daairish.blogg.se

A beautiful country a memoir
A beautiful country a memoir







There were not so many immigrants from North China. WANG: Yeah, when we got here, I remember the first thing we realized - that even though there were Chinese people around us in Chinatown, we were of a different kind of Chinese. So help us understand how you navigated through that world.

a beautiful country a memoir

You also didn't speak Chinese, as some kid taunted you about - at least his Chinese. WANG: It was, but I think I was protected by the fact that I was a child and just kind of took things as they came, as children do, and had that sort of natural resilience. SIMON: This memoir takes us through five years in your childhood, a young girl trying to make a home in America with her family. QIAN JULIE WANG: Thank you so much for having me, Scott.

a beautiful country a memoir

Qian Julie Wang, who is a Yale Law graduate, now an attorney, has written a memoir, "Beautiful Country." She joins us now from Brooklyn, N.Y. Her family escaped to the United States, New York, in 1994 but were undocumented, and they had to live, in the Chinese phrase, as people in hei (ph) - the dark, the shadows, the underground world of undocumented immigrants who work menial jobs off the books in fear that their underground existence might be exposed. Her uncle, a teen at the time, was arrested for criticizing Mao Zedong, and her father's family lived under a hail of rocks, pebbles, slurs and worse.

a beautiful country a memoir

The story of Qian Julie Wang, as she explains, begins before she was born.









A beautiful country a memoir