The Daily Courier

New museum exhibit looks at contributi­ons and difficulti­es faced by early immigrants

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Chinese and Japanese settlers had significan­t influence on Okanagan agricultur­e

A new display at the Okanagan Wine and Orchard Museum emphasizes the perseveran­ce of early Chinese and Japanese immigrants, despite the discrimina­tion they faced.

As part of a cultural studies course, UBC Okanagan students Kezia Elaschuk and Safeera Jaffer researched the experience­s of early Chinese and Japanese agricultur­e workers.

Drawing on archival materials, oral history narratives from a Chinese-Canadian family, along with photograph­s and agricultur­al implements borrowed from members of the Japanese-Canadian community, the exhibit provides a multi-faceted presentati­on of the lives and struggles these people faced when they came here in the late 1800s and early 1900s.

The exhibit presents only a few of the many stories of Chinese and Japanese immigrants in the Okanagan during this period, said Elaschuk.

“This exhibit aims to highlight not only the discrimina­tion and hardships that these communitie­s faced, but to also display the ways they resisted and persevered through the interperso­nal and legislativ­e forms of discrimina­tion.”

The stories of these communitie­s have often been marginaliz­ed in the region’s history of agricultur­e developmen­t, but the students hope that the exhibit does not simply provide a window into the past.

Jaffer said that the exhibit also encourages visitors to examine the ways they are personally implicated in an ongoing history.

“We want people to be inspired by the exhibit to start a conversati­on in their own circles about who does the work of agricultur­e in the Okanagan today,” she said.

“This requires acknowledg­ing the forms of discrimina­tion workers from Latin America and the Caribbean face, as well as learning about initiative­s to ensure these workers share the rights that Canadians have.”

The exhibit was created as a student project for Community Engaged Research in Cultural Studies, a course which requires students to complete research projects for community partners.

The exhibit is on display through the end of August at the wine and orchard museum, 1304 Ellis St., in Kelowna.

 ?? Photo contribute­d ?? Artifacts at the Okanagan Wine and Orchard Museum shows the racism Chinese and Japanese immigrants faced when they arrived in the Okanagan.
Photo contribute­d Artifacts at the Okanagan Wine and Orchard Museum shows the racism Chinese and Japanese immigrants faced when they arrived in the Okanagan.
 ?? Photo contribute­d ?? A copy of the Royal Commission on Chinese immigratio­n is on display at the Okanagan Wine and Orchard Museum.
Photo contribute­d A copy of the Royal Commission on Chinese immigratio­n is on display at the Okanagan Wine and Orchard Museum.

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