Updates from Queens Library:
Meet Yingwen Huang!
(left to right) Yingwen Huang, Lita Solis, Joanne T. Dolman, Sarah Quick at a
Queens Memory event at Forest Hills Library, February 2016.
Yingwen is the emerging Library and Archives professional selected to lead the
charge in planning and facilitating dozens of community events for the
Memories of Migration program in Queens, New York City. An immigrant
herself, Ying brings her library skills and her personal experiences as a
Chinese American to the demanding and rewarding work of adding personal
migration histories of Queens residents to the library’s permanent
archival collections. Queens Library, as one of four model sites for
the program, will host 40 community Memories of Migration history events
tailored to elderly immigrants from Hong Kong, Taiwan and mainland
China. In addition to Yingwen, fluent Mandarin and Cantonese speakers
will be on hand to help conduct the events and catalog the resulting
digitized materials. Our first Memories of Migration event, an oral
history workshop, was held on February 20th in conjunction
with the Queens Museum’s New New Yorkers program. Most events will be
take place at the Flushing Library, at the heart of New York City’s
largest Chinese neighborhood.
|
Workshop participants at Queens Museum, February 2016.
Because
of the many Chinese community organizations and cultural heritage
institutions in Queens dedicated to serving Chinese audiences, the
Queens Library Memories of Migration team had the opportunity to
leverage some powerful partnerships to co-host events, cross-promote and
generally leverage an already activated community. To pull all of
these programs together into one, coherent place for the public, the
Memories of Migration events will be part of a larger series called Living Memory: The Culture and Heritage of Chinese New Yorkers. Partners include the Museum of
Chinese in America (MOCA), Flushing Town Hall, Asian Americans for
Equality, the Forest Hills Asian Association, Chinese-American
Planning Council, Chinese Christian Herald Crusades, and a number of
local senior day care centers. Queens Library Board Member Eve C.
Guillergan, Esq. has joined the team as a passionate advocate, speaking
directly to participants at larger Living Memory events, like film
screenings and panel discussions, to make a case for the work the Queens
Library team is doing to document the history and cultural
contributions of the Chinese community in Queens.
(left
to right) Yingwen Huang, Queens Memory Director Natalie Milbrodt,
Queens Memory contributor Sandy Liu, Queens Library Board Member Eve C.
Guillergan Esq. and Danielle Chang at a screening of Chang's television
show, Lucky Chow at the Flushing Community Library, April 2016.
Natalie Milbrodt interviews Zhang Hongtu, March 2016. Photo by Jingyi Zhang.
The
Living Memory inaugural event was held March 14, 2016 at the Flushing
Library. The evening featured Queens Memory Director Natalie Milbrodt
who conducted an interview with artist Zhang Hongtu, as
well as a panel discussion on issues of identity in the process of
becoming American. Panel participants included New York City Councilman
Peter Koo, Jiayang Fan of The New Yorker, Prof. Peter Kwong of Hunter
College and the CUNY Graduate Center, and food writer Kian Lam Kho.
In
addition to the scanning and story sharing events scheduled
March-October of 2016, Yingwen will also be training youth volunteers of
Chinese heritage organized and hosted by Chinese Christian Herald
Crusades (CCHC) who are interested in conducting oral history interviews
with elders from their families and church community. Queens Library
staff will process the interviews, preserve them and make them
accessible to researchers.