|
Post by helen on Oct 15, 2011 14:43:12 GMT -5
The History of Chinese Growers in New Zealand
The Dominion Federation of NZ Chinese Commercial Growers Inc. have nearly completed a set of books about the history of New Zealand Chinese Growers from 1866-2011.
黃土子嗣
SONS OF THE SOIL Chinese Market Gardeners in New Zealand
The book travels through each major region where there were communities of Chinese market gardeners. In the growers’ own words, the book presents their stories, their experiences and their thoughts on the life of a grower.
成功得自苦寒來
SUCCESS THROUGH ADVERSITY A History of the Dominion Federation of New Zealand Chinese Commercial Growers
The Dominion Federation was established in 1943 and since then it has been the representative body of Chinese market gardeners throughout New Zealand. This book covers the Federation’s history including its formation, the challenges it has faced and its achievements over the years.
Both of these books will be of interest to Chinese growers and their families; those associated with the vegetable growing industry, members of the Chinese community, and the general public.
Pre-orders available now
Howe Young, 153 Union Road, R.D. 3, PUKEKOHE, 2678 New Zealand 09 2389612, fax: 09 2388813 email:howeyoung@xtra.co.nz
|
|
|
Post by helen on Oct 15, 2011 14:44:49 GMT -5
Profile of Authors:
Lily Lee
Lily Lee (Ho Li Li) born in Auckland in 1940 is a second generation Chinese New Zealander. Her mother and sister arrived as war refugees. Lily grew up on a market garden in Mangere during the late 1940s to 1960s. Lily graduated in Geography from Auckland University in 1961. She taught in primary and secondary schools for a number of years before joining the Ministry of Education as a Liaison Officer in 1989. She spent 17 years working in the school sector before retiring in 2005. In 2008 to 2010 she was invited to work with Asian communities for the Ministry of Social Development. In 1963, Lily visited her parent’s village of Gum Kei, Zhong Shan and gained a better appreciation of her culture, language and heritage. Over the years she has returned a number of times to China documenting her family history.
Ruth Lam
Ruth Lam, born in 1956, is a third generation Chinese New Zealander of Jung Seng descent. She is married to Alex (Pak Hung) who for many years has been market gardening successfully at Pukekawa. Ruth often assisted in the garden while bringing up their family of four children. Ruth has also been involved with local community groups including the Plunket Society and the Pukekawa School PTA. She co-edited the 1995 Pukekawa School Centenary book. In 1998, Ruth completed a Master of Arts degree in Education, with Honours from the University of Auckland. She then worked at the University on research projects to improve children’s reading. In recent years Ruth worked for the Franklin District Library Trust as a Customer Services Manager. It was during her time at the library that Ruth developed an interest in the history of Chinese market gardening in the Pukekohe district. Through this project, Ruth has enjoyed using her research skills to contribute to the preservation of the history of Chinese New Zealanders.
Nigel Murphy
Nigel Murphy is a sixth generation New Zealander of Irish-German-English descent. He was born in 1958. He holds a Master degree in History. He has studied Chinese New Zealand history for over 25 years and has been involved in the Chinese New Zealand community as secretary of the Wellington Chinese Association and chair of the Wellington Chinese Language School. His publications include ‘The Poll Tax in New Zealand: a research report’ which was published in 1993 and 2003, and a 'Guide to Laws and Policies relating to the Chinese in New Zealand 1871-1997' which was published in 2008. He co-authored the 2005 ‘Aliens at My Table: Asians as New Zealander see them’ with Manying Ip. He also contributed chapters to 'Unfolding history, emerging identity: the Chinese in New Zealand' and 'Dragon and the Taniwha: Maori and Chinese in New Zealand' published in 2009. He was a research librarian at the Alexander Turnbull Library for 25 years. In 2002 he was seconded to the Office of Ethnic Affairs as a researcher and historian to support the Chinese poll tax apology reconciliation process. Between 2007 and 2010 he was an historian with the Waitangi Tribunal.
|
|
|
Post by helen on Oct 15, 2011 14:45:12 GMT -5
History of Chinese New Zealand Growers The New Zealand Chinese Growers’ Federation In 1867, just one year after the first group of Chinese goldminers arrived in Otago, the first Chinese market garden was established in New Zealand. Since then Chinese New Zealanders have formed the backbone of New Zealand’s vegetable-growing industry. Chinese growers were, and still are, an integral part of the market gardening industry in New Zealand. Their history provides multi-faceted insights into a range of social, political and community changes spanning 140 years.
|
|
|
Post by chansomvia on Oct 17, 2011 19:03:17 GMT -5
Hi Helen,
I look forward to getting hold of the History of Chinese Growers in New Zealand as a lot of our Canterbury Chinese Association members have moved to Christchurch from Ashburton after selling their market gardens to retire here.
Ask the authors to email me a flyer and I can print it out for our noticeboard.
I have been following the University of British Columbia articles and on Youtube, they have a very active Chinese historical section which have produced many items on the Chinese in Canada. One of their more interesting video is the movement to get compensation for the Head Tax, it is calculated that the Head Tax paid to the Canadian Government was enough to pay for the TransCanadian railway where many Chinese died during the work under appalling conditions. The video ended by saying that New Zealand is the only Commonwealth country which has compensated the Chinese, the organisers in Canada are still fighting for compensation.
Perhaps some of our American friends can update the situation.
One of the recent press releases is below --- there are many others if you go into their Chinese Department.
I see Simon made his name on Wikipedia - congratulations.
Joe
NEW CHINESE CANADIAN BOOK SERIES BY UBC SERIES AND AUTHOR CELEBRATION
VANCOUVER, BC – SEPTEMBER 30, 2011
A new and groundbreaking Chinese Canadian book series is reimagining North America’s engagement with the Pacific world.
The series, Gold Mountain Stories, brings to light the long ignored and untold stories of Chinese migrant experiences through their interactions and relationships with other Asian migrants, indigenous peoples, and European migrants. The first three books will be showcased at the Gold Mountain Stories Series and Author Celebration at UBC on October 13 at 7:30 pm.
Ranging in setting from Vancouver’s Chinatown, to Chilliwack, to even Mexico, each book in the series showcases different facets of the Chinese Canadian experience from the past to the present.
“Chinese Canadians have come at different times and from different places in China and throughout the Pacific region,” says Henry Yu, Associate Professor of History at UBC. “Many have called a variety of places home before coming to Canada, but once here, they formed vibrant communities that have significantly shaped Canadian society.”
Dim Sum Stories: A Chinatown Childhood by Larry Wong, a local historian and past president of the Chinese Canadian Historial Society, is about his 1940s-1960s childhood in Vancouver’s Chinatown. A close friend of Wayson Choy, author of The Jade Peony, Wong’s personal short stories reveal a world filled with people from diverse ethnic backgrounds.
In Chilliwack’s Chinatowns: A History, independent scholar Chad Reimer follows dual trails of arson in 1921 and 1934 to discover the previous existence of two Chinatowns in small town Chilliwack, British Columbia. Bolstered by interviews and archival research, Reimer brings the Chinese, Whites, and Natives characters of Chinatown North and Chinatown South to life. Their lives of success, labour, leisure, and family show how history can be used to restore our common past.
Mami: My Grandmother’s Journey by Rebeca Lau, traces Lau’s return to Tapachula, Mexico from Vancouver in 2002, to eat her grandmother Mami’s Chinese-Mexican cooking and learn of her family’s history. Lau opens her heart and home to readers as she and Mami revisit longtime friends and childhood haunts, while reflecting about how three generations of her family have spread their lives around the Pacific.
“The stories of Chinese Canadians have either been left out of our history, or the stories we hear are often about the terrible things that were done to them, rather than what they were doing,” says Yu. “In order to create a common past for all Canadians, we must remember those who have been forgotten. Chinese Canadian stories are Canadian stories.”
|
|
|
Post by helen on Oct 18, 2011 3:44:19 GMT -5
Hi Joe There's also the Lost Years www.lostyears.ca/LOST YEARS: A People's Struggle for Justice LOST YEARS is an epic documentary mini-series touching on the largest exodus in humankind, covering over 150 years of history of the Chinese in Canada and abroad. An epoch that delivers an important message, namely, "Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it." (Spanish philosopher, George Santayana (1863-1952), in Reason in Common Sense, The Life of Reason.) We witness how man's inhumanity to man continually plays out in world history and affairs, in part through the advances of new media and the vastness of our global village. Our journey begins in old China in 1910 and concludes with the movement to embrace redress as a concept of social justice in the modern world of Canada, the United States, New Zealand and Australia, exactly one century later.
|
|
|
Post by helen on Nov 10, 2011 0:28:36 GMT -5
|
|