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標題: Citizenship photo of Yuen Har, 1967
日期: 1967
提供者: Tong, Poy
主題: Citizenship photo of Yuen Har, 1967
省份: Ontario

Tong, Poy

Poy Tong was born in Guangdong Province, China. His mother, Hew Ting, raised her three sons in China while her husband, Tung Shew Nan (also known as Dong Shou), worked overseas in Canada. After The Chinese Immigration Act, 1923 was repealed, Hew Ting and her sons applied to come to Canada. Only she and Poy were approved to receive visas because her other sons’ answers were deemed unacceptable by immigration officials at the Canadian Consulate in Hong Kong. Hew Ting waited six months in the hopes that the family could travel together, but was forced to leave behind her two sons in China when Canadian immigration threatened to cancel the visas. After making appeals to Canadian Immigration, the Tungs were reunited with their remaining sons, who joined the family months later in the town of Delhi, Ontario. The Tungs lived above the family’s restaurant and each family member was expected to contribute to the successful operation of the business. After moving to Toronto as an adult, Poy Tong worked for Canada Post and raised a family with his wife, Yuen Har. At the time of the interview, Poy Tong was a volunteer in school literacy programs.

As a result of sojourner work patterns and the Exclusion Period (1923-1947), the sex ratio between Chinese Canadian men and women remained imbalanced up until the 1980s. In the 1950s and 1960s, many young Chinese Canadian men went to Hong Kong to marry. At the encouragement of his parents, Poy Tong went to Hong Kong in the 1950s to marry Yuen Har, an arrangement set up by his uncle. Yuen Har is seen here in this citizenship photo from 1967.