• 資料項目
  • 提供者簡介
  • 描述
標題: Sui Fa Kung and Chuck Lee, Halifax
日期: Unknown
提供者: Lee, Albert
主題: Family Life, Marriage and Dating
省份: Nova Scotia
Author: Albert Lee

Lee, Albert

Albert Lee is a Halifax-based photographer and creater of the photo exhibit Growing Up Chinese in Halifax (Nova Scotia Museum, 1997). His father Shew (Chuck) Lee was the first Chinese boy to grow up in Halifax, Nova Scotia. In the late 1920s, 18 year-old Chuck was sent to China to marry his 14 year-old betrothed, Sui Fa Kung. During the Exclusion Period (1923-1947), Sui Fa Kung lived in China apart from her husband, raising their two children (one of whom passed away) and looking after the family’s farm through periods of famine and political turmoil. In 1949, after The Chinese Immigration Act, 1923 had been repealed, Chuck traveled by boxcar to Vancouver, British Columbia to meet his newly-arrived wife and 14 year-old daughter. Albert describes this as the happiest time of his father’s life because the family was finally together. The Lees had three more children in Halifax, including Albert. Albert recalls that their household was a hub of activity in the small, tight-knit Chinese community.

Albert took this portrait of his parents in 1972. Chuck Lee (right) supported his family by running rooming houses and maintaining rental properties. He also assisted members of the Halifax Chinese community by arranging documents and providing translation services. Albert recalls that his mother (left) was the keeper of Chinese traditions in the household, marking holidays in the calendar and cooking special foods for the family.