Lim Boon Keng

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Dr.

Lim Boon Keng

林文慶
Photograph of Lim Boon Keng
Lim Boon Keng
Born(1869-10-18)18 October 1869
Died1 January 1957(1957-01-01) (aged 87)
Resting placeBidadari Cemetery
Other namesLin Wenqing
EducationMBBS (Hons)
Alma materUniversity of Edinburgh
OccupationPhysician, social activist
Known forPromoting social and educational reforms in Singapore
Spouse(s)
  • Margaret Huang (黃端瓊)
  • Grace Yin (殷碧霞)
Children
  • Robert Kho-Seng Lim (林可勝)
  • Francis Kho-Beng Lim (林可明)
  • Walter Kho-Leng Lim (林可能)
  • John Kho-Liau Lim (林可卿)
  • Peng Han Lim (林炳漢)
Parent(s)Father: Lim Thean Geow (林天堯)
Lim Boon Keng
Traditional Chinese林文慶
Simplified Chinese林文庆

Lim Boon Keng OBE (18 October 1869 – 1 January 1957) was a Peranakan physician who promoted social and educational reforms in Singapore in the early 20th-century. He also served as president of Xiamen University in China from 1921 to 1937.

Beginning Life[]

Lim was born as the third generation of a Peranakan family in Singapore, Straits Settlements, with ancestry from Haicheng Town, Longhai City, Fujian Province. He moved to Singapore with his father, Lim Thean Geow (Chinese: 林天堯; pinyin: Lín Tiānyáo; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Lîm Thian-giâu), and the rest of his family when he was young. He studied at Raffles Institution in Singapore. However, the death of his parents during his childhood inspired him to pursue a career in medicine. In 1887, Lim became the first Malayan to receive a Queen's Scholarship. He gained admission to the University of Edinburgh and graduated in 1892 with a first class honours degree in medicine.[1]

Career[]

In 1895, Lim became a member of the Legislative Council of the Straits Settlements in Singapore. The following year, he headed a Commission of Inquiry into the sources of poverty in Singapore. He was also a Justice of the Peace and a member of the Chinese Advisory Board.

Lim founded the Philomatic society and published the first Chinese-language magazine in the Straits Settlements in 1897 with Song Ong Siang. They were later joined by Dr Wu Lien-teh as a fellow editor.[2]

In the same year, he also campaigned against the wearing of queues among Chinese men, with the intention of toppling the Qing dynasty in China.

In 1898, Lim co-founded the Tian Nan Xin Bao (天南新报) with Khoo Sook Yuen.

In 1899, Lim co-founded the Singapore Chinese Girls' School (SCGS) with his friend, Song Ong Siang, to facilitate the education of Chinese women living in the Straits Settlements. (Chinese girls were not encouraged to be educated before the 20th century, thus many were illiterate.) The next year, Lim founded the Straits Chinese British Association, and later became its president.

As a member of the Legislative Council, Lim wanted opium banned so he formed the Anti-Opium Society. However, opium was not banned until 1943 during the Japanese occupation of Singapore. The British reasoned that imposing a ban on opium would mean that the government would lose a source of income from the tax on opium. To make up for the loss, the British governor suggested taxing the people's incomes. The main group that would be affected by this tax would be the merchants. Therefore, the European and Asian merchants opposed to this, and opium was not banned, although heavier taxes on opium were imposed.[3]

Lim was created an officer of the Order of the British Empire on 12 March 1918 (backdated to 1 January 1918) for his services as an Unofficial Member of the Legislative Council of the Straits Settlements.[4]

Together with Lim Nee Soon, Lim co-founded OAC Insurance in 1920. OAC was the first locally owned insurance company to be set up in Singapore. The following year in June, upon the request of Sun Yat-sen, Lim served as the second president of Xiamen University, until the outbreak of the Second Sino-Japanese War in July 1937. The university was founded by Lim's friend, Tan Kah Kee.

Lim later went into banking, and co-founded the Oversea-Chinese Banking Corporation (OCBC).[5]

As the president of Xiamen University, Lim published his own English translation of the Chinese poem Li Sao, also known as An Elegy on Encountering Sorrows.

In 1937, Lim founded the Straits Chinese China Relief Fund Committee of Singapore to support China in its war efforts against Japan during the Second Sino-Japanese War.

President of OCA[]

In 1942, Lim's family were interned at a Japanese concentration camp at Arab Street. Lim was asked by the Japanese to become the leader of (OCA). In response, Lim refused, claiming that he was too old to take up the role of a president. Lim's wife was then made to kneel down under the scorching sun for four hours at a stretch, in addition to bearing other insults. After Shinozaki let him drink beer and persuaded him, telling him that Lim's position as president was merely to be a figurehead without needing to do much work, Lim finally relented.[6][7]

In March 1942, Lim was ordered by the Japanese to raise a . However, only 28 million dollars were raised with much difficulty. In response to the anger of , Lim made an emotional speech:

"We never told a lie. When we promised to give the military contribution, we mean to do it. Financial conditions are now such as to be beyond our control. If we are unable to pay, then die we will. I wish to point out, however, that the manner in which the Government raise this military contribution is without any parallel in any country."

In the end, the Japanese agreed to a loan for the remaining sum through the Yokohama Specie Bank.[8]

Known as the grand old man of the Singaporean Chinese community, during the Japanese occupation, Lim feigned a drunken stupor rather than cooperate with the Japanese.[9]

Later life[]

Lim led his remaining years in recluse in Singapore as an ordinary citizen. He died on 1 January 1957, two months after his 87th birthday.[10] and was buried at Bidadari Cemetery in Singapore.

Family[]

Lim married twice. He married Wong Tuan-Keng (黃端瓊; Huáng Duānqióng), the eldest daughter of Sibu pioneer Wong Nai Siong, in 1896 at a Presbyterian church. They had four sons, Robert Kho-Seng, Francis Kho-Beng, Walter Kho-Leng, and John Kho-Liau. Wong died in 1905.

Lim remarried in 1908, to Grace Yin (殷碧霞; Yīn Bìxiá) the sister of S.C. Yin with whom he shared a medical practice. They had one son, Peng Han, who later became a race car driver and the first Chinese person to race in Brooklands in the United Kingdom. They also had a daughter, Ena Guat-Kheng. Lim also had another son, Peng Thiam, with Chui Geok, the niece of his second wife.

Legacy[]

The area now known as Boon Keng, including Boon Keng MRT station, Boon Keng Road and Upper Boon Keng Road are named after Lim.

References[]

  1. ^ "Lim Boon Keng". National Library Board. Retrieved 8 January 2015.
  2. ^ Lee, Kam Hing; Wong, Danny Tze-ken; Ho, Tak Ming; Ng, Kwan Hoong (2014). "Dr Wu Lien-teh: Modernising post-1911 China's public health service". Singapore Medical Journal. 55 (2): 99–102. doi:10.11622/smedj.2014025. PMC 4291938. PMID 24570319.
  3. ^ "Background of Lim Boon Keng". Retrieved 8 January 2015.
  4. ^ "No. 30576". The London Gazette (5th supplement). 12 March 1918. p. 3287.
  5. ^ Oon, Clarissa (7 April 2008). "Nanyang gentleman caught between two different worlds". Straits Times. Singapore.
  6. ^ Tan 1947a.
  7. ^ Shinozaki 1976, pp. 55-56.
  8. ^ Tan 1947b.
  9. ^ "Healer, educator and social reformer, Lim Boon Keng (born 1869 – died 1957)". Retrieved 8 January 2015.
  10. ^ "Talk: Lim Boon Keng- A Life to Remember. 1869-1957". Singapore Heritage Society. Retrieved 8 January 2015.

Bibliography[]

  • Cook, John Angus Bethune, Sunny Singapore: An account of the place and its people, with a sketch of the results of missionary work, E. Stock, 1907
  • Doran, Christine, The Chinese Origins of Democracy: Dynamic Confucianism in Singapore., Nebula, 2010
  • Frost, Mark Ravinder, Singapore: A Biography, Singapore, 2009.
  • Frost, Mark Ravinder, Transcultural Diaspora: The Straits Chinese in Singapore, 1819–1918[1], NUS ARI Working Papers, 2003.
  • Shinozaki, Mamoru (1976). Secret Record of Japanese Occupation of Singapore (in Japanese). Tokyo: Hara Shobo.
  • Tan, Y.S. (12 June 1947). "The first terrible days in Singapore". The Straits Times. p. 6. Retrieved 4 November 2017.
  • Tan, Y.S. (13 June 1947). "How they kept their heads on their shoulders". The Straits Times. p. 4. Retrieved 4 November 2017.

External links[]

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