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林航苇
About

Dr Sun Yat-sen, together with members of Tongmen Hui in Wangqing Yuan, when he came from Japan to revisit Singapore in March 1907; Lin Hangwei seated first from the left in the second row. Via Wikicommons (on Public Domain).
Lin Hangwei (林航葦) was a Cantonese-speaking Chinese community activist and early theatre organiser in Singapore and British Malaya, remembered for linking social reform (anti-opium work) with nationalist cultural mobilisation in the late 1900s–1910. He was from Wufeng Village (五凤村), Panyu, Guangdong, and is described as having served as a clerical member (书记员) of the Singapore Anti-Opium Society (振武善社 Zhen Wu Shan She), with a strong personal commitment to public welfare and to opium-cessation (戒烟) initiatives in Malaya.
Within the Jubilee Church–Singapore Reading Room milieu, Lin is also documented as one of the Chinese Christians who joined the Tong Meng Hui revolutionary network, and he is specifically noted for encouraging Chinese Christians to support the revolution at the Singapore Chinese Christian Youth Association [Zhu & Wang 2024].
In the cultural sphere, Lin is portrayed as a prominent “disciple” figure, who was shaped by the Zhen Tian Sheng (振天聲) Nanyang Tour [Shen 2019]. In 1909, he initiated the founding of Min Duo She (民铎社) to reform and promote new drama, directing works such as Meng Hou Zhong (梦后钟), Du Zhong Du (毒中毒), Zei Zai Sheng Guan (贼仔升官), Yan Gui Xin Nian (烟鬼新年), and Shen Quan Zhao Huo (神权肇祸), and Hei Hai Ci Hang (黑海慈航). Reports of Min Duo She’s activities place these productions in Singapore and beyond, including fundraising performances and touring circuits that connected Singapore with Johor and other Malayan towns.
A press article on 星洲晨报, dated 23 June 1910 (as quoted in later commentary) frames Lin’s theatre as explicitly civic in intent—using song and drama to satirise social ills and expose official corruption; in the report’s phrasing, its aim was “以歌曲讽世 … 描写官场之腐败” (to satirise the world through song … depicting the corruption of officialdom). Lin died of illness in October 1910, cutting short a short but influential career at the intersection of anti-opium reform, nationalist advocacy, and the early development of Chinese-language modern theatre in Malaya.
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| Troupe | Established Date |
|---|---|
| Zhen Tian Sheng Troupe (中國振天聲社) | 1908 |
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Sources
Zhu, Qing, and Yuanlin Wang. 2024. “Chinese Christian Community in Modern Singapore: The Case of the Jubilee Church, 1883–1942.” Religions 15: 1284.
Shen, Guoming. 2019. “【南洋文艺】战前,马来亚侨民入场观赏演剧先购买“荷兰水”和扇(第七篇).” eNanyang (e南洋 (eNanyang), 21 June 2019.
星洲晨报. 23 June 2019, 3.
Contributor
2026. “Lin Hangwei (林航葦)“. In Performing Archipelagos, edited by Kyueun Kim, Alvin Eng Hui Lim and Hedren Wai Yuan Sum. Singapore: National University of Singapore.




