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標題: Clip: Alice Yeh talks about her decision not to enter into an arranged marriage.
日期: October 21, 2009
提供者: Yeh, Alice
主題: Inter-generational Relations, Marriage and Dating
省份: Ontario
語言: ENG

Yeh, Alice

Alice Yeh (née Yook-Lin Gee) was born in Victoria, British Columbia on October 10, 1919. Alice’s mother, Gee Wong Moey, was widowed in the early 1920s and rented rooms in her house to support the family. The house became a hub of activity in Victoria’s Chinese community. For instance, Alice and her friends used the house as a meeting place for a youth forum, which staged dramatic productions and conducted neighbourhood tours in Chinatown to combat negative stereotypes and raise funds for charitable causes. Alice was extremely active in both her community life and work life. She worked for the postal censorship department in Ottawa, Ontario during World War Two, served as a private secretary to the Taiwanese Ambassador to Japan in the early 1950s, and worked as a social worker for the Catholic Children’s Aid Society in Toronto until her retirement. She also led the Young Women’s Guild at the Chinese Presbyterian Church in Toronto, Ontario, and was an organizer for Canadian branches of the Kuomintang (Nationalist) party. At the time of the interview, Alice resided in Etobicoke, Ontario.

‘I thought to myself, after seeing all these arranged marriages, some worked and some didn’t, I just don’t want to go into an arranged marriage. I wanted to choose the one I want.’

Despite pressure from her mother to agree to an arranged marriage, Alice Yeh married a man of her own choosing. Alice did not like her mother’s choice of a husband for her.