Dear Readers,
I was BOILING MAD and EXTREMELY OFFENDED when I read the following article in BK Magazine. September 4th 2009. And imagine this was written by the Managing Editor!
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Attack of the baked goods from outer space. Text and Photos by Gregoire Glachant.
We don’t like mooncakes at BK. In the past, we’ve used them as doorstops, penholders een as weapons of self-defense. But, just like herpes, you can count on mooncakes to come back, no matter what you throw at them or who you throw them at. showers. This year, we conducted a scientific experiment, leaving a mooncake on our office windowsill. It sat there for exactly 10 days. It went through at least two heavy storms and daily the ants wouldn’t touch it until day 7. The birds stopped coming – they might never return. The mooncake’s only visible transformation was a growing ring of oil at its base. On day 10, when we cut it open, we found the insides appeared identical to those of a fresh mooncake. If we could bear eating it, we bet it would pretty much taste the same. Sorry, but that’s just not right. These things are like the cockroaches of food: if there were a nuclear holocaust, the last thing left to eat wouldn’t be canned sardines. it would be mooncakes.
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Here is the complaint letter I wrote to them, I hope they will take some action on this:
From: Stacy
Subject: Mooncake Lab – culturally offensive article in BK Magazine
To: bkmagazine@asia-city.co.th
Cc: asiacity@asia-city.com.hk, ismag@asia-city.com.sg, shonline@asia-city.com.cn, pchow@asia-city.com.sg, gcrandall@asia-city.com.hk
Date: Thursday, September 10, 2009, 12:33 AM
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Dear Editor,
I am a regular reader of BK magazine, at times some articles are rude and offensive but I never complain because, perhaps I’m more on the conservative side. (Like for instance, that horrible Songkran article where your writer wrote, “Women go to Khao san to get their breast fondled” (Not the exact wording but something to that tone)
I’m writing to you about the article written by you wrote, Mr. Gregoire Glachant, on Mooncakes, titled “Moon Cake Lab”
You say, ” We don’t like mooncakes at BK. In the past we’ve used them as foorstops, penholders and even weapons of self-defense” And carries on to day that as an experiment he leaves them out, untouched for 7 days and even cockroaches won’t eat them?
This is really offensive. Being Chinese, we love mooncakes as it is tradition to share mooncakes with friends and family, and it is one of the constant customs and comfort items of the Mid-Autumn festival. The mid-autumn festival just isn’t the mid autumn festival without our mooncakes!
You may not like them, but to write an article where you say cockroaches won’t even eat them because they are so ghastly? It is not witty nor is it humourous. It is downright distasteful.
I implore you, dear editor, for you and your writers to have more taste and tact. I am all for freedom of speech, but there is a thin line between voicing your opinion and being distasteful and disrespectful to another culture.
Many chinese people (be them overseas, or Chinese-Thai) people read your magazine, and you are also have afflilates magazines in Hong Kong, Singapore, Shanghai and Kuala Lumpur. I am CC-ing your affliates in this email because I think they should know what type of content is in BK Magazine.
Angered and disgusted by your article,
Regards,
Stacy
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I’m so angry! Some non-chinese culturally insensitive guy writes this article, saying that Mooncakes are the most horrible thing on earth, I bet he didn’t even bother to learn and to acquaint himself with the historical cultural significance of Mooncakes.
During the Yuan dynasty (A.D.1280-1368) China was ruled by the Mongolian people. Leaders from the preceding Sung dynasty (A.D.960-1280) were unhappy to live under foreign rule. They decided to coordinate a rebellion without it being discovered. The leaders of the rebellion, knowing that the Moon Festival was drawing near, ordered the making of special cakes. Inside each moon cake was a message with the outline of the attack. Because it’s a Han (the main clan before the Mongolian took over) cake, the Mongolian people are not interested. On the night of the Moon Festival, the rebels successfully attacked and overthrew the government. What followed was the establishment of the Ming dynasty (A.D. 1368-1644). Today, moon cakes are eaten to commemorate this legend.
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Mooncakes celebrate the legacy and the history of China. Wikipedia on Mooncakes. It angers me that someone, the managing editor of BK Magazine could be so culturally insensitive and downright distasteful!
Very disgusted,
Stacy