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Posted: 2022-12-21 18:47:00

The first Westpac, a student massacre and racist remarks — the complicated relationship with our largest trading partner.

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Born in China in 1945, Francis Lee looks back fondly at his decision to set sail for Sydney in 1961 when he was only 16 years old.

A young Francis Lee practicing Tai Chi in 1959.
A young Francis Lee practicing Tai Chi in 1959.(Supplied: Francis Lee)

"I loved the simplicity and honesty of its people, and I felt very much at home," he reflects from his home in Zetland, NSW.

In 1961, China was still under the rule of communist revolutionary and People's Republic of China founder Mao Zedong, with whom Australia had no diplomatic relations — our embassy was still in Taipei, not Beijing, or Peking, as it was known at the time.

Francis Lee, aged 16, boarding the boat to Australia.
Francis Lee, aged 16, boarding the boat to Australia in 1961.(Supplied: Francis Lee)
Francis Lee entering boarding school aged 16 in 1961.
Francis Lee entering boarding school aged 16 in 1961.

"Deep down I was still very Chinese, especially in terms of literature and family tradition," Francis adds.

"But I accepted and appreciated both facets of my personality and history, and was fully prepared to seek a future in this new land." 

Francis was naturalised as an Australian citizen in 1968, just a couple of years before then-opposition leader Gough Whitlam would make a surprise visit to Beijing in 1971, breaking ranks with the United States in seeking to establish relations.

A 1973 photograph of Gough Whitlam and Premier Zhou Enlai surrounded by a parade of Chinese people holding flags
Whitlam and Zhou in China, 1973. (Supplied: National Archives of Australia)

It was the first instance of goodwill China had had from Australia in years.

During his meeting with China's former premier, Mr Whitlam said that Canberra would recognise Beijing if he was elected — a move he said should have taken place decades before. 

It was a political gamble of seismic proportions, but fortuitous timing.

A black and white photograph of Mao Zedong and Gough Whitlam seated next to each other
Gough Whitlam met Communist Party chairman Mao Zedong in 1973.(National Archives of Australia: A6180, 10/12/73/11)

The following year, Mr Whitlam would lead the Labor Party to victory after decades in opposition, and officially established diplomatic relations on December 21, 1972.

Soon after, the government closed its consulate in Taipei — a key condition of the new relationship — and moved it to Beijing.

Days later, United States national security adviser Henry Kissinger would follow in setting up a secret meeting with China's leaders.

"When Henry Kissinger [on behalf of President Richard Nixon] got to Beijing, I had already gone to Shanghai!" Mr Whitlam later publicly joked at a dinner.

Back in Sydney, a young Francis, now working as an engineer, welcomed the news. 

Francis Lee at a university debate in 1967.
Francis Lee at a university debate in 1967(Supplied: Francis Lee)
Francis Lee as a young engineer in 1982.
Francis Lee as a young engineer in 1982.(Supplied: Francis Lee)

"[Gough] had a vision, he had courage," Francis says. "At a time when people were suspicious of China, he took the lead to go, even ahead of America." 

Gough Whitlam putting his ear against the echo wall in China.

After establishing the new embassy in Beijing, a whirlwind of diplomatic activities followed, including Australia signing a three-year trade agreement with China the following year.

Domestically, China was about to start rapidly changing, too.

Black and white photo of Chairman Mao Zedong and Deng Xiaoping from 1959.
China's chairman Mao Zedong (left) conferring with Deng Xiaopiong (right) in Shandong province in March 1959.(Reuters)

In 1976, Chairman Mao died of a heart attack, which also brought about an end to the Cultural Revolution and its associated hardline communist, anti-capitalist values.

A black and white photo of Deng Xiaoping riding in a car with the top open.
Deng Xiaoping was responsible for opening up China's economy to the world.(AFP)

Then in 1978,  new leader Deng Xiaoping would introduce radical economic reforms — allowing foreign investments and private businesses to thrive — and the foundations for what would become "socialism with Chinese characteristics" would be laid down.

Beijing was opening up to the modern world, and more and more Australians would begin to visit and live in mainland China.

'A little taste of Australia'

In 1982, Australian-born Joanne Wood — whose story mirrors Francis' — went to Beijing to study Mandarin, with the hopes of becoming a translator for the United Nations.

Joanne Wood with her classmates in China, 1982.
Joanne Wood, centre, with her classmates in China, 1982.(Supplied: Joanne Wood)

Plunged into the newly re-opened but cold, dark winter of Beijing, with temperatures below 20 degrees Celsius, it was a clear contrast to her life back in Adelaide.

"What caught my attention was the vast open areas of land," she recalls.

"China was coming out of a period of turmoil back then, and it felt like you were in the last vestiges of the Cultural Revolution." 

An officer walks along the west side of Tiananmen Square in 1984.
West Side Of Tiananmen Square, Beijing, 1984(Supplied: Alex Ng)
The marble boat at the summer palace in Beijing in 1985.
Downtown Beijing in 1985.

Because of her height and light skin, Joanne was often thought to be Russian. When she told people she was from Australia, knowledge of the country and responses were surprisingly consistent. 

"They all knew about kangaroos, that we were a vast country with great wealth and resources — and also that we had wonderful seafood," she says. 

Joanne Woo

As her scholarship program was coming to an end, Joanne was determined to stay, live and work in Beijing, rather than return home to Australia.

"So I printed off my CV and cycled 15 kilometres into town to Tiananmen Square," she says.

"In those days, there were very few foreign businessmen based in China, and almost every one lived and worked out of a hotel room, [which at the time was] really only two or three hotels." 

Tiananmen Square in Beijing, 1984.
Tiananmen Square in Beijing, 1984.(Supplied: Alex NG)

Within two days of door-knocking to hand out her resume, Joanne secured a job with an American bank that no longer exists — the Chemical Bank — and entered the world of finance.

Set-up in a hotel office, she recalls the first Australian bank in China — Westpac — operating in the same hotel across the hall, which she fondly remembers as being "a little taste of Australia" in her new home.

While Joanne continued to travel around and adjust to life in China, popular reformist and democracy advocate, general secretary Hu Yaobang, would make a landmark trip to Australia in 1985

Mr Yaobang met with then-prime minister Bob Hawke, visited an iron ore mine, signed numerous trade deals, and opened new consulates.

Bob Hawke visiting an iron ore mine with general secretary Hu Yaobang.
Bob Hawke visiting a mine with general secretary Hu Yaobang, 1985.(Supplied: Australian National University Archives)

The visit would set the template for trade relations between the two countries: iron ore and steel industries. 

Meanwhile in Sydney, Francis was becoming more and more involved with the growing Chinese Australian community, founding the Australian Chinese Forum in 1985.

Francis speaks at a forum with Gough Whitlam in attendance, 1989.
Francis speaks at a forum with Gough Whitlam in attendance, 1989.(Supplied: Francis Lee)
Francis chairing a China Australia debate, 1989.
Francis chairing a China Australia debate, 1989.(Supplied: Francis Lee)

The forum was designed to give the Chinese community a voice in Australia's political process.

But just a couple of years later, the China-Australia relationship was about to face its first significant challenge.

'A bloody incident'

A man stands in front of a row of tanks.
The iconic Tank Man image from Tiananmen Square, 1989.(Reuters)

In 1989, Mr Yaobang — who had recently catalysed trade with Australia during his trip — died, prompting widespread protests due to his popularity as a democratic reformer among students.

The protests escalated into the Tiananmen Square pro-democracy movement, which Beijing would respond to with military force, killing what's now believed to have been hundreds of people.

"On June 4, I awoke to see the news that a bloody incident had taken place overnight," Francis recalls, adding that the massacre cast a long shadow on China and Australia's relationship.

Francis Lee with Bob Hawke follow the Tiananmen Square massacre, 1989.
Francis Lee with Bob Hawke following the Tiananmen Square massacre, 1989.(Supplied: Francis Lee)

Dozens of Chinese community leaders — including Francis — were called into a special meeting with Mr Hawke in Canberra to discuss the incident.

Despite increasing community concerns about the rate of Asian immigration into Australia, Mr Hawke would later act alone in granting asylum to some 40,000 Chinese students, prompting the biggest influx of Chinese migrants since the Gold Rush. 

Bob Hawke becomes emotional speaking about the Tiananmen Square massacre.

"I have a deep love for the Chinese people," Mr Hawke said.

"I was told: 'You cannot [just hand out visas like that], prime minister'.

"I said to them, 'I just did. It is done.'" 

Despite the fallout from Tiananmen, the incentive of trade between the countries grew stronger as both sides opted to focus on mutual economic interests, rather than political differences.

The following years would see China's trade open up further, with Beijing joining the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum in 1991. By 2020, Chinese trade with APEC countries would reach nearly $3 trillion per year. 

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