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COMMUNITY CENTRE(RT59)

In the 1960s and 1970s, when the community was not well off, many parents went out to work in order to make ends meet and neglected to take care of their children, who might not have access to education. They had nothing to do and wandered around all day long, and were easily recruited by the lawless elements to engage in various illegal activities. To alleviate these problems, the Government launched the Neighbourhood Level Scheme in the 1970s, which was implemented by NGOs in transitional communities with inadequate social facilities and welfare services. Community centres provide venues and facilities to encourage young people to participate in community activities. Chess games such as Xiangqi, Go, Backgammon and Poggle, as well as table-tennis, football and basketball are usually available in community centres for young people's enjoyment. In addition to this, various kinds of cultural and recreational competitions and performances are held from time to time, such as open chess tournaments, table-tennis competitions and singing contests. The most popular game among children is the recreational chess game, which is similar to billiard ball in that each side has 16 pieces with names similar to those of Chinese chess, and the players compete with each other in a battle of wits to get the opponent's pieces into the holes in the four corners of the table as quickly as possible. Although supplies were relatively scarce at that time, in order to play a game of recreational chess, often have to wait in long queues, but the children are still happy to enjoy the simple and pure joy of their youth.




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CityStories - RT56

HERBAL TEA SHOP(RT56)

In the decades following the opening of Hong Kong in 1842, although there were several Western hospitals, the Chinese generally resisted Western medical treatment and always trusted Chinese medicine, and therefore often relied on herbal tea to prevent and treat illnesses. Early herbal tea shops were mainly home-based, selling herbal tea alone, mostly in a "shop in front, workshop at the back" style, with bowls of herbal tea in front of the shop and a few tables inside the shop, where customers could sit down or stand in front of the shop to drink herbal tea. At the back of the shop, there is a kitchen where the herbal tea is boiled and poured into a large copper pot in front of the shop to keep it warm. In the 1950s and 60s of the last century, Hong Kong people's living conditions were not good, and jukeboxes and televisions were not yet popular, but most of the herbal tea shops were equipped with jukeboxes and televisions, so the herbal tea shop became a cheap entertainment place for the general public to spend their leisure time and socialise, and as long as they paid 10 or 20 cents, they could enjoy audio-visual entertainment while drinking herbal tea. Nowadays, in addition to herbal tea, new-style herbal tea shops also sell other health food products such as tortoise jelly, kudzu soup with raw fish, and even snacks such as tea-leaf eggs, dim sum and desserts, in an attempt to attract customers with a wide range of products.




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