Page 29 - 2023 eMag Final Draft
P. 29

Jointly reported by:
         Lau Kai Ren Sr1ScF
    Our last interviewee hails from   Lee Xue Rui Sr1ScF
 Australia. Daniel Zhou treasures his        Foreign
 upbringing surrounded by Chinese       Foreign

 and Australian culture. He has fond
                    Friends
 memories of celebrating Chinese
 holidays like Mid-Autumn Festival and
 New Year’s with the hanging of bright   Friends                              An EXCLUSIVE

 red decorations and the consumption
 of delicious zongzi and moon cakes.                                        Interview
                                                                            with
    He regaled us with the history               Foreigners

 of the Australian Chinese diaspora.   Chinatown in New York
 Back during the gold rush of 1951, an           Attending KCHS!
 influx of Chinese prospectors came
 to  the  British  colony  in  search  of  a
                      A
 richer future. They eventually settled             t the start of each year, I’m sure you will look through your class’ name list,
 down in Australia after the rush, and   either curious about potential friends or looking for familiar names. Among the sea of
 the first wave of Chinese immigrants   Lees, Tans, and Wongs, sometimes a unique name pops out at you. It is unlike the typical
 entrenched themselves  in  Australian   3-word English-spelt name the average Chinese student has, but rather a 2-word name

 society. Nowadays, Australia has a   with a foreign pronunciation. However, it is rare to find such names. A fellow reporter
 similar Chinese immigration boom,   and I, curious about how the high school experiences of these students differ from the
 with Daniel reporting an increased   typical Chinese student, scouted for foreigners in our beloved school to learn more about
 number of first and second generation   their experiences.

 migrants. The suburbs of Box Hill
 and Glen Waverly are predominantly                                 The first person that came to our mind
 inhabited by a Chinese community. In                        was a good friend of ours who happens to be
 the cities, there are officially sanctioned   Chinatown in Kuala Lumpur  Korean! This lovely individual is  Victoria

 Chinatown areas in the Central                              Hwang from JR3S3, who agreed to have
 Business Districts (CBD), but most                          a chat with us about her history. She was
 Chinatowns started out as rural towns                       born in Korea and lived there for three years
 founded by Chinese settlers during the                      before migrating to Malaysia. We knew we

 gold rush.                                                  would learn a lot about her experiences
                                                             at Kuen Cheng High School as she had
            attended preschool in Korea and lived there for a few years before coming to Malaysia.

 “No matter where you visit, chances are that there’s a thriving Chinatown district
 somewhere in the city. Pay them a visit, and you might just learn something new      To provide a bit of additional context, Victoria’s parents decided to migrate their

 about our Chinese heritage.”  family to Malaysia as they look highly upon Chinese education here. She is also very
            fluent in English as she consumed a fair amount of English media during her childhood.

            Attending SJK(C) Kuen Cheng 1 had helped facilitate her integration into Chinese
            student life when friendships were formed with a few local friends during her time there.



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