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| WITHIN THESE WALLS: Katherine Toy, charged with
restoring the old barracks, wants visitors to get a taste of the detention
experience. |
FOR 20 STOMACH-CHURNING DAYS, the Chinese
paper sons lay on canvas cots below deck, sustained by mush,
toast and coffee, while they studied page after page of notes provided
by their desperate parents.
The teenagers from Cantonese river-delta villages were bound for Gam SaanGold
Mountainthe fabled shores of the American West. But as they fled
political and economic chaos at home, they were risking their families
life savings on passage to an uncertain future. Because the Chinese Exclusion
Act prohibited Chinese laborers from immigrating to the United States
unless family members were already established here, thousands tried to
slip in by pretending to be related to friends or even strangers who had
preceded them through the Pacific gateway.
As the young men crossed the ocean, they read prepackaged family histories
of the relatives they would claim, memorizing details that might help
them answer tricky questions from immigration officials. How many windows
does your house in China have? Where is the rice bin kept? What direction
does the front door face? What is your living room floor made of?
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| GRIM SCENE: Soon after they arrived on Angel Island,
detainees were taken to the hospital for medical examinations. |
When the San Francisco headlands finally came into sight, many tore up
the notes and threw them overboard, confident they could convince the
authorities. But instead of disembarking with first-class passengers on
the city wharves of the Pacific Mail Steamship Co., the Chinese were diverted
onto smaller boats and ferried out to the middle of the bay. Their destination
was a processing station called Angel Island, where undesired aliens were
detained.
And there the boys and other Chinese passengers waitedfor weeks,
months, sometimes yearsto be quizzed by skeptical inspectors who
would compare their answers to those of their alleged relatives. An estimated
175,000 Chinese, mostly males, along with smaller numbers of Filipinos,
Indians, Japanese, Koreans and Russians, passed through Angel Island Immigration
Station between its opening in 1910 and its closing in 1940. Crowded by
the hundreds into locked rooms in dank barracks surrounded by barbed-wire
fences and armed guards, detainees were allowed out only for physical
examinations, which they considered humiliating and barbaric. Those diagnosed
with communicable diseases or parasites faced unconditional deportation,
as did the many who failed their interrogations. The saddest fate of all,
perhaps, was an extended waitin effect, indefinite imprisonment.
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| PROCESSING CENTER: Some 175,000 Chinese passed through
the immigration station over 30 years. |
As the long days passed, detainees poured out their despair and frustration
by inscribing poems on the redwood walls. The verses echo like ghostly
voices today.
Today is the last day of winter,
Tomorrow morning is the vernal equinox.
One years prospects have changed to another.
Sadness kills the person in the wooden building.
The poems tell us that the boys were full of despair, and a lot
of them were very angry, says Katherine Toy, a fifth-generation
Chinese-American who serves as executive director of the Angel Island
Immigration Station Foundation. They also talk about how the [Chinese]
government wasnt strong enough to fight for them.
Today, the island is one of Californias most popular state parks,
and its status as a historical landmark draws a steady stream of school
groups. Toys jobas the point person in a $32 million, eight-year
projectis to guide the restoration of the deteriorating immigration
station and come up with creative ways to bring its past to life.
The poems are at the heart of the saga she wants to help the island tell.
This is not just the story of Chinese-Americans or Asian-Americans,
but a quintessential American story about the dreams that bring immigrants
to this nation and how they continue to come in spite of the hardships
and obstacles that are so often placed in their way, says Toy, 91,
MA 95. And the spirit of this place is essential to telling
the story, because theres nothing like it anywhere else, where the
walls speak as they do here.
Over a hundred poems are on the walls.
Looking at them, they are all pining at the delayed progress.
What can one sad person say to another?
Unfortunate travelers everywhere wish to commiserate.
Gain or lose, how is one to know what is predestined?
Rich or poor, who is to say it is not the will of heaven?
Why should one complain if he is detained and imprisoned here?
From ancient times, heroes often were the first ones to face adversity.
The poems are literally everywhere, Toy says. Some are modeled
on well-known verses from classical Chinese literature; others are less
formal. Many characters are rendered in a style that suggests they may
have been brushed on in ink during the very early decades of the 20th
century, when would-be immigrants from China tended to be well educated.Toy
and others speculate that later detainees etched the inked characters
into the wood.
Although a collection of the poems was published in 1980 (Island: Poetry
and History of Chinese Immigrants on Angel Island, 1910-1940), conservators
expect to find dozens more as they scrutinize dark corners and strip away
old paint during the restoration. The process, however, is extremely laborious.
A postcard-size patch of wall tackled by a pair of experts last fall took
a full day to clear, using different kinds of solvents to remove a half-dozen
layers of green, yellow, brown and gray paint, as well as spackling that
had been applied to cover up the writings. Even then, the timeworn characters
were so obscure that only a sharply angled flashlight could bring them
into view. You can see how so much of the poetry was missed for
years, says Toy.
Scraping every inch of the barracks down to the original redwood might
not be practical or even desirable, she adds. The decrepit paint, in fact,
sets an authentically dismal mood. Would we want to leave some sections
as they are? she wonders aloud. Would that be a better way
to make the barracks a contemplative space?
Still, she admits to getting a chill every time she wanders through the
deserted barracks and discovers a new character. A self-described history
geek, she describes the feeling this way: I remember putting
my hand on the column of a Roman ruin once and thinking, If I could
peel back thousands of years, what would those people say? On Angel
Island, the words of the people are right here in the room with you.
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| THE BARRACKS: Detainees were housed in communal
rooms where they languished for weeks, months or years. |
IT IS IMPORTANT to hear those words today,
Toy says, in part because the Chinese immigrant experience has been shrouded
in silence for so long. This stands in contrast to the stories of European
immigrants, which are recounted in dramatic detail throughout American
culture.
Toy, who used to teach history at a middle school in Baltimore, recalls
taking students on field trips to New Yorks Ellis Island and encouraging
them to trace their families roles in U.S. history. But most Chinese
who came through Angel Island have kept quiet about their time there,
she says, because of the shame they felt about being detained. Some elderly
men still have paper names and live with the fear that their
U.S.-born children might be deported someday.
Nor do many schoolbooks highlight the ordeal or examine the questions
it raises about national policies. What does that say, when your
history isnt discussed? Toy asks. It tells me that we
have in many ways tended to romanticize America as an immigrant nation,
and that perhaps we need to look more critically at the question of American
immigrant identity and explore how, as a nation, boundaries have opened
and closed over time, both literally and figuratively.
John Kuo Wei Tchen, a historian at New York University, notes that the
Chinese Exclusion Act, passed in 1882, wasnt repealed until 1943,
when China became a World War II allyand even then, it was replaced
by a quota system that allowed only 105 Chinese to immigrate per year.
The 1882 act was a racially defined law, he says, and
the legacy of paper sons, of buying other peoples identities,
was the result of trying to get around legislation that was suspect to
begin with.
Toy adds a 21st-century slant. Recent events, especially, should
make us all ask questions and look at the treatment of Arabs in this countryas
foreigners, as people unable to assimilate, as people who are seen as
other. Theres the whole notion of Who gets to
be considered an American? What do you have to look like?
Questions like those could be asked, Toy says, in the kind of interactive,
interpretive site she envisions for the restored immigration station.
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| ELOQUENT ETCHINGS: Some of the most delicate Chinese
characters appear to have been brushed on the walls in ink during
the immigration station's early years, then carved into the soft redwoood
by later detainees. |
THE FULL HISTORY of the idyllic-looking,
15-acre island stretches from the Civil War, when federal officials developed
it as a garrison, to the Cold War, when the Defense Department set up
a missile station there. The immigration station that opened in 1910 was
the West Coasts main processing center for Pacific Rim immigrants
(smaller stations were in Seattle, San Diego and San Pedro). It consisted
of a pier, barracks, hospital and large administrative center, along with
several facilities buildings. There were also 12 cottages, designed by
up-and-coming architect Julia Morgan, that housed families who worked
on the island. A fire destroyed the administrative center and closed the
immigration station in 1940; during World War II, the barracks housed
German prisoners of war. By 1963, when Angel Island was established as
a state park for picnickers, hikers and campers, all that remained of
the original immigration station were the barracks, hospital and power
plant.
Some of these very important historic buildings are in an advanced
state of deterioration, and were now looking for ways to do right
by the restoration of the site and its interpretation, says Brian
ONeill, general superintendent of the Golden Gate National Recreation
Area, which encompasses Angel Island.
The cause has gained momentum in recent years from some influential endorsements,
as well as continuing pressure from many in the Chinese-American community.
Designated a National Historic Landmark in 1997, the former immigration
station is now listed by the National Trust for Historic Preservation
as one of the nations 11 most endangered sites. It is one of only
two National Historic Landmarks recognizing the often-troubled experiences
of Asian-American immigrants (the other is the WWII Manzanar internment
camp for Japanese-Americans near Independence, Calif.). Its also
an invited member of the International Coalition of Historic Site Museums
of Conscience, a group that includes Ellis Island, Auschwitz/Birkenau
in Poland, Maison des Eclaves (Slave House) in Senegal and Russias
Gulag Museum.
The major restoration project began in 1999, with the Angel Island Immigration
Station Foundation working in an unusual partnership with the California
State Parks and the National Park Service. Toy, now 32, assumed the helm
in May 2000, taking as her model the tenacity of past presidents such
as Felicia Lowe and Dan Quan, as well as fund-raiser Kathy Lim Ko, 91,
who has brought in sizable federal and private donations.
Superintendent ONeill is among those who work closely with Toy.
We want to be able to tell the stories of what Angel Island represents
from the perspective of those who experienced it, and Katherine Toy has
now become the point person for the partnership, he says. Shes
very bright, engaging and resourceful, and she came on the scene at just
the right time.
Two consulting firms are developing plans for bringing the old barracks,
hospital and power plant up to current health and safety codes, reproducing
period landscaping, and documenting, translating and preserving the poems.
To reach the $32 million required, the three-way partnership still must
raise $15 million, and Toy is working to keep costs under control.
We understand that we cant afford to rebuild the administration
building and that its not necessary, says Lowe, a Chinese-American
filmmaker and activist, who helped launch the 1980s grassroots committee
that was the forerunner of Toys foundation. With todays
technology, there are many creative ways to create imprints and impressions
that can help people empathize with the experience of the detainees.
Lowe, the daughter of a former detainee, spent six years making a documentary
film, Carved in Silence (1987), about the experiences of Angel
Island immigrants. In 1999 she organized two visioning workshops
in which historians, anthropologists, architects, artists and Chinese-American
community leaders imagined aloud how they might bring to life the story
of the station. Should visitors experience the place from the perspective
of hopeful immigrants, perhaps tracing their steps from arrival on the
island to the doors of the barracks? How about building a pier and period
ship to simulate the process of disembarking? Could interrogations be
re-enacted? What about filling the silence of the barracks with recordings
of oral histories?
Toy is exploring a grab bag of possibilities, looking especially for those
with visceral impact. Having been a teacher, whenever I visit historical
sites, I think about how they might captivate students, she says.
I ask, Is this comprehensible to the average 14-year-old,
and not just to a history freak like myself?
My belly is so full of discontent it is really difficult to relax.
I can only worry silently to myself.
At times I gaze at the cloud- and fog-enshrouded mountain-front.
It only deepens my sadness.
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| THE GREAT WALL: Toy visits the station several times
a month to walk in the steps of the would-be immigrants. |
TOY HAS BEEN DRAWN to family-history research
since her childhood in Belmont, Calif., when she used to dig through an
old, rubber-banded shirt box in her fathers closet, searching for
photographs. She found snapshots of her grandfather from the 1920s, dressed
in his Eagle Scout uniform, and she read newspaper clippings that described
him as a celestial boy when he had his braided queue cut off.
As an international relations major at Stanford, Toy wrote papers about
what it meant to be Chinese-Americanand in one foray to Meyer Library,
she discovered a book with a picture of her grandmother rolling bandages
for the Red Cross in San Francisco in 1940.
In December 1998, Toy and her sister, Melissa, made a trip to the National
Records and Archives Administration office in Seattle to search for documentation
of their great-great-grandfathers travels between the Pacific Northwest
and China. Armed with information about the years and months of his many
trips, the sisters discovered that ship manifests singled out the names
of Chinese passengers, listing them separately on the left side of the
record logs. Merchant Toy, well established in his business, had a file
several hundred pages thick, packed with questionnaires, photographs and
certificates of identity. One helpful letter, dated January 25, 1924,
states that Charley Toy of Milwaukee is a personal friend of Assistant
Secretary of Labor the Hon. E.J. Henning and asks that special courtesy
be extended to him and his family.
As a teacher, Katherine Toy drew on her fascination with family history
by having all her students map out their stories on a single timeline
that extended down a long school corridor. Young people often look
at history as something that happened to other people, she says.
I tried to show them that you can happen to history. And
they began to see that, in fact, American history was reflected in the
lives of their classmates. They could see the progression of history in
the potato famine that brought Irish families to America and in the pogroms
that brought Eastern European Jews.
Now, she hopes to insert the immigrant stories of Angel Island into the
nations historical timeline. With only a couple of hundred detainees
still alive, foundation volunteers are trying to record as many oral histories
as they can, but the silence of shame is difficult to break through. Toy
tells about a recent interview she had arranged with a son and his father,
a former detainee living out of state. After taking his father to visit
Angel Island and seeing his eyes fill with tears in the barracks, the
son canceled the appointment, saying it just wasnt going to work.
That reluctance to talk makes it even more important to spotlight the
poems, says Toy.
Anxiety. Fear. Depression. Beauty. The whispering walls will be heard.
The night is cool as I lie stiff on the steel bunk.
Before the window the moon lady shines on me.
Bored, I get up and stand beneath the cold window.
Sadly, I count the time thats elapsed.
It is already mid-autumn,
We should all honor and enjoy her.
But I have not prepared even the most trifling gift and I feel embarrassed.
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