• Article
  • Profil du donateur
  • Description
Titre: Clip: Victoria King talks about her rights as a Chinese Canadian woman
Date : Unknown
Donateur : King, Victoria
Sujet : Discrimination, Identity
Province : British Columbia
Langue : ENG

King, Victoria

Victoria King was born in 1930 in Victoria, British Columbia. Her mother came to Canada in 1912 to join her husband, bringing with her two female servants (mui tsai), who later went to an orphanage. Victoria recalls that her mother’s feet were bound and that she never left the house by herself. One of nine children, Victoria was expected to help her siblings with household chores such as chopping kindling, lighting the stove and doing the washing. She attended elementary and secondary school, and though she was a top student, she looked forward to leaving school after Grade 10 to work and earn money. Over the years, Victoria has held many jobs: as a worker at a Dad’s cookie factory, an order clerk at the Hudson’s Bay Company, a flight attendant for Canadian Pacific Airlines and a hostess at the Rickshaw restaurant. An enterprising spirit led her to the real estate field and the buying and management of properties. While she was raising her family in the 1960s, she began running successful restaurants just outside of Vancouver, British Columbia in the towns of Whally and Langley. When she wanted to open a restaurant in Langley, some of the neighbours didn’t want a Chinese-owned business on the main strip. In response to racial prejudice, Victoria responds: ‘I’m born in Canada….I pay my taxes. I have just as much right as them.’ At the time of the interview, she continued to reside in the Vancouver area.

‘Don't be afraid of anybody or afraid to speak. But just don't call people names.’

In this audio clip, Victoria King says that she never felt that her potential or her rights were restricted by being a Chinese Canadian woman, stressing the importance of speaking up against prejudice or injustice.