Museum of Chinese in America Shows a Little-Known History
Carolyn Weaver, VoA News
New York - November 4, 2010 - Like other non-white ethnic groups from
outside northern Europe and the British Isles, Chinese immigrants to
America faced prejudice and exclusion for many years. In 1980, the New
York Chinatown History Project was founded to collect documents,
photographs and other materials telling their story. That was the
beginning of
the Museum of Chinese in America, which re-opened last fall
at a larger site in Chinatown in downtown Manhattan.
Designed by Chinese American architect Maya Lin, the new museum is
built around a sky-lit, brick-walled atrium that’s meant to evoke the
central courtyards of old buildings in China. Another room recreates a
traditional Chinese apothecary, the kind found in Chinatowns the world
over.
The lead exhibit, “With a Single Step: Stories in the Making of
America,” tells a history little-known either abroad or in the U.S.,
where only one-percent of the population is of Chinese ancestry.
In the 1700s, a handful of Chinese sailors on trading ships were the
first Chinese visitors to America. But beginning in the 1840s, a flood
of Chinese laborers arrived to help build the cross-country railroad,
starting from California.
“We all know about the Chinese coming and building the railway from
the West Coast, the European workers, the Irish, building the railway
from the East Coast, and meeting in Promontory Point, Utah,” Museum
director S. Alice Mong said in an interview. “But even before that, the
Chinese were coming here to mine.”
That was during the Gold Rush, when prospectors found gold in the
hills and streams of the western U.S. and Canada. Poor Chinese men,
drawn by the lure of what they called “Gold Mountain,” the Chinese term
for California in those days, arrived in San Francisco and headed as far
northwest as Alaska and British Columbia.
But once the Gold Rush was over and the railway built, the laborers were
no longer welcome. A new labor movement, backed by racist political
groups, rallied - and sometimes rioted - against the immigrants who were
seen as taking American jobs. The Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 was the
only U.S. law ever to block immigration and naturalization on the basis
of national origin.
At the time, says S. Alice Mong, “There was an economic recession in the
United States, and the Chinese were asked to go home: 'You've helped us
build the railway, now go home.' Unfortunately with many of these
workers, there was no home to go to. And they could not bring their
families, because they were not citizens. So, that's kind of the genesis
of Chinatown throughout the United States, [in] San Francisco, Los
Angeles, New York. They became ghettos.”
Racism and anti-miscegenation laws meant that Chinese immigrants
could not blend in gradually, as the Irish and Italian immigrants began
to do. And as Mong notes, there were few ways to make a living, other
than working as a servant: "Laundry and restaurants.”
C. Weaver, VOA
The atrium at the center
of the new Museum of Chinese in America, designed by Maya Lin
Hand laundries provided some independence for their owners, but it
was hard, dirty work. The museum displays a typical iron, weighing
nearly four kilograms, for pressing wrinkles out of clothing. Workers
lifted them hundreds of times a day.
Chinese restaurants, some with "real" Chinese food and others with
bland, Americanized dishes for white visitors, were another path to
independence.
Popular culture portrayed Asians as mysterious, sneaky and possibly
dangerous, or as comical. Hollywood's racial codes forbade Anna May
Wong, the first Chinese-American movie star, from kissing a white
actor. The American-born daughter of a laundry-owner, Wong was limited
to racially stereotyped roles, such as a cruel “dragon lady,” or
submissive Oriental “butterfly.”
S. Alice Mong says, “She died a broken woman because she never really
found acceptance by America, her home. And ironically she had a chance
to go back to China in the 30s, and she also didn't find acceptance
there, because the Chinese in mainland, found her role, which she could
not choose, to be kind of degrading.”
Laws against immigration and mixed marriages began to ease during World
War II, when China was a U.S. ally. But the advent of communism in
China in 1949 led to new suspicions of Chinese-Americans, and especially
in the early years of the Cold War, the Federal Bureau of Investigation
compiled files on many innocent citizens.
Visitors like 14-year-old Maciej Buko of Florida say the museum reveals
an unfamiliar history.
“Most children know about the African-American segregation, and the
Jim Crow laws, but no one really hears about Chinese-American
segregation, or the propaganda that was against them,” he said.
Race discrimination in jobs, housing and education and housing
segregation remained commonplace throughout the United States in the
1950s. S. Alice Mong notes that even Asian Americans with advanced
degrees couldn’t always find jobs in their field. Not until the civil
rights movement of the 1960s, and the equal opportunity court cases and
laws that followed, did racial barriers begin to fall.
C. Weaver, VOA
Artifacts from a typical
Chinese American 'hand laundry'
Since then, Chinese-Americans have become prominent in every field,
from the arts to science, government and athletics. Capsule biographies
arrayed along the walls tell their stories, too.
“Nobel-winning scientists like Steven Chu, Secretary of Energy, people
like Yoyo Ma, I.M. Pei.,” Mong says. “Vera Wang, Anna Sui, Michelle
Kwan. So, we're seeing these Chinese Americans really making great
strides."
She says the museum now aims to become the national museum of Chinese in
America, drawing visitors from around the U.S. and abroad. Online, it
sponsors theChinatown Film Project, where
people from all around the world are invited to submit films about their
own Chinatowns.
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