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Title: Clip: Brenda Joy Lem’s story of her Canadian-born mother’s experience of family separation.
Date: December 7, 2009
Donor: Lem, Brenda Joy
Subject: Family Separation, War and War Effort
Province: Ontario
Language: ENG

Lem, Brenda Joy

Brenda Joy Lem is a third generation Chinese Canadian visual artist based in Toronto, Ontario. Her mother, Kathleen Lem (née Yip), was born in Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan but was educated in China. When Japan invaded China, Kathleen and her sisters fled their village, moving from one Christian Mission to another in search of refuge. The young women were displaced for thirteen years before they were reunited with family in Canada after the war. Kathleen then married William Lem of Toronto, Ontario and the couple settled in Etobicoke, Ontario. Brenda values the Chinese cultural practices and traditions her mother taught her, some of which she has passed on to her own daughter, Una. On her father’s side, Brenda admires the life of her late grandmother Jean Chin and aunt Margaret Lem. The artist explores her aunt’s memories of growing up Chinese Canadian in Oshawa in several recent works included in the traveling exhibition, Brenda Joy Lem: Homage to the Heart. Drawing from archival photographs, cultural imagery, and the oral histories of her family members, Brenda’s prints and mixed media works explore notions of identity, memory, and place.

‘[W]hen war broke out, my Mum and her sisters, they had to flee. People in the village were saying, ‘The Japanese were so many towns away, we have to move.’’

Brenda Joy Lem’s grandfather brought his Canadian-born children to China and returned to Canada with his two sons, leaving his three daughters – including Brenda’s mother Kathleen Lem – behind. Brenda describes Kathleen’s attempts to flee the Japanese, finding refuge in Christian missions. Against all odds, Kathleen reunited with her family in Canada.