New Chinese Canadian Museum opens its doors in historic Vancouver Chinatown building
VANCOUVER — When the Chinese Exclusion Act came into effect in 1923, it didn’t just effectively halt Chinese immigration to Canada — it extinguished the family lines of thousands of labourers already here.
Many were condemned to bachelorhood or cut off from loved ones in China, said Catherine Clement, curator of the inaugural exhibition for the Chinese Canadian Museum that opens on Saturday in Vancouver’s Chinatown, on the 100th anniversary of the controversial law’s enactment.
“They just withered here,” Clement said. “They had no descendants left to tell their stories. Nobody even remember they existed … They broke while they were here.”
Some ended up in mental health institutions, including Coquitlam’s Essondale Hospital, said Clement, calling them “the face of exclusion.”