今年是中國武力鎮壓八九民運37周年,全球有三十多項紀念活動悼念當年的死難者,在獄中的鄒幸彤已表明會繼續在獄中絕食37小時,呼籲大家續寫六四故事,拒絕遺忘,以免讓遺忘把民主帶向衰亡。
六四屠城37周年:我們的故事未完
鄒幸彤
2026年5月31日

5.19那天,我在法庭做完結陳詞回到監獄,看到新聞報導說,韓國星巴克因為以46年前的屠殺作宣傳噱頭,惹起公憤,集團會長急忙道歉,連行政總裁也被免職。然而,在平行時空的我城,不僅燭光有罪,更年年有人公然在屠城的忌日、悼念的場所,辦市集、裝喜慶、不羞不慚,沒有後果,還能得到政府的大額資助。
這就是文明與野蠻的分別吧!
一個失去了言論自由的社會,從來不只是失去了幾篇文章、幾場活動,而是往往會連靈瑰也丟失,因為倫理生於人心,死於權力;生於選擇,死於唯一;生於質疑,死於服從。
權力使人腐化是句老掉牙的話,所以當權力意志滲透一切,成為人們行事決策的最高準則,社會的墮落也就無可避免。但反過來說,要反抗權力的滲透,甚至想將權力關回籠子裏的話,就得從守住做人的底線開始,一步一步地,從權力手中奪回人性。
打這場官司,就是這麼一個嘗試,是在要求自己不說不相信的話,不作不該做的事,而不去計較什麼成敗得失。
難嗎?但這都不過是普通的人性呀——有誰天生喜歡說違心話,做違心事呢?做最真實的自己,本該是最自然、最容易的事。
我沒什麼大志,想像中的烏托邦,其實也不過是這麼一個人人都能活得舒暢自在,生活真實一點、容易一點的地方。但過份集中的權力,從來就是最扭曲人性的哈哈鏡。所以,制衡權力結束專政,無可退讓,無從迴避。
守護六四的記憶,其實也就是在守護同一條 人性的底線。當我們能按照自己良心所向,多走一步,權力的領地便也就少了一分。
在六四這一天,請繼續:
去記念、去記錄、去分擔、去同行、去做那個更好的、也更自然的自己吧。
在六四這件大是大非的事情上,能站穩腳跟,我們就能鍛練出抵禦權力腐蝕的抗體,而這種能力,方是打破專政輪迴,終結權力崇拜最可靠的依仗。
今年六四屠城37周年
我繼續在獄中進行37小時絕食。
請不要忘記:
在權力與獨裁的光環背後,隱藏著 普通人的血 與 破碎的夢。遺忘正是民主走向衰亡、走向終告的根源。
支記的故事我哋已經講完。
希望大家能接力講落去~
在記憶與改寫記憶的抗爭……
我們的故事~未~完~!

資料來源:https://www.patreon.com/posts/liu-si-tu-cheng-159628900
The 37th Anniversary of the June 4th Massacre:
Our Story still holds unwritten pages
On 19 May, after delivering my closing submission in court, I returned to prison to find news reports stating that Starbucks Korea had sparked public outrage by using a massacre from 46 years ago as a marketing gimmick. The group’s chairman hastily apologised, and the CEO was even dismissed. Yet, in my city – as if in a parallel universe – not only are candlelit vigils deemed criminal, but year after year, people openly hold markets and put on festive displays on the anniversary of the massacre at the very sites of remembrance, without a shred of shame or remorse. These organisers face no consequences; instead, they even receive substantial government funding.
Here, conceivably, lies the line between civilisation and barbarism
A society that loses its freedom of speech never just loses a few articles or events — it loses its very soul. Morality is born of the human heart and dies at the hands of power; it is born of choice and dies in the face of uniformity; it is born of inquiry and dies in the face of blind obedience.
‘Power corrupts’ is a hackneyed phrase, but when the will to power permeates everything, and becomes the supreme criterion for human actions and decisions — the decline of society becomes inevitable. Conversely, resisting the encroachment of power, or even attempting to put it back in its cage, requires a steadfast return to fundamental human values, reclaiming our humanity from its clutches step by step.
This legal battle is one such attempt: it is a demand that I do not speak words I do not believe, do not do things I ought not to do, and do not dwell on success or failure.
Is it difficult? Yet, this is nothing more than basic human nature. Who is born with an inherent desire to speak insincerely or act against their own conscience? Being one’s truest self ought to be the easiest, most natural thing in the world.
I harbour no grand ambitions. The utopia I envision is simply a place where everyone can live comfortably and freely, where life is a little more authentic and a little easier. Yet, like a funhouse mirror, the excessive concentration of power has always warped human nature. Checking that power and ending dictatorship is therefore non-negotiable; there is no room for retreat or evasion.
To preserve the memory of June 4th is to safeguard that very same baseline of human decency. When we take that extra step in accordance with our conscience, the reach of authoritarian power shrinks by that very measure.
June 4th is a matter of principle. By standing firm on it, we can build the resilience much needed to resist the corrosive effects of power. This resilience is our most reliable safeguard against the perpetuation of dictatorship and the cult of power.
This year marks the 37th anniversary of the June 4th massacre, and I will continue to hunger strike for 37 hours while imprisoned.
Please do not forget:
Behind the glitter of power and dictatorship lies the blood and broken dreams of ordinary people.For in amnesia lies the demise of democracy. They can lock us up, they can’t do on our souls.
Now that the story of the Hong Kong Alliance is told, let’s take up the baton and lead the way forward.
In the struggle between memory and the rewriting of it… our story is far from over!
