Times Colonist

David Lai demonstrat­ed powerful vision

- GRACE WONG SNEDDON and REETA TREMBLAY Grace Wong Sneddon is the chair of the board of the Victoria Foundation and an adjunct faculty at the University of Victoria. Reeta Tremblay is a professor in the department of political science. They are working on a

When David Chuen-Yan Lai died on June 15 after a prolonged illness, British Columbia lost an outstandin­g citizen who had been a role model to colleagues, civic leaders and ordinary citizens, and who, through his example, encouraged us all to have have the courage to take risks in striving to enrich and improve the lives of all Canadians.

Lai was, among other things, professor emeritus of geography and adjunct professor of Pacific and Asian studies at the University of Victoria.

Throughout his life, he was a well-known promoter of multicultu­ralism and an explorer of the early Chinese community history in British Columbia, in particular Victoria.

Confronted with the overt discrimina­tion against the Chinese population when he first came to Victoria in 1968, which meant being unable to find a suitable accommodat­ion for him and his wife, Lai went on to distinguis­h himself as a renowned expert on the history of Chinese Canadians, the developmen­t of Canadian Chinatowns and ethnic groups in British Columbia.

Through his scholarly work and community engagement, he demonstrat­ed an outstandin­g vision in preserving the history and culture of Chinese Canadians and more than 40 Chinatowns across Canada. He was awarded the Order of Canada, the Gabrielle Léger Award of the Heritage Canada Foundation, the Heritage Award of the B.C. government, a Victoria Leadership Award and was made an honorary citizen of the City of Victoria.

Lai was born in 1937 in Hong Kong. He received his PhD from the London School of Economics. After teaching for five years in Hong Kong, he accepted a teaching position as an assistant professor in the department of geography at the University of Victoria in 1968, where his teaching career was to span more than 35 years. Conducting research and writing about Victoria’s Chinatown quickly became his lifelong passion.

Early in his career at UVic, he was asked to provide a piece on Chinatown for a seminar on urban problems in Victoria. At that time, Chinatown had many abandoned and crumbling buildings.

When Lai set out to do research for the project, he discovered there were no available archives or statistics, so he went to the Chinese community members for his research and started his mission to document the history of Victoria’s Chinatown.

In 1979, he wrote a report called The Future of Victoria’s Chinatown: A Survey of Views and Opinion, which led to the City of Victoria’s initiative to restore the buildings and heritage of Chinatown.

In 1981, the current Gate of Harmonious Interest was erected under Lai’s leadership. He intervened in the destructio­n of the old immigratio­n house on Dallas Road to take plaster pieces of the walls on which were written Chinese poetry. These are some of the most important artifacts in B.C.’s history and are now on loan to the Royal Ontario Museum.

Certainly, the buildings and artifacts that have been saved or built through his efforts enrich the lives of Victorians. More generally, it is only through Lai’s incredible efforts that significan­t historical records have survived and that generation­s of Victorians will be able to know this important part of our rich history.

It would not be an exaggerati­on to state that through his preservati­on efforts, Victoria’s Chinatown continues to have a massive impact on tourism. Even after his retirement from the university, as professor emeritus, he encouraged his younger colleagues to become involved with the Arrivals project at the Royal B.C. Museum.

The exhibits for the Centre for Arrivals project presented the experience of migrant communitie­s by recreating intercultu­ral B.C. history through their own diverse lenses, and underscore­d the migrant arrivals’ contributi­on to the history, culture and developmen­t of B.C.

The Victoria Foundation was an avid supporter of Lai’s persistent efforts in preserving the Chinese history and culture in Victoria. In 2011, it provided financial support for the Chinese Canadian History Project Council at Simon Fraser University’s David Lam Centre, with a mandate to develop educationa­l materials for use by schools, community organizati­ons and the tourism industry.

The foundation was also instrument­al in assisting Lai in the production of a new document providing an account of Victoria’s oldest Chinatown as part of a national chronologi­cal overview of Chinese Canadian history.

David Chuen-Yan Lai’s research interests and community involvemen­t inspired many others to become engaged in understand­ing and promoting Victoria’s cultural landscape. We remain indebted to him for enriching and improving the lives of all Canadians, more especially the lives of Victorians, through his work in preserving and celebratin­g our shared history.

 ??  ?? David Chuen-Yan Lai in Fan Tan Alley in 2010, his favorite place in Chinatown because of its historical significan­ce. The noted scholar of Chinese culture in B.C. died June 15.
David Chuen-Yan Lai in Fan Tan Alley in 2010, his favorite place in Chinatown because of its historical significan­ce. The noted scholar of Chinese culture in B.C. died June 15.
 ??  ?? David Chuen-Yan Lai
David Chuen-Yan Lai

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