Main Headline UTM Life

Online photograph album helps celebrate May Fourth Movement

中文摘要 / Summary in Chinese

IFTM has posted online an album of photographs to celebrate the May Fourth Movement of 1919. The album went live in May and is intended to increase awareness of the patriotic campaign that is widely seen as a turning point in the post-imperial transformation of China.

The goal is to make students more aware of the movement, the spirit behind it, and to stimulate positive contributions to the development of the People’s Republic of China and the Macao SAR.

Last year, the IFTM Heritage Club and Mainland Student Union jointly arranged an exhibition of photographs of the May Fourth Movement to celebrate its 100th anniversary.

Since the majority of face-to-face classes at IFTM is suspended to limit the Covid-19 pandemic, this year’s May Fourth Movement anniversary celebration has gone online, with an album featuring photographs shown at the 2019 exhibition. The online presentation also includes information about the May Fourth Movement.

The May Fourth Movement was a patriotic campaign led by Chinese students. In Beijing on 4 May 1919, students gathered to protest the transfer of German concessions in the Chinese province of Shandong to Japan. The transfer was made at the Versailles Peace Conference, the treaty that formally ended the First World War. The Chinese students protested against the transfer, demanding the territories be returned to China. The protest evolved into a political, cultural and anti-imperialist movement.