0.45%

  • AZN

    2.5200

    73

    +3.45%

  • BTI

    0.1500

    52.37

    +0.29%

  • BCE

    0.2200

    24.6

    +0.89%

  • GSK

    1.0100

    38.03

    +2.66%

  • BP

    0.1900

    32.71

    +0.58%

Forced out of business in China, a bookseller turns the page
Forced out of business in China, a bookseller turns the page / Photo: Drew ANGERER - AFP/File

Forced out of business in China, a bookseller turns the page

From talks on social issues to topics like constitutionalism and religion, bookseller Yu Miao wanted Jifeng Bookstore in Shanghai to be a place for public discussions.

Text size:

"But some topics are considered taboo and sensitive to discuss in public spaces," he told AFP, of the store that was effectively forced out of business in China in January 2018.

Years later, Jifeng has started a new chapter as JF Books in Washington, a rare source of Chinese-language volumes in the US capital, covering everything from sociology to China studies.

The bookstore originated in China in 1997, with up to eight outlets in cosmopolitan Shanghai at its peak.

But as Beijing tightened restrictions on booksellers and academics over the past decade, the store came under heightened scrutiny.

Authorities posed obstacles to organizing events on topics like feminism, constitutionalism and religion -- sometimes notifying the store that certain seminars had to be canceled.

"We didn't want to have any taboo topics or self-limitations," Yu said, adding that subjects were chosen for their importance.

The store did not allow its decisions to be affected by concern over potential interference, added Yu, who took over the business from its founder in 2012.

He recalls being delighted that most people attending the seminars were young.

- An emotional farewell -

But Jifeng came under increasing pressure to cancel events, and in 2017 it had trouble renewing its lease.

"You realize that your space for survival is shrinking," Yu said.

In those years, he added, other publications, independent media and cultural institutions also shuttered amid scrutiny.

In 2016, China shut down several online operations for independently reporting and publishing articles about potentially sensitive subjects.

Some of the freewheeling political and social news sites of Sina, Sohu, Netease and iFeng were closed, state media reported at the time.

On one of the last days of Jifeng's Shanghai operations, people were in the store when its power was cut.

"I think the power outage was also to prevent people from gathering," Yu recounted.

But instead of leaving, patrons lit up their mobile phones and put up battery-powered lights, casting a hazy glow over the space.

"People read poetry, sang, strummed the guitar and played the piano," Yu said. "More readers heard the news and came to join us. It was a moving moment."

Photos from that evening are displayed on JF Books' brightly lit storefront in Washington, while handwritten cards from patrons of the Shanghai store remain displayed by its entrance.

- 'Hard to imagine' -

After Jifeng's closure, Yu moved to the United States with his wife and their children, furthering his studies.

With the family now planning to stay in the country for longer, opening another bookstore was a natural choice for Yu.

"My desire to participate in society came together with my inner regret," he said, referring to his wistfulness over Jifeng's closure.

Realizing it was tough to find Chinese-language books in Washington, even online, Yu figured that opening such a bookstore could fulfil the needs of readers like himself.

In addition to Chinese-language volumes, the store carries English titles with a focus on Chinese and Asian issues, alongside Asian authors' works.

"Besides books from mainland China, we can also procure books published in Taiwan and Hong Kong," Yu said.

"This was hard to imagine when we were running a bookstore in Shanghai."

Many such books are not available in mainland Chinese stores due to strict controls.

Yu has faced other difficulties in recent years: after a visit to China, his wife was temporarily unable to leave, an experience he called "a nightmare."

Now, he added, "We really cherish being able to live together freely and without fear."

- A meeting place -

Like its predecessor in Shanghai, Yu wants JF Books to be a space where people come together -- to buy books or attend seminars and cultural activities.

Already, three talks it is organizing in September, including one with Chinese-American poet Ha Jin, are fully subscribed.

"It feels very nice to have a bookstore of Chinese books in (Washington)," said Rayna Zhang, 35, who visited the shop after reading about it on social media.

"I think it's also a way of helping us keep up with the trends, the culture of young people back home," added Zhang, who is Chinese.

Another patron, 36-year-old William Au, added: "I just find it fun that a place that seemed so prominent in the community out of Shanghai (is suddenly here)."

(A.Lehmann--BBZ)