A VERY BRIEF HISTORY OF TRIADS
Abstracted from "Amsterdam: Continental Cancer", Chapter 12 of
"Triad Takeover, A Terrifying Account of the Spread of Triad
Crime in the West"
by David Black, Sidgwick & Jackson,
London, 1991. ISBN 0 283 99938 1
And in turn from the
Organized Crime Home Page
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-- Phil Ward
The commonly accepted myth about triads is that they began
as a resistance movement to the Manchu emperors. The Manchu were
from a country north of China (Manchuria) and were seen as
foreign rulers, who took China's northern capital (Peking) by
force, and established their dynasty in 1674.
In the thirteen year of rule of the second Manchu emperor
(Kiang Hsi), a monastery of fighting monks ("Siu Lam") were
recruited by the emperor to defeat a rebellion in Fukien. These
monasteries received some imperial power as a reward. Due to
court jealousies, these Fukien Buddhist monks were then
themselves seen as a threat, and an army was sent to suppress
them. Eighteen monks escaped, but only 5 survived further, who
are thought to have founded 5 monasteries, and five secret
societies, dedicated to overthrowing the Manchu (also known as
the Ching) dynasty, and restoring the previous Chinese Ming
dynasty, which was seen as a golden age for China. Their motto
became "Crush the Ch'ing, establish the Ming".
The family name of the Ming emperors was "Hung", and their
colour was red, so both Hung and red are associated with Chinese
secret societies. The societies called themselves the "Hung
Mun". Secret codes were developed, to frustrate the emperor's
spies. However, this secrecy, and the martial arts training,
eventually led to the associations being used for criminal
purposes, instead of political ones. During this period many
Hung Mun were seen as protectors of the people against a
repressive and sometimes vicious regime of the emperor.
These secret societies played roles in several rebellions
against the Manchus, notably the White Lotus Society rebellion in
Szechuan, Hupeh and Shansi in the mid-1790's; the "Cudgels"
uprising in Kwangsi province, 1847 to 1850; and Hung Hsiu Chuan's
Kwangsi-based rebellion 1851-1865. Hung called himself Christ's
brother, and rebellion (called T'ai Ping) was crushed with the
aid of the Western powers. The Boxer Rebellion in Peking in
1896-1900, involved the White Lotus Society, as well as other
triads called the "Big Swords" and the "Red Fists". Sun Yat Sen,
the founder of Republican China, was allied with the Hsing Chung
triad society, in his 1906 rebellion. Meanwhile, the Western
powers and Japan virtually raped China, enforcing opium drug
sales by war, stealing gold and heritage antiques, and demanding
huge recompensation for any affront.
The Manchus (the Ch'ing) were overthrown in 1911, but there were
no Mings left to restore.
Sun Yat Sen's successor was warlord Yuan Shik Kai, who
worked with the triads in corruption. The Nationalist government
set up in 1927 in Nanking was headed by a known killer and
criminal member of the Shang Hai Green Gang, Chiang Kai Shek.
The triads took over the government of southern China, and fought
the Communists, later under Mao Tse Tung, for total control. The
Western powers used this "Green Tang" organized crime group to
suppress any labour unrest, and to kill off communists.
When the Japanese invaded most major Chinese cities in World
War Two, the Triads offered to work for them instead. In Hong
Kong, the Triads ran criminal enterprises for the Japanese. The
Japanese united the gangs under an association called the "Hing
Ah Kee Kwan" (Asia Flourishing Organization). The gangsters were
used to help police the residents of Hong Kong, and to suppress
any anti-Japanese activity. The gangs were paid through a
Japanese front company, called Lee Yuen Company.
Following World War Two, the target of the West and the
Triads became Communists again, and Chiang Kai Shek's nationalist
government campaigned to increase Triad membership. In Southern
China, this campaign was under Nationalist army lieutenant
general, Kot Siu Wong, who had his headquarters at number 14, Po
Wah Road, Canton. This is where the name of the "14 K" triad is
thought to have originated. It was estimated that in 1947, there
were 300,000 Triad members in Hong Kong alone.
When Mao Tse Tung's communists were victorious by 1949,
these Triad nationalists were dispersed to Hong Kong, Macao,
Thailand, San Francisco, Vancouver, and Perth Australia. [The
remnants of Chiang Kai Shek's KMT (Kuomintang) south China army
was forced into the Burmese highlands, where they became pivotal
to smuggling drugs to the West, via Thailand, under Khun Sa].
The Communists suppressed triads on the mainland, executing and
imprisoning many. Mao's Prime Minister, Chou En Lai, banned
cultivation and use of opium in 1950.
In 1956 there was a major riot in Kowloon, which was
exploited by triads from Taiwan. Emergency (Detection Orders)
Regulations were passed by the colonial government, and 10,000
suspected mobsters were arrested. Triads went into a semi-
dormant period. But the cultural revolution in mainland China
was one of several factors which caused massive emigration and
social problems, including a resurgence of Triad criminal
activity, much of it centering around Hong Kong, but extending to
several continents.
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