Chinatown: Victoria's Forbidden City

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 27 окт 2024

Комментарии • 205

  • @Canadiana
    @Canadiana  6 лет назад +55

    This episode is a little longer than our usual ones-we cover a lot-but there's always more to every story. Be sure to check out the description for resources and some episode notes (we always seem to max out the character count allowances).

    • @Digitalhunny
      @Digitalhunny 4 года назад +2

      Please come back... we _all_ miss you terribly. 🤗🥂 *hugz from the Atlantic coast🍁

    • @buzzbc
      @buzzbc Год назад

      ❤034cw494😢vv3🎉🎉😢😢4😅😂v22vefw🎉very 😢5❤😂😂😂d😢dcd🎉fcd😢😢❤s😢d😢😢😢v😂🎉😅😊😊dcc2dccd😂😂😊❤❤😊😂❤🎉😂😂❤😊😅

    • @buzzbc
      @buzzbc Год назад

      😊o

    • @buzzbc
      @buzzbc Год назад

      😂😢😢

    • @kidmohair8151
      @kidmohair8151 Год назад

      although this video is four years old, I feel it is incumbent on the channel to monitor
      the comments section and weed out the blatantly, and not so blatantly, racist comments.
      it is one of the duties of running a youtube channel, since the platform itself has no
      commitment to following its own professed community guidelines.
      that would eat into its profits too much.

  • @el_chino778
    @el_chino778 5 лет назад +183

    Being a Chinese Canadian born in Victoria and my great great father coming to Vancouver in 1910 paying head tax and going through the exclusion act this was so informative.

    • @Prodigious1One
      @Prodigious1One 3 года назад +9

      It's excellent that you know your family's history.

    • @tpxchallenger
      @tpxchallenger 8 месяцев назад +1

      I'm guessing you must have already checked out the Chinese Heritage Museum in Fan Tan Alley that opened last year. My wife (also Canadian Born Chinese) and I were there a month ago and loved it!

    • @markgolden1418
      @markgolden1418 Месяц назад

      Sorry we treated yall so badly.

  • @JohnMcMurray-c7k
    @JohnMcMurray-c7k 2 месяца назад +4

    I wish this gentleman was my history teacher. This show needs to be placed on all streaming services to educate everyone

  • @Pyette91
    @Pyette91 11 месяцев назад +5

    i like the way he presents history. no sugar coating. but showing the optimistic outcome. it gives the measurement of how far we've come in inclusion. thank you. literally no body should be angry with the way this is presented.

  • @NicoleyCupcakes
    @NicoleyCupcakes 5 лет назад +53

    I am a tour guide in downtown vancouver and these videos are so valuable! Thanks for your hard work!

  • @roverzilla
    @roverzilla 5 лет назад +45

    awesome content. This should be taught in every Canadian school. Please tell us more about Victoria.

  • @klaxxor
    @klaxxor 6 лет назад +38

    I'm so glad you guys made a video of Victoria! Tons of rich history here, and you started with a big one!

    • @Canadiana
      @Canadiana  6 лет назад +7

      We had a great time getting to know Victoria and, of course, this is one of many stories to tell about the city-we figured we should go big while we had the opportunity! We have some extra videos that will come out down the road and a Canadiana Short or two, but we definitely need to get back as soon as possible-we didn't even get into the intriguing history of The Empress, let alone all the other rich history of the area. Thanks for watching!

  • @TheTankss
    @TheTankss 7 месяцев назад +2

    Mom dad get the popcorn, they are back. No Fluff just history, I love this channel.

  • @Hatrackman
    @Hatrackman 3 года назад +51

    In Market Square, right next to Chinatown, there is a big commemorative plaque explaining how Victoria had 13 legitimate opium factories around the turn of the century. The Crown is well versed in the use of addiction as a social engineering tactic.

    • @euminkong
      @euminkong 9 месяцев назад

      Crown Royal 👑

  • @flagship21
    @flagship21 5 лет назад +27

    Well done. Im chinese i did not know about this part of history of victoria

  • @alicecuriosityoftenleadsto6288
    @alicecuriosityoftenleadsto6288 Год назад +14

    I am from Seattle, Wa, USA. I love your videos. Seattle's Chinatown (now called the International district) is so much like Victoria's, with such a powerful history.
    I love learning about our neighbor to the North. I wish we learned more of Canadas history is school and just in general, Im 44 years old and its all new to me.
    Hammerson Peters and Canadiana are my new info bingeing obsessions. :)

    • @Canadiana
      @Canadiana  Год назад +2

      We still find it incredible when neighbours to the South check out our episodes! Thanks for watching and the kinds words. There's a heck of a lot of American tie-ins this season coming up!

    • @billpetersen298
      @billpetersen298 Год назад

      Hi Alice, when talking to Canadians, you spell neighbour, and colour with a u.
      Cheers from Vancouver.

  • @Clove_Parma
    @Clove_Parma 5 лет назад +29

    How do you only have 12k subs?! Production quality is far too good for low subs to last.

    • @markdemell3717
      @markdemell3717 3 года назад +2

      Most of the younger generation are just to mesmerized by their stupid smart phones , sadly.

    • @sonicvenom8292
      @sonicvenom8292 3 года назад +4

      Those smart phones are how they’re watching RUclips.
      Your statement didn’t answer the question.

    • @JohnGeorgeBauerBuis
      @JohnGeorgeBauerBuis Год назад

      They are at almost 70K subscribers now.

  • @Flyn4thewin
    @Flyn4thewin Год назад +12

    As a previously unhoused occupant of Victoria, I can confidentially guarantee all viewers there are still plenty of opiates haunting fan tan Alley's reputation.

  • @nightshadowsphotography4118
    @nightshadowsphotography4118 6 лет назад +17

    Amazingly great piece and well told. I knew most of it, as I lived in chinatown for years. Glad that you didn't hold the punches.

  • @dtruetheeness
    @dtruetheeness Год назад +4

    Important stories like this one can get lost in history, so I'm thankful Canadiana is telling these stories.

  • @jdlmediaco3541
    @jdlmediaco3541 3 года назад +9

    My great grandfather was one of the crew building the railway. And that as all I know. Since my grandfather passed away, the history seems to be lost.

  • @rileygally2967
    @rileygally2967 2 года назад +10

    Standing in the square near fan tan alley really makes me feel like I can begin to imagine what it could’ve been like all those years ago

  • @bmartin2304
    @bmartin2304 Год назад +3

    As a resident of Victoria I found this vary informative. Thank you!

  • @Kevin-ne2fr
    @Kevin-ne2fr Год назад +3

    Lived in Victoria my whole life, I knew alot about this but still learned some new facts! Very cool and informative.

  • @ShearedJoy
    @ShearedJoy Год назад +2

    Thanks so much for putting this together. I knew bits and pieces but had no idea of the full history of Chinese immigrants in BC.

    • @alukuhito
      @alukuhito Год назад

      This is hardly the full history.

  • @IanGTheaker
    @IanGTheaker 4 года назад +5

    Great vid, Canadiana! I too am Chinese Canadian, & a Victoria resident, and Victoria's Hidden City revealed several items new to me. Much appreciated!

  • @garnettanner2218
    @garnettanner2218 6 лет назад +14

    Wow! best video you guys have made so far. Curious where the old maps you show came from? They are so detailed and very easy to read.

    • @Canadiana
      @Canadiana  6 лет назад +10

      Thanks! A lot of the time we source old maps through the David Rumsey Map Collection. Thankfully their scans are all Creative Commons, otherwise we would be stuck with low-res alternatives-or nothing historically accurate (all the maps in this episode are specific to the time periods we focus on). Rarely, Library and Archives will have a good size map we can use, which was the case for the city plan map in this episode (late 1800s). I would strongly suggest browsing through the David Rumsey Map Collections because there are some incredible gems there from all over the world-there's even a map from the 1500s that has the Atlantic Ocean titled "Mer du Canada" (Canadian Ocean).

    • @Canadiana
      @Canadiana  6 лет назад +6

      I should also say, sometimes we literally colour the maps in photoshop to make them more readable. We had to in our episode about Marie-Josephe-Angelique, for example. In this episode, we had to alter the rail map of Canada (1898 I believe) so that a collection of perfect squares formed a full map.

    • @garnettanner2218
      @garnettanner2218 6 лет назад +3

      @@Canadiana thanks for sharing!
      I used a few search keywords in the archive to see what came up. Amazing how extensive it is.

  • @SanderTheNinja
    @SanderTheNinja 5 лет назад +5

    Dude these videos are great! Very glad I discovered this channel.

  • @clementlee2121
    @clementlee2121 5 лет назад +8

    I never knew Victoria Chinatown had such an interesting story behind it especially the fan tan alley which I’ve been to. Thanks for sharing.

    • @HaloFTW55
      @HaloFTW55 Год назад

      Sounds like a nice place to visit next time I have vacation time.

  • @liongkienfai104
    @liongkienfai104 5 лет назад +10

    1:56 I think it's very dangerous wording to say that Chinese migrants colonized alongside European settlers. Saying settled would be more appropriate as the Chinese were merely taking up opportunities in a European-made system.

  • @OnwardsUpwards
    @OnwardsUpwards 2 года назад +5

    Small correction but at 3:43 it is spelled the "Frazer river", should be Fraser. Great video.

    • @alukuhito
      @alukuhito Год назад

      I doubt the production team actually made the map. They probably found it somewhere and just used it as a visual. Don't blame them.

    • @OnwardsUpwards
      @OnwardsUpwards Год назад +1

      @alukuhito it's their responsibility. They're telling stories reprentative of Canadian culture. These sorts of mistake matter at times. Love the channel though. Also, so everyone knows, the Fraser river is pronounced "fray-zer" and not "fray-zier" "fray-zsher".

    • @alukuhito
      @alukuhito Год назад

      @@OnwardsUpwards It's just a depiction of a map. No map is accurate, particularly old ones.

  • @ChoxTheMuse
    @ChoxTheMuse 5 лет назад +10

    Victoria is such a creepy/haunted place =) it's awesome! great video!

  • @sylvievicenza179
    @sylvievicenza179 Год назад +4

    So interesting. Maillardville /Coquitlam BC would be interesting to look at. Fraser Mill was employing Chinese. The people in power did not like they where not spending there money but where sending back home. That was the reason to sent the curé Maillard back east and recruit French Canadian that had large families and would stay and spend in the region... The rest is for you to tell us. (I am sure Société Maillarville -Uni would be there to help). This is what I remember from when I was living in Coquitlam. Thank you from Italy

    • @alukuhito
      @alukuhito Год назад

      An Italian in Coquitlam?

  • @Dan-nt2yb
    @Dan-nt2yb Год назад +32

    As a Canadian and current resident of Victoria I can only feel shame that our first Prime Minister was such a drunk racist SOB. This dark and dreadful history was, and still is not, taught in our schools and should be. Great upload….well done.👍🏾

    • @annalisavajda252
      @annalisavajda252 Год назад +1

      Yes but lots of whites were mistreated and used for slave labour in Canada too ie: mine workers not just Asian rail builders or Indigenous residential school victims in Canada and maybe he was a drunk but think of all the opioids that have come from Asia too. History should be taught but given proper context as well. Look how they tore out Old Town in the Victoria Museum now too just want to rewrite history.

    • @nancy78811
      @nancy78811 Год назад

      I learned all of this at my small school in the interior of BC actually. And we definitely did not cover more than the mandated minimum curriculum.

    • @briano9397
      @briano9397 Год назад

      I can promise, you don't need to preface that you are a Canadian on this channel.

    • @songcramp66
      @songcramp66 Год назад

      You can almost guarantee that everywhere in the world people were xenophobic in the past with a few exceptions at the crossroads of different cultures. There is nothing to feel ashamed about, it was not your actions and Canada is not exceptional in this. Even today, China will not give foreigners Chinese citizenships even if you marry a Chinese citizen and many non-Western countries are this way.

    • @RobertHinchey
      @RobertHinchey Год назад

      I learned about this in high school in Ontario over 10 years ago. To be fair, it was only a quick note about the time Macdonald was Prime Minister as most of the topic was on the Federation of Canada and they should have gone into more details about it but, at least this topic was mentioned unlike Residential Schools.

  • @mastersadvocate
    @mastersadvocate 7 дней назад

    This video has so much information! I found it very interesting! I enjoy learning about Victoria's past. Thank you for sharing this! ~Janet in Canada

  • @jasminefoong1054
    @jasminefoong1054 Год назад +1

    Instant subscribe! You deserve way more views

  • @amyweaver7413
    @amyweaver7413 Год назад +2

    Victoria is my hometown and I love it’s China town-amazing food, history, architecture, fresh veggie stores, and many wonderful shops. The provincial museum does a good job of providing the shameful, racist history too and I love supporting the people who work and live in China town today.

  • @sergiobowers6930
    @sergiobowers6930 Год назад +1

    Wow, very informative, can’t believe I never learned this in school. Awesome video!!

  • @jasonarthurs3885
    @jasonarthurs3885 Год назад

    Victoria has been my home for the past 12 years (originally from Southwestern Ontario). This city, and the Island at large continue to astonish me daily. There is so much to discover here.

  • @realFl1ck
    @realFl1ck 6 лет назад +8

    Great episode as always

  • @jakegaydud284
    @jakegaydud284 6 лет назад +5

    Very cool! Love this so much. Thank you

  • @patrickgallagher9069
    @patrickgallagher9069 Год назад +1

    I'm not Canadian, but I love this channel! Very interesting. I lived in Anacortes, close to Victoria. I've been to Victoria many, many times. I had no idea there was this history there. Totally interesting! And in high school, my friend and I snuck into the pool at the Empress Hotel! My motives were the girls we snuck in with. I had no idea the history was significant.

  • @rastamon5403
    @rastamon5403 6 лет назад +7

    Wow your channel is amazing

  • @achimrecktenwald9671
    @achimrecktenwald9671 4 месяца назад

    I lived for close to 10 years in Victoria. I had no idea about all this. Thanks for this history lesson.

  • @hilariousname6826
    @hilariousname6826 Год назад +2

    Well done. Except ... the purpose of the anti-opium laws and the Empress Hotel were to send the Chinese community of Victoria a message?? Those laws were essentially a public-health measure, and the CN/CP hotel was essentially a hotel - there was one in every city the railway serviced, wasn't there?

  • @00bikeboy
    @00bikeboy 10 месяцев назад

    Terrific ! Loving this Canadian content.

  • @martykong3592
    @martykong3592 4 месяца назад

    :) WOW! Well DONE INDEED! I remember my Grandfather worked at the Empress Hotel, making pastries for them.. Unfortunatly never knew him as he passed the year I was born:( So I know out family had roots back there. ALL the BEST and THANKS MUCH for sharing!

  • @DavidQHarrisLawStories
    @DavidQHarrisLawStories 11 месяцев назад

    Thank you, Adam, excellent research and content.

  • @matt45540
    @matt45540 Год назад

    I found your content last night, looking forward to learning all about canada!

  • @gov005
    @gov005 5 лет назад +4

    Your videos are great. Please tell me how I can create more awareness about your channel. I want to help you guys to continue making videos like this.

    • @Canadiana
      @Canadiana  5 лет назад +1

      Thank you for the kind words. We're still trying to crack that nut ourselves, the bottom line is: sharing and word-of-mouth. We've seen a lot of traffic come from Reddit occasionally, so we're always grateful to see videos posted there. Otherwise, letting people know about our channel in any way (even those who think Canadian history is boring) is the best we can hope for. For the channel to survive, we need funding, and our primary source is Patreon-not everyone is in a situation where they can contribute in that way of course, but it's the key to making this project sustainable. Our primary goal is to garner more views though, so just spreading the word is more than generous and we thank you for doing so.

  • @Flyn4thewin
    @Flyn4thewin Год назад +10

    I am so, so deeply enraged that the Canadian school system failed to inform me Chineese immigration was literally made illegal... I am in tears and dismay.

    • @alukuhito
      @alukuhito Год назад

      The Canadian school system is lacking in many ways, but people can only work with what they've got. Once in a while you get a good teacher that tries to bring in new material outside of the curricula.

    • @Saffarts
      @Saffarts 8 месяцев назад

      I’m quite surprised really. Even in the US, we learned about our Chinese Exclusion Act.

    • @Flyn4thewin
      @Flyn4thewin 8 месяцев назад

      @Saffarts even in the US??? Thats just downright.... unfair... how can the US school system do a better job?

    • @tym6245
      @tym6245 5 месяцев назад

      There government run, new political group in power =new textbook made

  • @roseoverdose6451
    @roseoverdose6451 Год назад +1

    this is SO good. i'm from Victoria and didn't know any of this stuff.

  • @jayneterry8701
    @jayneterry8701 Год назад +1

    Enjoying your videos of Canadian history 👍❤️🇨🇦💗

  • @d420zed
    @d420zed Год назад

    great video , thanks . I live in Victoria and your lesson brings me back to grade school . cheers .

  • @pattyslater514
    @pattyslater514 Год назад

    Such an exceptional video! Thank you!

  • @iamanisland
    @iamanisland 2 года назад +2

    I’ve always wondered whether the term “pâté chinois” (shepherd’s pie), came as a result of it being what was fed to the Chinese railroad workers.

  • @Spind0k
    @Spind0k 6 лет назад +4

    Amazing video - Shoutout from duncan bc!

    • @Canadiana
      @Canadiana  6 лет назад

      Thanks! We have a few more extra videos on the way we shot while we were in the southern end of Vancouver Island. We have a pretty lengthy Canadiana Short about Nanaimo and some secret stuff that's a ways away. Stay tuned for more Vancouver Island!

  • @shinnith
    @shinnith 4 года назад +1

    Dude I love this- hella in depth

  • @jrontherocks99
    @jrontherocks99 Год назад

    Borned raised and an Irish landed well ok our Dad amd family sure the ell are!..Eat breathe such magical memories of this hot spot of estorical land!! Bless your heart and your teams hearts for engaging in such lovilyness.

  • @Missjones34
    @Missjones34 11 месяцев назад +1

    I heard Duncan used to have a china town as well

  • @gaslitworldf.melissab2897
    @gaslitworldf.melissab2897 Год назад +2

    In the US, we tend to have an idealized version of Canadian history, one in which Canada is the nicer part of North America. In fact, it was settled by the same Europeans as the US and lots of Canadian policies mirror those of the United States. The US even went so far as to forbid Chinese immigration for several decades - even though they were the primary builders of our railroads, certainly helped fuel our dynamic economy. And I can't finish this paragraph without disclosing that they also faced violence, even murder, at the hands of White Americans. I can't do justice to their story here in the United States.

  • @ethann6346
    @ethann6346 Год назад +1

    lived here my whole life and didnt know most of this!

  • @CatholicCanadianConservative
    @CatholicCanadianConservative 5 лет назад +4

    I'm so sad to see our Chinatown being lost to non chinese businesses

  • @CatholicCanadianConservative
    @CatholicCanadianConservative 5 лет назад +2

    It's easy to still find the opium poppies in Victoria, people grow them in their gardens without even knowing it.

  • @kennethdong8490
    @kennethdong8490 Год назад +1

    July 1 will be the 100th anniversary of the Chinese Exclusion Act. Maybe Justin will do a photo op.

  • @illhumoured8023
    @illhumoured8023 3 года назад +1

    I arrived to BC in 1971. All noodles sold in Chinatown were mandated to be labeled as "Imitation alimentary paste". Sounds yummy, eh?

  • @josoffat7649
    @josoffat7649 3 года назад +2

    I live six block away, never really been in that part though. Honestly most of downtown is still like how it was back then, pretty shady

  • @paige.campbell
    @paige.campbell 4 года назад

    Incredible channel and video!

  • @NobleOz
    @NobleOz 4 года назад

    Great job on the video!

  • @yikesbud4308
    @yikesbud4308 3 года назад

    Fantastic video. Love learning about the wild past of Victoria bc.

  • @DebbieJiang-l4j
    @DebbieJiang-l4j Год назад

    The SFU link is broken, is there a new site?

  • @Astr0b0y8
    @Astr0b0y8 Год назад

    So interesting. TY!

  • @michelleready
    @michelleready Год назад

    Look deeper into King George. Look at the correlation between Canada and the US revolution and the world wars, including the one we’re in. Great video on the history of Victoria and the colonial disruption there.

  • @katelaloba8243
    @katelaloba8243 Год назад

    How cool. I live I Saanich. Love Chinatown

  • @SayuRinpoche
    @SayuRinpoche 3 года назад

    If BC's Social Studies curriculum is the same level as this video my friend Tom wouldn't end up being a Chemistry nerd

  • @yiddena
    @yiddena Год назад

    Interesting to hear about this --- as this is my city!:) Chinatown is my favorite spot:)

  • @marqy007
    @marqy007 Год назад +1

    A most beautiful people city...the best kept secret in Canada.

  • @papwithanhatchet902
    @papwithanhatchet902 11 месяцев назад

    As an fyi for those who don’t know, Victoria’s Chinatown is a whole 3 blocks. Not square, mind you... just 3 blocks.

  • @ravisahota8977
    @ravisahota8977 Год назад

    Incredible knowledge

  • @boscoyu_sci
    @boscoyu_sci 2 года назад +1

    that is a powerful story!

  • @alukuhito
    @alukuhito Год назад

    I grew up near Vancouver and have been to Victoria many times. I still haven't even tried opium. To be honest, I've never even seen it.

  • @daplsy1328
    @daplsy1328 5 лет назад +1

    That white car haven’t moved that guy must be lazy

  • @andresfelipe8605
    @andresfelipe8605 3 года назад

    Ecxelente video, Gracias 👍🏽

  • @lurkingchicken
    @lurkingchicken 4 года назад

    GREAT VIDEO BROTHER

  • @Sylacs
    @Sylacs Год назад

    Im from there, my favorite places to shop!

  • @charleyyoung5024
    @charleyyoung5024 4 года назад

    Good facts about my home town.
    Unfortunately, the intoxicated man weaving the tail throws it all off.

  • @neldajackson360
    @neldajackson360 Год назад +1

    Ok just out of curiosity why do people call us North America all the time? Instead of just Canada

  • @truemightyyogurt
    @truemightyyogurt 5 лет назад +2

    cool!

  • @shinnith
    @shinnith 4 года назад +1

    I live around Vancouver/Van Isl and there is a big asian/chinese/japenese community and i never stop hearing the phrase "!!!They're taking over our country!!!!" It's annoying, and straight up incorrect. I hope you guys come back to the island! (after the pandemic of course)

  • @leezhao
    @leezhao 5 лет назад +5

    5:23 The sign on top of that Pai Fang says "The Great Qing Empire". This might not be politically correct, if it came out of another mouth. But I'm Chinese American. (By the way, I also think if something it true, then it's true no matter who says it. So I'd be perfectly fine if a white person said what I'm about to say.) The sign clearly had no legal meaning, because certainly no one would recognize that piece of land as a part of the Empire. But perhaps it betrayed a certain psyche of the Chinese diaspora. Those who put up that sign clearly did not care to integrate into the new society in which they lived. There is no excuse for the Canadian or the American laws of exclusion and those laws were immoral. But the early Chinese immigrants might not want to be included. If one doesn't want to be included, then should one be surprised at being excluded.

    • @leezhao
      @leezhao 5 лет назад +2

      @Daver G Was this meant to be a reply to my comment? I said nothing about Chinese putting up barriers and certainly nothing about it being "perfectly fine." I commented on things like the Chinese exclusion act in Canada and the US which banned Chinese from immigration and naturalization. Both countries have apologized for those mistakes. I don't know enough about the current BC's tax code or Chinese housing regulations to say anything and did not. I am at a loss as to how your allusion of a double standard is related to anything that I wrote.

    • @DEADMANRIDING1
      @DEADMANRIDING1 2 года назад

      Canada's cities were ghettoized, often by choice. Europeans moving here naturally gravitated to communities in which they could speak their own language & enjoy their own culture. Rural towns/districts were also very ethnic oriented. Old world prejudices/conflicts came with them. Only in the late 60s did I see any positive change in general attitudes. That said, our Chinese citizens were treated horribly by just about everyone.

  • @oliverlee554
    @oliverlee554 Год назад

    Thank you.

  • @Victoria-qs8hu
    @Victoria-qs8hu Год назад +1

    Born and raised here in Victoria the 1990s were the best. Today your lucky if you don't get mugged downtown. All the alleys have drug addicts smoking meth shooting up. Our homelessness issue is disgusting thanks to former mayor Lisa helps. This city has turned into trash. I don't understand why they're making it seem so nice. A 2 bedroom apartment goes for $2500 a month. Nothing included. It's overpriced.

    • @hilariousname6826
      @hilariousname6826 Год назад +1

      Every city in North America has a "homelessness issure". But, yeah, it's all the fault of your former mayor.

    • @forest_green
      @forest_green 9 месяцев назад

      There were still drugs in the 90s 🙄 y'all are more creative than professional fiction authors.

  • @tatonka411
    @tatonka411 2 года назад +1

    That is THE WRONG symbol for medicine. That's the symbol for thieves, merchants, and messengers.

  • @minzyminz9987
    @minzyminz9987 2 года назад

    Wow so informative

  • @LuxAeterna22878
    @LuxAeterna22878 3 года назад +2

    Thanks for putting together such an excellent documentary. :) Very interesting and informative. I'm glad you didn't leave out how shamefully racist my white ancestors were to the Chinese. Canada must learn from its history of bigotry if we are to make any moral progress whatsoever.

  • @bobbymacwatt7417
    @bobbymacwatt7417 3 года назад

    woah... cool man.

  • @francisbacon2401
    @francisbacon2401 Год назад

    Politicians are now trying to destroy it.

  • @janebond8342
    @janebond8342 Год назад

    He doesn't need to speak. The hand gestures say it all.

  • @sarah-janechilton8109
    @sarah-janechilton8109 4 года назад +1

    I live in victoria

  • @trailhiker8063
    @trailhiker8063 3 года назад +2

    Bad history in this vid. The Spanish had the first fort at Nootka called fort san miguel. If you study history the fort the americans built was in Clayquot, they were avoiding the Spanish. The Spanish seized British ships at Nootka, which became known as the nootka incident. Part of the seizure of ships and prisoners were the 50 chinese brought to build the fort. The British prisoners and Chinese were shipped back to San Blas Mexico. Until the Spanish and British resolved the matter, avoiding war. One of the British officers was a chap called Collnet. He complained while voyaging to mexico as a prisoner that the Spanish wouldn't let him soak his biscuits in tea first before eating them, it was hard on his false teeth. I see this a lot where its almost racism at play to deny that the Spanish were here, keep it all just white and british. Please study real history. Google nootka incident. Google Spanish in the Pacific northwest.

  • @GIguy
    @GIguy 3 года назад +1

    So hard to believe, I’ve only been there a couple of times, but every time I’ve been there, I see a peaceful tranquil small little town, that couldn’t possibly have the problems of a big city like we do here in Toronto, but I guess I was wrong, what a shame, I wish I was wrong. As a tourist, I just thought of it as a quaint peaceful place to visit for the day as I was on my way to Nanaimo and around Vancouver Island. I’m really surprised that such a small place can have so many problems.

    • @cece354
      @cece354 Год назад

      Is not problem. Is the racist Canadian politicians that suppress the Chinese ability to thrive in this country. They use Chinese as slaves to build the railway and then discard them like yesterdays newspaper.

  • @ardennielsen3761
    @ardennielsen3761 Год назад

    Alberta was settled by Mississippi Carolina Kentucky aria residents in the mid 1800's... on word of... also because of 1813-1814 and established relative phycological processing by Order OF!

    • @ardennielsen3761
      @ardennielsen3761 Год назад

      Farther more settled by descendants of Russia Ukraine, Hutterites. not one from the cities, all from very distanced places far away from there metropolises and deceiving problems from excessive population size. your not an Albertian if you arn't, MA BANNAH SHIZAH UNT YA UNTER HOZIN!

  • @lschambliss1
    @lschambliss1 3 года назад +1

    Thank you for discovering herstory, here in the US they are tyring to rewrite history.

  • @eskimoassasin6764
    @eskimoassasin6764 4 года назад

    So this is like gta chinatown

  • @nathanielrose274
    @nathanielrose274 Год назад

    Can you share links to the racist Kipling quotes? or give me an idea where to find them. I like to study Kipling but the only quotes on the subject of Canadian Chinese I can find are him arguing against the "Oriental Ban". Albeit in his epically insensitive and tone deaf fashion. So I would like to read where he takes an opposite opinion.