Revision as of 05:56, 28 December 2014 editSkookum1 (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled89,945 edits fixing bad English, and correcting improper use of "Mainland" meaning "Mainland China". In British Columbia, "the Mainland" refers to the British Columbia mainland, and a "Mainlander" is someone from there; not from China← Previous edit | Revision as of 05:59, 28 December 2014 edit undoSkookum1 (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled89,945 edits →Language: fixing wording as "Mainlander immigrants" in Canadian/BC English means immigrants in mainland British Columbia. Repeating usages in sources that make this mistake like using "Vancouver" to mean Surrey and Richmond is a regular faultNext edit → | ||
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In the 19th Century until the influx of the 1980s, multiple dialects of ] were spoken in British Columbia. This is because ] province itself, the source of much Chinese immigration, had multiple dialects of Cantonese and the ] spoken within its borders.<ref name=Stanleyp201>Stanley, Timothy J. ''Contesting White Supremacy: School Segregation, Anti-Racism, and the Making of Chinese Canadians''. ], January 1, 2011. ISBN 0774819332, 9780774819336. p. .</ref> Most railway workers were from ] and spoke the Taishanese dialect of Cantonese.<ref name="ReferenceA"/>{{page needed|date=December 2014}}<ref>''Saltwater City: Story of Vancouver's Chinese Community'', Paul Yee</ref> | In the 19th Century until the influx of the 1980s, multiple dialects of ] were spoken in British Columbia. This is because ] province itself, the source of much Chinese immigration, had multiple dialects of Cantonese and the ] spoken within its borders.<ref name=Stanleyp201>Stanley, Timothy J. ''Contesting White Supremacy: School Segregation, Anti-Racism, and the Making of Chinese Canadians''. ], January 1, 2011. ISBN 0774819332, 9780774819336. p. .</ref> Most railway workers were from ] and spoke the Taishanese dialect of Cantonese.<ref name="ReferenceA"/>{{page needed|date=December 2014}}<ref>''Saltwater City: Story of Vancouver's Chinese Community'', Paul Yee</ref> | ||
Historically Cantonese was the dominant language in Greater Vancouver. Cantonese was the language used in radio and television programming involving that community. By 2003, Mandarin began to have a presence, including in the media, due to an increase in |
Historically Cantonese was the dominant language in Greater Vancouver. Cantonese was the language used in radio and television programming involving that community. By 2003, Mandarin began to have a presence, including in the media, due to an increase in immigrants from mainland China.<ref>Teo, p. 3.</ref> By 2012 Mandarin was displacing Cantonese in Greater Vancouver.<ref name=Bhatty/> Cantonese and Mandarin are commonly spoken in ].<ref name=CrowePT112>Crowe, Paul. "Dharma on the Move: Vancouver Buddhist Communities and Multiculturalism" (Chapter 6). In: Harding, John S., Victor Sōgen Hori, and Alexander Soucy. ] (MQUP), June 1, 2014. ISBN 0773590498, 9780773590496. ] .</ref> | ||
==Institutions== | ==Institutions== |
Revision as of 05:59, 28 December 2014
The history of Chinese Canadians in British Columbia began with the first recorded visit by Chinese people to North America in 1788. Some 30-40 men were employed as shipwrights at Nootka Sound in what is now British Columbia, to build the first European-type vessel in the Pacific Northwest, named the North West America. Large-scale immigration of Chinese began seventy years later with the advent of the Fraser Canyon Gold Rush of 1858. During the gold rush, settlements of Chinese grew in Victoria and New Westminster and the "capital of the Cariboo" Barkerville and numerous other towns. and throughout the colony's Interior, where many communities were dominantly Chinese. In the 1880s, Chinese labour was contracted to build the Canadian Pacific Railway. Following this many Chinese began to move eastward, establishing Chinatowns in several of the larger Canadian cities.
History
The first Chinese known to have been in British Columbia were a group of labourers brought in to build a ship at Nootka Sound, the Northwest America, who were sent back to China afterwards (though some traditions of the Nuu-chah-nulth say some remained and married, and that they had seen Chinese people before). The next Chinese arrived with the massive and sudden migration of 30,000 gold-seekers and merchants from San Francisco and the California goldfields with the Fraser Gold Rush of 1858, forming the nucleus of Victoria's Chinatown and leading to the establishment of others at New Westminster, Yale and Lillooet, though most Chinese gold-seekers were not in the newly emerged towns but busy prospecting and working the goldfields. Estimates indicate that about 1/3 of the non-native population of the Fraser goldfields was Chinese. As more and more gold fields were found, Chinese spread out all over the colony, and confrontations at Rock Creek and Wild Horse Creek with mostly-American miners, but the colonial government intervened on the side of the Chinese (other similar situations were fairly rare, until the railway era).
Chinese miners were notable in many of the gold rushes in the coming decades, including the remote Omineca and Peace River Gold Rushes of the 1860s Cassiar Gold Rush of the 1870s. While Chinese were driven from the Similkameen Gold Rush in the 1880s, the Cayoosh Gold Rush at Lillooet in that same decade was entirely Chinese. In most goldfield towns there were no distinct Chinatowns, and in many towns and gold camps, Chinese miners and merchants were often the majority so the term "Chinatown" is inapt for them. Barkerville had an "official" Chinatown but Chinese dominated the population in the town's whole area, and many whites lived in the "official" Chinatown; nearby Richfield was near-entirely Chinese, as were many of the towns in the Cariboo goldfields. As the more impatient white miners moved on, Chinese took over their diggings, often pulling out more due to more advanced placer-mining techniques, and also obtained ranches and farms and Chinese retailers were often the mainstay of commerce in the waning goldfield towns. In Victoria, the first tax register for that city indicates that of the ten richest men in the city, eight were Chinese (with the Governor and James Dunsmuir only ahead of them on the list).
In 2014 the British Columbia government crafting an apology for the Chinese Exclusion Act, the head tax, and other government actions that negatively impacted ethnic Chinese. In order to determine the exact wording of this apology, the BC government planned to hold seven meetings with ethnic Chinese persons in the province. Christy Clark, the Premier of British Columbia, issued this apology in May 2014. The British Columbia Legislature had unanimously agreed to give this apology. The government planned to provide to education a legacy fund with $1 million. No compensation was to be given to individuals.
Chinese merchants from New Westminster were among the first to set up shop in Gastown, the townsite that sprang up next to the Hastings Mill property which was the historical kernel of what would become the City of Vancouver. Some were on Water Street but most early Chinese businesses (mostly bordellos and opium dens) were along what is now the 100 block of West Hastings Street. The use of Chinese labour in the clearing of the West End led to the winter riots of 1885 which saw Chinese residents flee to a refuge in a creek ravine around the then-southeast end of False Creek, thereafter known as China Creek. It was not until the 1890s that Chinese businesses began to relocate back into the growing city, along Dupont Street (now East Pender Street), forming the nucleus of Chinatown.
Until around 1980, Toronto's ethnic Chinese population became the largest in Canada then, Vancouver had the largest ethnic Chinese population in Canada.
The gold rush era
A group of Chinese persons sent Ah Hong to survey the Fraser area after hearing that gold had been discovered there. Ah Hong verified that the gold rush was happening and stated this upon his May 1858 return. The Chinese first appeared in large numbers in the Colony of Vancouver Island in 1858 as part of the huge migration from California during the Fraser Canyon Gold Rush in the newly declared Mainland Colony. Around a third of the sudden, massive immigration were Chinese. Although the first wave arrived in May from California, news of rush eventually attracted many Chinese from China itself. Most Chinese mined gold, but there were some who mined jade. During the era, coal mines on Victoria Island hired Chinese workers.
The Chinese often entered existing mining sites that White miners had abandoned since it was easier for them to acquire the claims to those fields instead of getting a claim to a new field. In many cases claims to used mining sites were less expensive than claims to new sites. The ethnic Chinese then reworked the abandoned sites. In the goldfields, Chinese mining techniques and knowledge turned out to be better in many ways to those of others, including hydraulic techniques, the use of "rockers", and a technique whereby blankets were used as filter for alluvial sand and then burned, with the gold melting into lumps in the fire. In the Fraser Canyon, Chinese miners stayed on long after all others had left for the Cariboo Gold Rush or other goldfields elsewhere in BC or the United States and continued both hydraulic and farming, owned the majority of land in the Fraser and Thompson Canyons for many years afterwards. At Barkerville, in the Cariboo, over half the town's population was estimated to be Chinese, and several other towns including Richfield, Stanley, Van Winkle, Quesnellemouthe (modern Quesnel), Antler, and Quesnelle Forks had significant Chinatowns (Lillooet's lasting until the 1930s) and there was no shortage of successful Chinese miners.
In addition to the mining operations, Chinese established auxiliary businesses including vegetable farms, restaurants, and laundries. Chinese opened a fishing company in an area near the provincial capital. When fish canneries opened in the 1870s Chinese workers were hired. Chinese also worked for Western Union to install a telegraph line between New Westminster and Quesnel. Western Union hired 500 Chinese for this task in 1866.
Whites were upset because the Chinese were willing to work for wages lower than wages than Whites. Whites believed that the willingness to work for less money had prevented Whites from taking labour jobs and depressed overall labour wages. Therefore white organized labour groups criticized Chinese. Whites perceived themselves to have superior physical conditions and morals compared to the Chinese, and Whites believes that the Chinese had many diseases. The Chinese often sent money back to China instead of doing local investment. In addition the Whites believed that the Chinese were taking in more money than they needed since the Chinese had simple lifestyles and did not have their families with them. Therefore non-Chinese stated the belief that that ethnic Chinese were not contributing anything to the area while they were taking resources from it, and that the Chinese were preventing economic growth from occurring. White persons had a belief that China was an inferior country and the White culture was superior over others. White persons were also afraid that the Chinese would someday have more people than the Whites.
White persons had committed violent acts against ethnic Chinese, and therefore Chinese had avoided areas where Whites had newly discovered gold. The White Canadian public had an anti-Chinese attitude and made anti-Chinese statements. White Canadian-dominated newspapers along with politicians made anti-Chinese statements. The Library and Archives Canada stated that blaming the Chinese for economic downturns was a way to promote White supremacy and give a sense of unity to White migrants. British Columbia Whites had made public efforts to demand for laws that limited the amount of Chinese immigration and enacting restrictions on Chinese activity.
The Gold Rush caused the British Columbia Chinese population to be around 6,000-7,000 in the early 1860s. Once the Gold Rush in Canada ended, many Chinese moved to the United States. According to the 1871 Canadian census there were 1,548 ethnic Chinese in the province. In 1878 there were about 3,000 ethnic Chinese in the province.
The province began attempting to pass head tax and licensing bills modeled after similar anti-Chinese laws in Australia. In 1878, the provincial government passed a law forbidding Chinese from engaging in provincial public works. A bill calling for a $30 license fee per every half year per Chinese person passed in the BC legislature in 1878, making it the first anti-Chinese law passed by that legislature. The law prompted a strike of Chinese workers, which was the first Chinese civil rights action taken in the province. An 1884 law, titled the "Chinese Regulation Act," affected all ethnic Chinese, including those of Hong Kong origins, by stating that "any person of the Chinese race" must pay them. The law asked for a payment of $100 per person 15 or older. In the same period the federal government had blocked many anti-Chinese laws passed by the BC government. For instance the 1878 law was nulled due to a lack of constitutionality and the federal government blocked the 1884 law.
The places of origin of the Chinese immigrants were not recorded on Canadian census records. Most immigrants to British Columbia in the late 1800s were from Guangdong, with many others from Fujian. Of those from Guangdong, most came from Siyi (Sze-yap), a group of four counties.
Immigration for the railway
When British Columbia agreed to join Confederation in 1871, one of the conditions was that the Dominion government build a railway linking B.C. with eastern Canada within 10 years. British Columbia politicians and their electorate agitated for an immigration program from the British Isles to provide this railway labour, but Canada's first Prime Minister, Sir John A. Macdonald, betraying the wishes of his constituency, Victoria, by insisting the project cut costs by employing Chinese to build the railway, and summarized the situation this way to Parliament in 1882: "It is simply a question of alternatives: either you must have this labour or you can't have the railway." (British Columbia politicians had wanted a settlement-immigration plan for workers from the British Isles, but Canadian politicians and investors said it would be too expensive).
In 1880, Andrew Onderdonk, an American who was one of the main Canadian Pacific Railway construction contractors in British Columbia, originally enlisted Chinese labourers from California. When most of these deserted the railway workings for the goldfields, Onderdonk and his agents signed several agreements with Chinese contractors in China's Guangdong province, Taiwan and also via Chinese companies in Victoria. Through those contracts more than 5000 labourers were sent as "guest workers" from China by ship. Onderdonk also recruited over 7000 Chinese railway workers from California. These two groups of workers were the main force for the building of Onderdonk's seven per cent of the railway's mileage. As was the case with non-Chinese workers, some of them fell ill during construction or died while planting explosives or in other construction accidents, but many deserted the rail workings for the province's various goldfields. By the end of 1881, the first group of Chinese labourers, which was previously numbered at 5000, had less than 1500 remaining as a large number had deserted for the goldfields away from the rail line Onderdonk needed more workers, so he directly contracted Chinese businessmen in Victoria, California and China to send many more workers to Canada. 17,000 Chinese, many of whom became railroad employees, arrived to Canada between 1881 and 1885.
Winter conditions and working conditions, dynamite blasts, substandard medical care and nutrition, and landslides killed many railroad workers. Paul Yee, the author of Saltwater City: Story of Vancouver's Chinese Community, wrote that "onservative estimates" stated that the total number of ethnic Chinese railroad workers killed was 600.
Onderdonk engaged these Chinese labour contractors who engaged Chinese workers willing to accept only $1 a day while white, black and native workers were paid three times that amount. Chinese railway workers were hired for 200 miles of the Canadian Pacific Railway considered to be among the more difficult segments of the projected railway, notably the area that goes through the Fraser Canyon.
After the railroad was completed, some Chinese who had worked on the railroad returned to China. Some who stayed in Canada went to Vancouver and to the Prairie Provinces.
Settlement in the late 1800s
In 1884 Nanaimo, New Westminster, and Victoria had the largest Chinese populations. At that time Quesnelle Forks was majority Chinese, and there were also Chinese in Cumberland and Yale.
In addition to the railroad business, Chinese in the late 19th century British Columbia also worked in market gardens, coal mines, sawmills, and salmon canneries. Most Chinese at the time lived among other Chinese.
In 1881 4,350 ethnic Chinese lived in British Columbia, making up 99.2% of the ethnic Chinese in all of Canada. Around 1881 Chinese settlement in British Columbia had a 28 male to 1 female ratio. The gender disparity was not as high in New Westminster and Victoria, but in there was a more severe gender disparity in the Fraser and Thompson canyons, Barkerville, Cassiar, Nanaimo, and market gardens in the vicinity of Victoria. In 1883 there were almost 1,500 Chinese gold miners in the province.
The province banned Chinese and First Nations-origin persons from voting in provincial and federal elections with an amendment of the Qualification of Voters Act passed in 1872. Because eligibility for federal elections originated from provincial voting lists, persons of Chinese origins were unable to vote in federal elections. At the time some electoral districts in British Columbia were majority Chinese.
In 1882 8,000 Chinese arrived in Canada. The province was unable to pass its own immigration law, so it asked the federal government to take action. In the late 1800s the British Columbian government supported efforts by the Canadian federal government to charge a head tax. The purpose of the tax was to discourage ethnic Chinese from immigrating to Canada. The Chinese Immigration Act of 1885, which included the head tax, was passed shortly after the railway construction cased. No other ethnic group had a tax levied on it during immigration. The tax was originally $50. In 1887 there were 124 Chinese who came to Canada, a sharp decrease. The numbers of Chinese began increasing around the year 1900. In 1900 this tax increased to $100, and in 1903 it became $500, again reducing immigration levels of Chinese. An average worker's yearly wages were below $500.
Settlement in Vancouver
There were 114 ethnic Chinese in the Burrard Inlet area in 1884. The population included 60 sawmill hands, 30 cooks and washing persons, ten store clerks, five merchants, three married women, and one prostitute. The sawmill hands worked at Hasting's Sawmill. Additional Chinese settled an area north of False Creek after an 1885 announcement that the terminus of the railway was to be extended to the area. Former railroad workers caused Vancouver's population to increase.
The city of Vancouver incorporated in April 1886, and at the time the city had a pre-existing Chinese population. The Chinese coming to Vancouver had originated from Guangdong. Many Chinese worked at Hastings Sawmill upon arrival, and many Chinese worked in logging camps, mills, and in forest-clearing crews. Property owners hired Chinese to clear forests because the Chinese were the cheapest laborers available.
Discriminatory actions against Chinese occurred early in the city's history, including mob violence, newspaper articles asking for preventing Chinese from living in Vancouver, and post-Great Vancouver Fire street resolutions asking for preventing the return of the Chinese. Paul Yee, the author of Saltwater City: Story of Vancouver's Chinese Community, wrote that the practice of contractors hiring labour crews of only one race had caused the wage disparity between Whites and Chinese, and the lower pay of the Chinese workers was the "classic explanation" for anti-Chinese sentiment among Whites. Some historians argued that Whites desiring a racially homogenous White Canada was another strong factor in anti-Chinese sentiment. In early 1886 Whites in Vancouver prevented ethnic Chinese from voting.
In 1900 there were 36 Chinese laundries in Chinatown. The city government had passed a law in 1893 that the section of Pender Street between Carral and Columbia was the only place which may have laundry businesses; Paul Yee stated that enforcement of this law was very difficult, and therefore in 1900 the permitted zone had only two Chinese laundries. The city government later passed laws that harmed smaller Chinese laundries to benefit White-owned laundries, so the Chinese hired Wilson V. Sekler, a lawyer, to get the laws overturned.
Around 1911 3,500 persons lived in the Vancouver Chinatown, and it was Canada's largest Chinatown.
20th century
In 1907 the Asiatic Exclusion League sponsored a parade in Vancouver that opposed persons of Asian origin. This parade developed into a riot that caused damage to Vancouver's Chinatown and Japantown.
The 1911 census stated that Vancouver had 3,559 ethnic Chinese, giving it the largest ethnic Chinese population in all of Canada. That year, Victoria had 3,458 ethnic Chinese. Victoria had Canada's second-largest Chinatown.
The Chinese Immigration Act, 1923 prohibited ethnic Chinese from obtaining Crown land and it prevented ethnic Chinese who were not persons born in Canada, diplomats, businesspersons, and university students from immigrating to Canada. The Canadian Encyclopedia wrote that the act "effectively ended Chinese immigration." This act was repealed in 1947. That year, Chinese persons in BC were given the right to vote. In 1951 the final anti-Chinese laws in British Columbia were terminated.
Geography
As of 2011 there are over 450,000 ethnic Chinese in Greater Vancouver. Vancouver received the title of being, outside of Asia, the "most Asian city" due to its large ethnic Chinese population. Vancouver had ethnic Chinese residents when the city was founded in 1886. According to Graham E. Johnson, the author of "Hong Kong Immigration and the Chinese Community in Vancouver," people with origins from Hong Kong "have been especially notable in the flow of international migrants to British Columbia which, for all intents and purposes, has meant the Vancouver region."
Richmond, in Greater Vancouver, had more ethnic Chinese residents than White residents in 2013. Ian Young of the South China Morning Post described Richmond as "the most Chinese city in North America."
As of 2002 the only sizeable Chinatowns in the entire province were in Vancouver and Victoria,
, with most Chinese Canadian living elsewhere than the traditional Chinatowns.
Ethnic Chinese are located throughout Vancouver. 40% of the residents of a large portion of Southeast Vancouver are ethnic Chinese. The Granville and 49th area within South Vancouver also has a Chinese population. Henry Yu, a University of British Columbia history professor, stated in 2007 that significant ethnic Chinese populations are located in all Greater Vancouver neighbourhoods. The Vancouver Chinatown is the largest Chinatown in Canada.
In 1981 the vast majority of ethnic Chinese in Greater Vancouver lived in the Vancouver city limits. At the time Chinese were concentrated in eastern Vancouver, around Chinatown. By the mid-1990s ethnic Chinese had moved to Kerrisdale and Shaughnessy. In those communities ethnic Chinese built large modern-style housing in place of Neo-Tudor and other style houses from the early 20th century.
Richmond has a high concentration of ethnic Chinese. Ethnic Chinese make up 80% of the residents of the Golden Village area, focussed along No. 3 Road, which contains many Chinese businesses. Douglas Todd of the Vancouver Sun wrote "Richmond remains the most striking bastion of Chinese culture". In 1997 the newly immigrated ethnic Chinese in Richmond were stereotyped as being, in the words of Ray, Halseth, and Johnson, "wealthy 'yacht people'". Richmond had few Chinese in 1981, with most census tracts having fewer than 5% of their populations being ethnic Chinese and with no census tract having over 10% of its population be ethnic Chinese. By 1986 the proportion of Chinese in Richmond was increasing; in 1986 the city's 8,000 ethnic Chinese persons made up 8.3% of Richmond's total population and 9% of the Vancouver area's Chinese Canadians. By 1991, 16.4% of Richmond's population was Chinese Canadian and 11% was Chinese immigrants. In 1997 Ray, Halseth, and Johnson wrote that "it appears that" new ethnic Chinese immigrants were bypassing Vancouver and moving directly to Richmond.
Areas of northern Coquitlam also have ethnic Chinese residents, like most other places in the Lower Mainland. The Halifax Street and Kensington Street area of North Burnaby has Chinese residents, like most of Vancouver's neighbourhoods and suburbs.
Demographics
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In 2006, according to Statistics Canada data, the numbers of visible minority Chinese in Greater Vancouver included 168,210 in the city of Vancouver proper, 75,730 in Richmond, 60,765 in Burnaby, 20,205 in Surrey, 19,580 in Coquitlam, 5,835 in Delta, 3,770 in New Westminster, and 3,360 in West Vancouver.
Place of origin
As of 2011 most ethnic Chinese immigrants to British Columbia go to Vancouver, and of the overall provincial ethnic Chinese immigration most originate from Mainland China. Historically immigrants came from Hong Kong and to a lesser, extent, Taiwan. The Mainland Chinese government prohibits dual citizenship, while the Hong Kong government allows its permanent residents to also hold citizenships of western countries. David Ley, author of Millionaire Migrants and a professor of UBC, stated that this meant that previously Hongkongers had more of an incentive to come to Vancouver compared to Mainlanders.
In the period 1996-2001, according to Canadian census data, the number of persons from Mainland China arriving to Vancouver eclipsed the numbers of Hongkongers; the number of Hongkongers present in Vancouver declined between 1996 and 2006. In 2006 there were 137,245 immigrants from Mainland China in Vancouver, while there were 75,780 Hongkonger immigrants in the same city that year. The Hongkonger immigrant number had declined 12% between 1996 and 2006 with almost all of the decline occurring from 2001 to 2006. From 1996 to 2006, Ian Young of the South China Morning Post wrote "the fall in the number of such immigrants present in the city suggests" that 29,325 Hongkongers left Vancouver while according to the census data 18,890 Hongkongers arrived. Meanwhile the Mainlander population increased 88% between 1996 and 2006. In 2012 7,872 Mainland Chinese arrived in Vancouver while 286 Hongkongers arrived in the same city. According to Ley, the demographics of immigrants changed because "everyone who wanted a passport got one."
Mainland Chinese
Some households of Mainlander origin in Vancouver involve a wife and children living there. The husbands of the households are working in China. In 2013 Young wrote that "Anecdotal evidence suggests mainland Chinese wives commonly stay in Vancouver to provide a citizenship toehold for their absentee husbands." As of 2003 many Mainland immigrants had Mainland credentials in skilled jobs but encountered difficulty in finding employment in their fields with these credentials.
Language
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In the 19th Century until the influx of the 1980s, multiple dialects of Cantonese were spoken in British Columbia. This is because Guangdong province itself, the source of much Chinese immigration, had multiple dialects of Cantonese and the Hakka language spoken within its borders. Most railway workers were from Taishan and spoke the Taishanese dialect of Cantonese.
Historically Cantonese was the dominant language in Greater Vancouver. Cantonese was the language used in radio and television programming involving that community. By 2003, Mandarin began to have a presence, including in the media, due to an increase in immigrants from mainland China. By 2012 Mandarin was displacing Cantonese in Greater Vancouver. Cantonese and Mandarin are commonly spoken in Richmond.
Institutions
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In 1884 the Chinese Consolidated Benevolent Association (CCBA; Chinese: 中華會館; pinyin: Zhōnghuá Huìguǎn) was formed in Victoria. The original purpose was to collect support for the Chinese effort in the First Sino-Japanese War. The organization initially acted as an unofficial consulate of the Chinese government; the San Francisco consulate gave permission to Chinese businesspersons in Vancouver to establish the CCBA in the spring of that year. This function continued until the 1908 opening of the Chinese Embassy in Ottawa. The purpose of the CCBA became broader and it in general became a Chinese advocacy organization.
Prior to the 1960s many ethnic Chinese in Vancouver had established associations based on their clan origins and districts in addition to educational and recreational organizations. Douglas Aitken of The Georgia Straight stated that the Chinese Benevolent Association (CBA) was the most important organization operating in the Vancouver Chinatown in the first half of the 20th century. Wong Soon King, Lee Kee, Shum Moon, Yip Sang, Leong Suey, and Chow Tong founded the CBA in 1896. The organization operated the Chinese Benevolent Association Building in Chinatown; it was built in 1907. Additional association buildings opened in the 1910s and 1920s. According to Aitken, the organization "lost most of its influence" in the 1970s but had regained influence by 2014.
A new wave of Chinese Canadian organizations opened around the 1970s and 1980s. Newly arrived Hong Kong immigrants began participating, and the people leading the new organizations tended to be Hong Kongers. Graham E. Johnson, the author of "Hong Kong Immigration and the Chinese Community in Vancouver," wrote that older organizations were "flourishing" at that time.
In 1973 the Chinese Cultural Centre opened in Vancouver's Chinatown. The Sun Yat-sen Classical Garden Society is in operation in Vancouver. The purpose of the society was to raise funds to complete the Sun Yat-sen Classical Garden.
Prior to 1994 ethnic Chinese "music societies" in Vancouver, first founded in the 1920s, had an increase in popularity.
In 1973 the organization SUCCESS, a loose acronym for the United Chinese Community Enrichment Services Society, was founded to provide social services for ethnic Chinese, including recent immigrants. As of 2003, it had 350 employees, a headquarters in Vancouver, and 11 other offices in the Greater Vancouver region. As of the same year its budget is $16 million. As of 2010 Tung Chan, a former councillor of Vancouver, heads this organization. That year CBC News stated that SUCCESS has "strong links to Vancouver's Chinese community." Every two months, SUCCESS holds a new immigrant reception.
Commerce
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The tax registers of the City of Victoria show that Chinese businessmen were, after the Governor and coal-baron Robert Dunsmuir, the wealthiest men in the new city. Many of these were labour-contractors, a sector which would grow exponentially in the railway era, and opium merchants.
Many Chinese malls which contain businesses catering to Chinese speakers are located in Richmond.
Media
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Three Chinese language daily newspapers, Ming Pao, Sing Tao and World Journal cater to the city's large Cantonese and Mandarin speaking population.
The Vancouver Sun operates Taiyangbao (simplified Chinese: 太阳报; traditional Chinese: 太陽報; pinyin: Tàiyáng Bào), a Mandarin-language version of their regular newspaper. The English language edition of the Epoch Times, a global newspaper founded by Chinese emigres, is distributed through free boxes throughout the metropolis.
The Chinatown News, a biweekly, English-language paper, was a newspaper established by Chinese born in Canada, or tusheng. The founder was Roy Mah, who served as its editor. The paper focused on Canadian politics and events and did not focus on intra-Chinese political conflicts. Instead its focus was on things of interest to Canadian-born Chinese, and the paper often favored the tusheng in conflicts they had with newly arrived Chinese. It ran until 1995. The Chinese News Weekly and New Citizen were also established by locally-born Chinese, in 1936 and 1949, respectively, but closed after short durations of operation.
Historical Chinese-language papers include the Chinese Times, Chinese Voice, and New Republic.
The Da Zhong Bao was opened in February 1961. It was published by the Chinese Youth Association. It was originally bimonthly but it later shifted into being a weekly paper. There was an English version published in the Fall of 1970. Four issues were made in the CYA's attempt to spread messages to tusheng.
The Truth Monthly (traditional Chinese: 真理報; simplified Chinese: 真理报; pinyin: Zhēnlǐ Bào), a Christian newspaper, is in Vancouver.
Politics
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When Vancouver was founded in 1886, its charter stated that municipal elections would not have First Nations and Chinese voters. R. H. Alexander, the operator of the Hastings Mill, asked his Chinese employees to vote anyway but they were chased away from the polls by Whites. Alexander, at the time, was making an unsuccessful bid for the Mayor of Vancouver.
The Kuomintang became the dominant political group in the Vancouver Chinese community in the late 1930s. The international headquarters of the Communist Party of China was located, on the other hand, in Victoria's Chinatown.
In 1965 Peter Wong was elected as the Mayor of Victoria.
Chinese newspapers in the Vancouver region, during the 1960s and December 1970 began asking for their readers to participate in elections. In the Vancouver municipal elections in 1968 and 1970 three ethnic Chinese candidates each ran for election. In both Chinese candidates did not succeed in being elected.
By 1985 the City of Vancouver had an ethnic Chinese alderman. By 1994 multiple ethnic Chinese politicians have ran for and been elected in political campaigns in the Vancouver area. Most of these politicians were of Hong Kong origins.
In 2001 the Richmond Canadian Voters submitted three candidates for the Vancouver City Council, including two ethnic Chinese, but none of them won seats. Yee wrote that the public perceived the party as being "Chinese" "due to its leadership and conservative positions on group homes and liberal public education".
In 2013 a petition arguing that Chinese-only signs were a problem in Richmond was submitted to the city council. The City Council responded by ignoring the petition.
By 2014 the group Putting Canada First, which criticizes having Chinese-language signs in Greater Vancouver, was established. That year, its spokesperson, North Vancouver resident Brad Saltzberg, wrote a letter arguing against having Chinese language signs to the city council of West Vancouver. The Mayor of West Vancouver, Michael Smith, criticized the movement.
According to boundaries drawn in 1984, there were two Vancouver-area ridings with over 20% of their populations each being Chinese: Vancouver East, which was 23.9% Chinese, and Vancouver Kingsway, which was 24.6% Chinese. That year, Vancouver South was 17.8% Chinese and Vancouver Quadra was 11.2% Chinese. In 1988 the ridings were redrawn. The Vancouver East Chinese population was 25.4%, making it the only riding that was over 20% Chinese. The Chinese population of Vancouver South was 19.7%. In the 1980s a wave of Chinese from Hong Kong came to Vancouver. Levels of Chinese coming from Hong Kong declined after the Handover of Hong Kong in 1997. Vivienne Poy wrote that instances of antagonism towards ethnic Chinese and incidents of racial hatred targeting Chinese occurred by the late 1980s.
In 1992 Vancouver had the second largest ethnic Chinese population outside of China, with San Francisco having the largest such population.
By the 1990s white residents of some Vancouver neighborhoods criticized ethnic Chinese for demolishing older houses and building larger, newer houses in their place. Brian K. Ray, Greg Halseth, and Benjamin Johnson, authors of "The Changing ‘Face’ of the Suburbs: Issues of Ethnicity and Residential Change in Suburban Vancouver," wrote that many existing Whites perceived the ethnic Chinese and their new houses as being "an assault on traditional meanings associated with suburbia."
In 2006 there were 396,000 ethnic Chinese in Greater Vancouver.
By 2012 most Chinese arriving in Hong Kong were from the Mainland, with some Chinese coming from Taiwan.
A 2013 study by Dan Hiebert of the University of British Columbia predicted that by 2031 the Chinese population of Vancouver would be 809,000.
In 2014 the City of Vancouver enacted a grant program to preserve Chinese society buildings in the Vancouver Chinatown and in the adjacent Downtown Eastside areas.
Vancouver housing prices
As of 2014 the recent Chinese immigrants coming to Metro Vancouver are 96% of the total Chinese recent immigrants to the entire province. As of that year there was a trend of wealthy Mainland Chinese entering Vancouver. 29,764 wealthy ethnic Chinese, the majority of Mainland Chinese, entered British Columbia under the Immigrant Investor Programme (IIP), the Canadian wealthy investor immigration program, from 2005 to 2012. Vancouver was the intended destination of many of the IIP applicants. The applications were frozen because of the immense popularity. As of January 2013 there was a backlog of 45,800 Chinese intending to enter British Columbia using the IIP.
By 2013 these wealthy Mainland Chinese investors were buying property in Vancouver. Some existing members of the Vancouver community, including ethnic Chinese, criticized the new investors, arguing that they were driving up housing prices. As of 2013 Demographia Research ranked Vancouver as being the second-most expensive city in the world, after Hong Kong. The organization ranked 350 cities in the world. Ayesha Bhatty of the BBC wrote that "experts say there's little evidence to back up the fears." Mayor of Vancouver Gregor Robertson has made differing statements on whether or not the Chinese buyers are affecting housing prices.
Education
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (November 2014) |
The Victoria Chinese Public School (CPS; Chinese: 域多利華僑公立學校; pinyin: Yùduōlì Huáqiáo Gōnglìxuéxiào) in Victoria was established as the Imperial Chinese School (Chinese: 大清公立學校; pinyin: Dà Qīng Gōnglìxuéxiào) in 1909. Xu Jianzhen, the Consul-General of China in San Francisco, had officially opened the school. The Victoria School Board had a policy denying enrollment to China-born pupils that was enacted in 1908 and other schools for China-born students were overcrowded. In 1913 the school began offering classes during the daytime for ethnic Chinese students according to an agreement with the Victoria School Board, and it officially changed its name at the same time. The new daytime classes served students who were segregated in public schools.
In the early 20th century, the Chinese-language schools in Victoria were the CPS, the Oi-kwok Hok-tong School, and the Jing'e School. In Vancouver there were several schools: the Wenhua Xuexiao, the Chinese Public School of Vancouver, the Jinhua School, the Kwong Chi School, the Canton School (Guangdong Xuexiao), and two other scools. There was also the Oi-kwok Hok-tong School in New Westminster.
Henry Yu, a University of British Columbia history professor quoted in the Vancouver Sun, stated in 2007 that significant ethnic Chinese populations are located in all Greater Vancouver school districts.
Vancouver School Board (VSB) schools are all integrated, with many school populations now predominantly Chinese-ethnic in composition. Private schools are also integrated, whether privately chartered or Catholic church-run. Chinese-language courses are available in most schools, and are popular with non-Chinese students, although regular curriculum instruction is in English. The VSB has basic courses in Cantonese.
In 1998 a group of parents of Chinese origins asked the VSB to establish a new school. The school board opted not to establish the school. The requested school would have used school uniforms, assigned more homework than other public schools, and, in the words of Paul Yee, author of Saltwater City: Story of Vancouver's Chinese Community, "bring in discipline" and "back-to-basics subjects".
As of 2012 there are Chinese-language schools in Vancouver that teach both Mandarin and Cantonese languages. In the 1980s and 1990s Cantonese was, in almost all Chinese-language schools in the city, the only variety taught.
The University of British Columbia has a continuing studies Mandarin program. Vancouver Community College has introductory Cantonese courses. Langara College has continuing studies Cantonese classes for adults and Mandarin classes for children.
Religion
As of 2011 over 100,000 of the ethnic Chinese in Greater Vancouver were Christians, making up about 24% of the total population. 14% of the total population of Greater Vancouver ethnic Chinese stated that they were Buddhist.
Greater Vancouver has Chinese Protestant and Chinese Catholic churches. As of 2013 there are about 120 Chinese churches in the area. Of the Protestant churches there are over 110 in the area. Church services are held in Cantonese, English, and Mandarin.
There are over 26 Chinese Christian organizations in Greater Vancouver. They include theological organizations, radio stations, magazines, and newspapers.
Douglass Todd of the Vancouver Sun wrote that LGBT "may be the most distressing" of the sociocultural issues involving Chinese Christians in the area. In 2014 the Vancouver School Board had proposed a transgender rights program. In response, several Chinese-Canadian Christian groups and organizations, including Truth Monthly, protested the proposal. There were also Chinese Christian efforts to discontinue Burnaby Public Schools anti-homophobia programs. Justin K. H. Tse (simplified Chinese: 谢坚恒; traditional Chinese: 謝堅恆; pinyin: Xiè Jiānhéng), who wrote a master's degree thesis on wrote a PhD thesis on Chinese Christian public engagement in Vancouver and two other cities, argued that not all Chinese Christians have politically conservative beliefs.
Recreation
The first recording of Cantonese opera occurred in Vancouver in 1898.
The Chinese New Year Parade is held every year in Vancouver. Many area politicians attend the event.
Around the 1950s 80% of the patrons of the International YMCA, opened as the Chinatown Centre in 1943 but given its new name in 1950, were ethnic Chinese. Most of them were tusheng.
The pre-1960s Chinese community in Vancouver had social clubs and places of entertainment. The number of ethnic Chinese clubs increased in the mid-1950s. The Chinese Students Soccer Club was the only team not made up of White people that played during the 1920s and 1930s. There was also a Chinese Tennis Club. The Chinese Athletic Club and the Chinese Bowling Club were populated with tusheng or locally-born Chinese. The increase in ethnic clubs prompted the YMCA to establish an inter-club council.
The community had the Chinese Opera House and Chinese Theatre.
Around the 1950s Chinese churches in Vancouver had their own recreational programs, including Boy Scouts.
Terminology
See also: Nicknames of VancouverThis section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (October 2014) |
Chinese Vancouverites and Chinese British Columbians coined the term "Saltwater City" for Vancouver, and the term Gold Mountain, normally used for and coined in relation to the California goldfields, is also used for British Columbia. The Chinese Benevolent Association's records in Barkerville used "the Colonies of T'ang " in their documents and correspondence.
"Hongcouver"
The city is sometimes called "Hongcouver", by international media due to the size of the Chinese population; the term is no longer used locally and is regarded as derogatory. The nickname "Hongcouver" refers to the large numbers of ethnic Chinese in Vancouver. The nickname originated from the attraction of Hong Kong immigrants. The Government of British Columbia used tax incentives to attract Hong Kongers.
John Belshaw, author of Becoming British Columbia: A Population History, wrote that Vancouver's "bitter elite" created the term. Beginning in fall of 1988, and through the early 1990s some Greater Vancouver businesses sold T-shirts with the word "Hongcouver" on them. Use of the word by Vancouverites increased as more and more ethnic Chinese moved in.
David Ley, author of Millionaire Migrants: Trans-Pacific Life Lines, described it as an "imagined" term bringing an "exaggerated cariacature" that was "fabricated" by media in North America and Hong Kong. Ley argued that "The motivation for presenting this entity was in part satirical, possibly on occasion racist". Miro Cernetig of the Vancouver Sun wrote that the term Hongcouver was "an era's impolitic catch-phrase for the xenophobia and palpable occidental unease in Vancouver at the prospect of a profound upheaval in society." Nathaniel M. Lewis, author of "Urban Demographics and Identities," described the term as "derogatory." Anu Sahota of the CBC described it as an "offensive term". Katie King, the author of Networked Reenactments: Stories Transdisciplinary Knowledges Tell, wrote that Vancouver was "lampooned in economic racist terms" through the word "Hongcouver".
Ley argued that there was also "insight" in the term "Hongcouver". Linda Solomon Wood of the Vancouver Observer stated that Hongcouver was one of several affectionate terms for Vancouver.
Lewis stated that "Hongcouver" was not as commonly used as it had been in the 1990s. In 2007 Cernetig also stated that it was no longer commonly used in the city. That year, Sahota stated that "Hongcouver" "persists today".
Ian Young, a correspondent of the South China Morning Post (SCMP), titled his blog about the Hong Konger population in Vancouver "Hongcouver".
Notable Chinese from BC
- Jim Chu, Chief Constable of the Vancouver Police Department
- Shawn Dou, actor
- David Lam, philanthropist and later Lieutenant Governor of BC
- Richard Lee, member of the BC legislative assembly
- Jenny Kwan, activist, politician and cabinet
- Won Alexander Cumyow, the first Chinese person born in Canada
- Wong Foon Sien, journalist and social activist
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- Morton, James. In the Sea of Sterile Mountains: The Chinese in British Columbia. J. J. Douglas, 1974.
- Bloemraad, Irene. "Diversity and Elected Officials in the City of Vancouver" (Chapter 2). In: Andrew, Caroline, John Biles, Myer Siemiatycki, and Erin Tolley (editors). Electing a Diverse Canada: The Representation of Immigrants, Minorities, and Women. UBC Press, July 1, 2009. ISBN 0774858583, 9780774858588. Start p. 46.
- Guo, Shibao An interpretive study of a voluntary organization serving Chinese immigrants in Vancouver, Canada (PhD thesis) (Archive). University of British Columbia. See profile. Available at ProQuest.
- Ironside, Linda L. Chinese- and Indo-Canadian elites in greater Vancouver : their views on education (Master's thesis) (Archive). Simon Fraser University. 1985. See profile at Simon Fraser University.
- Johnson, Graham E. "Hong Kong Immigration and the Chinese Community in Vancouver" (Chapter 7). In: Skeldon, Ronald. Reluctant Exiles?: Migration from Hong Kong and the New Overseas Chinese (Volume 5 of Hong Kong becoming China). M.E. Sharpe, January 1, 1994. ISBN 1563244314, 9781563244315. Start p. 120.
- Ng, Wing Chung. The Chinese in Vancouver, 1945-80: The Pursuit of Identity and Power (Contemporary Chinese Studies Series). UBC Press, November 1, 2011. ISBN 0774841583, 9780774841580.
- Ray, Brian K., Greg Halseth, and Benjamin Johnson. "The Changing ‘Face’ of the Suburbs: Issues of Ethnicity and Residential Change in Suburban Vancouver." International Journal of Urban and Regional Research. Volume 21, Issue 1, pages 75–99, March 1997. Published online December 16, 2002. DOI: 10.1111/1468-2427.00059.
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- Yee, Paul. Saltwater City: Story of Vancouver's Chinese Community. D & M Publishers, Dec 1, 2009. ISBN 1926706250, 9781926706252.
Further reading
- Anderson, Kay. Vancouver's Chinatown: Racial Discourse in Canada, 1875-1980 (Volume 10 of McGill-Queen's Studies in Ethnic History, ISSN 0846-8869). McGill-Queen's University Press (MQUP), November 4, 1991. ISBN 0773508449, 9780773508446. - See profile at Google Books
- Barman, Jean. "Beyond Chinatown: Chinese men and indigenous women in early British Columbia" (report). BC Studies, Spring, 2013, Issue 177, p. 39.
- Carrigg, David. "Home improvements" (Archive). Vancouver Courier. Thursday August 5, 2004.
- Dunae, Patrick A., John S. Lutz, Donald J. Lafreniere, and Jason A. Gilliland. "Making the inscrutable, scrutable: race and space in Victoria's Chinatown, 1891." (Essay) BC Studies, Spring, 2011, Issue 169, p. 51.
- Edgington, David W., Michael A. Goldberg, Thomas Hutton. "The Hong Kong Chinese in Vancouver" (Archive). Research on Immigration and Integration in the Metropolis (RIIM) (Working Paper Series). Vancouver Centre of Excellence. April 2003.
- Lu, Duanfang. "The Changing Landscape of Hybridity: A Reading of Ethnic Identity and Urban Form in Vancouver" (Archive). Traditional Dwellings and Settlements Review (TDSR). International Association for the Study of Traditional Environments (IASTE). Volume XI. Number II. 2000. p. 19-28.
- Ogura, Tamiko. "Vancouver from the 1907 Anti-Asian Riots to Hongcouver: A Century of Change Through Students’ Eyes" (Archive). Schema Magazine. June 19, 2007.
- Roy, Patricia E. A White Man's Province: British Columbia Politicians and Chinese and Japanese Immigrants 1858-1914. UBC Press, January 1, 1989. ISBN 9780774803731. See profile at UBC Press.
- Roy, Patricia E. 12The Triumph of Citizenship: The Japanese and Chinese in Canada, 1941-67. UBC Press, November 1, 2011. ISBN 0774840757, 978077484075012 p. 12 (with sources in English and Chinese) discusses the post-World War II intra-Chinese politics in Vancouver. This book uses sources in both English and Chinese.
- Wat, Teresa. "Chinese Historical Wrongs Consultation Final Report and Recommendations" (Archive). Government of British Columbia.
- Tse, Justin K. H. and Johanna L. Waters. "Transnational youth transitions: becoming adults between Vancouver and Hong Kong." Global Networks. Volume 13, Issue 4, pages 535–550, October 2013. Online publication date: February 12, 2013. DOI: 10.1111/glob.12014.
- Wickberg, Edgar. From China to Canada: A History of the Chinese Communities in Canada.
- "The Hong Kong influx." CBC. 1997. Description page (Archived).
- "Perspectives on the 1907 Riots in Selected Asian Languages and International Newspapers" (溫哥華一九零七年排亞暴動中日英文史料) (Archive). University of British Columbia.
- "Report by W.L. Mackenzie King, C.M.G., Deputy Minister of Labour, commissioner appointed to investigate into the losses sustained by the Chinese population of Vancouver, B.C. on the occasion of the riots in that city in September, 1907."
- "Report of the Royal Commission on Chinese Immigration : report and evidence. Ottawa : Printed by order of the Commission, 1885.
External links
- "The Chinese Experience in British Columbia: 1850-1950." University of British Columbia.
- "The Chinese Experience in British Columbia: 1850-1950." Vancouver Public Library.
- Chinese Canadian Historical Society of British Columbia (加華歷史協會)
- Victoria Chinese Commerce Association
- "In pictures: Vancouver's Chinese community." BBC.
- Dr. Sun Yat-sen Classical Chinese Garden (Vancouver)
- Chinese Benevolent Association of Vancouver (加拿大溫哥華中華會館)
- Chinese Benevolent Association of Vancouver - "Origins of Historical Building in Vancouver" website, publ. Simon Fraser University