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Title: Clip: Raymond Lum describes a photograph of the Sup Duk Gei Loh Association, Vancouver
Date: October 10, 2009
Donor: Lum, Raymond
Subject: Clubs and Organizations, Gender, Language
Province: British Columbia
Language: ENG

Lum, Raymond

Raymond Lum is a photographer who resides in Vancouver, British Columbia. His father, Ming Lum (also known as ‘Tommy’), immigrated to Canada in 1922 from China. When Ming returned to China to visit in 1929, his family arranged for him to marry Irene Lum (née Tseng Yook Lahn) who came from a neighbouring village. The couple were separated for a decade during the Exclusion Period (1923-1947), while Irene lived with her in-laws in China. Raymond describes this period of separation as ‘awful’ because Irene was treated poorly by her mother-in-law and was not permitted to see her own family. In 1940, Irene came to Canada as a ‘paper daughter’, taking on the identity of a deceased woman in order to join her husband. She departed on one of the last boats leaving Hong Kong harbour before the Japanese captured the city. Ming and Irene worked side-by-side at Canada Produce, a busy grocery store on Granville Street in Vancouver. The Lums raised Raymond in an apartment above the store, and Irene had little time for socializing because she was, in Raymond’s words, ‘bound to the store.’ Raymond describes growing up in Vancouver, caught between the traditional expectations of his parents’ generation and his own aspirations as a Canadian-born youth.

‘This house housed people that spoke our dialect, when they came from China, they needed help, they needed a place to stay, they needed money, they needed a job, they’d come here.’

In this audio clip, Raymond Lum describes a group photograph of a Chinese community organization that helped new immigrants who spoke Longdu, a regional dialect of Zhongshan, China. Raymond’s mother, Irene Lum, is one of only two women pictured, indicative of the imbalanced sex ratio during the Exclusion Period (1923-1947).