• 資料項目
  • 提供者簡介
  • 描述
標題: Portrait of Grace Kwan, Vancouver
日期: Unknown
提供者: Chinese Canadian Military Museum
主題: Arts, Celebrations, Cross-cultural Relations
省份: British Columbia

Chinese Canadian Military Museum

This photograph is from the Chinese Canadian Military Museum collection, courtesy of the museum’s curator, Larry Wong.

Approximately six hundred Chinese Canadians served in the Second World War, while many more contributed to the war effort on the Canadian homefront. At the start of the war, national conscription excluded Chinese Canadians, but in 1944, Chinese Canadians were permitted to enlist under The National Resources Mobilization Act, 1940 to meet the British War Office’s demand for troops for the Special Operations Executive in Southeast Asia and the Southwest Pacific. Chinese Canadians served in almost every command in the armed forces. They also contributed to the war effort by working in the shipyards, factories, and by helping to boost food production for troops.

Chinese Canadian women served in the armed forces mainly in non-combat roles, relieving male soldiers so that they could serve at the front. Of the women appearing in these photos, Private Edna Silaine Lowe, Corporal Lila Wong, Private Marion Laura Mah, Private Mary Ko Bong and Private Helen Hoe joined the Women’s Army Corps, while Aircraft Woman 1 Jean Suey Zee Lee joined the Royal Canadian Air Force. Several more Chinese Canadian women took part in the Women’s Ambulance Corps, a civil defence unit of the St. John Ambulance Brigade.

Vancouver, British Columbia’s Chinese community celebrated the city’s Golden Jubilee in 1936 with an elaborate carnival festival in Chinatown. The community erected a gate at Pender and Carrall streets and invited the city to enjoy the festivities and cultural activities on display. Seen here in a glamour shot taken at Yucho Chow Studios, Grace Kwan was elected as Jubilee Queen to act as the public face of the Chinese Canadian community. The celebration was an important milestone in the evolving relations between Chinese Canadians and the broader community.