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The Honest Hui Merchants

 

For over 300 years beginning from the mid-Ming Dynasty(1368-1644), Hui merchants were one of the most influential merchant groups, and in fact were the strongest of all merchants groups in China at that time.

Hui merchants' steps reached almost half of China, east to the ocean and west to the desert. In the then rich Zhejiang andJiangsu provinces, it was said that the local prosperity could be attributed to Hui merchants' efforts. And in Hankou, capital city of Central China'sWuhanProvince, Hui merchants built a luxurious town assembly hall and opened a special dock along the river for Hui merchants' goods.

Huizhou is a poor town among the mountains of Central China'sAnhui Province. Coming out of such a barren land, what enabled Hui merchants to successfully find wealth all around China?

Hui merchants were honest. Apart from their extraordinary diligence and endurance, the sincere belief in honesty and morality is said to be the main factor of their success. Almost all Hui merchants believed that without honesty and morality, there would be no benefits.

 Confucian Philosophy

Confucian philosophy seeks a harmonious society, not dependent on feudal or financial merit but based on the ultimate goodness and moral equality of all mankind.

The heart of Confucian teaching is "morality." Ren, the key, means the qualities of benevolence, humanity, and love. It is the duty of governments, parents, and teachers to cultivate Ren in all its aspects.

Also important is Li, meaning rituals, ceremonies, and conduct. Then there is Yi, meaning duty or righteous behavior. There is also Zhi, which means wisdom, derived from both history and experience. Another virtue is Cheng, meaning reciprocity: "Do not do unto others what you would not have them do unto you."

 The Dialectic of interests andYi

In Confucianism,Yimeans duty or righteous behavior.

All merchants aim to make profits. The Hui merchants were no exception. But their interests were based on honesty and duty, and they made money based on Yi rules. Stories of Hui merchants who followed Yi were told generation by generation.

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