Guangdong Province
Before World War II, 90 percent of the Chinese immigrants who reached the United States came from an area the size of Rhode Island (1,231 square miles or about 3,150 square kilometers) in China's Guangdong Province1. Toishan County sent so many immigrants to New York City's Chinatown that until the 1960's fluency in the Toishanese dialect was required of the Chinese consulate in New York2. People from Toishan and the other areas around Guangdong's capital Guangzhou (Canton) were separated from China's central authority by thousands of miles and differences in the spoken language, but they were close to large seaports, including Hong Kong. Geographic and cultural isolation coupled with access to departure routes provided early migrants some impetus to leave. Political unrest and lack of economic opportunity were also motivating factors. As established Chinese boasting of American wealth or suffering from loneliness encouraged their family members and neighbors to follow them across the ocean by any possible means, the United States saw a large influx of immigrants from a small area of China.
Fujian Province
Today, the majority of emigrants departing for destinations around the globe originate in an area the size of Delaware (2,396 square miles or about 6,133 square kilometers) in China's Fujian (Fukien) Province3. The current situation in Fujian parallels the nineteenth century migration from its neighboring province Guangdong. The mountainous region of Fujian lies north of Guangdong and across the Taiwan Strait from Taiwan. The Communists were careful to place state industries out of the reach of Taiwan 4, and as a result Fujian became a leader in economic liberalization. The placement of export industries into coastal areas also contributed to a successful Fujianese economy. Fujian supplements light industry with natural resources such as coal, iron, limestone, hydroelectricity, forestry and fishing and traditional crops such as rice, sugar, tea and fruit5. Only Guangdong is considered richer.
Two distinct sub-cultures exist in Fujian. Different dialects are used in the area around the major ports of Fuzhou and Xiamen (Amoy). In Fuzhou, Fujian's capital a dialect of Chinese is spoken which is unintelligible not only to speakers of Mandarin and Cantonese, but also to speakers of Minanhua (Southern Min dialect), which is prevalent in Xiamen and Taiwan.
Fuzhou City
Fuzhou, the capital city of Fujian Province, has 1.5 million registered inhabitants and an estimated "floating population" of 250,0006. Substantial urbanization has been caused by the conversion of farmland around Fuzhou into industrial or special economic zones. Displaced workers from inland China also come into Fuzhou hoping for economic opportunity.
The people from the Fuzhou area have a long history of restless seafaring. The first Triad San Lian Hui originated near Fuzhou7. Criminal networks use contacts developed through historical smuggling of illegal goods to smuggle people out of China. Most of the illegal emigrants come from the counties around Fuzhou rather than from the city itself, apparently because the city's residents average higher levels of education and income than do the people from the surrounding area8, in places such as Changle, Lianjiang, and Fuqin.
Fuqin City
Fuqin City is composed of 21 towns and lies on the coast near Pingtan County, which has a reputation for sending illegal immigrants to nearby Taiwan. Fuqin has abundant factory work; nevertheless many residents leave to seek economic opportunity elsewhere13. Residents of Fuqin traditionally immigrated illegally to Japan, but following the Asian financial crisis, increasing numbers of people from Fuqin have tried to enter the United States illegally14.
Wenzhou City, Zhejiang Province
Residents of Wenzhou have immigrated to form large communities in Europe, especially in France, Italy and the Netherlands. The area has now become the second-largest Chinese source of illegal immigration to the United States15. In 1993, when 10 Chinese illegal immigrants drowned after the Golden Venture ran aground just outside New York Harbor, 40 of the 286 passengers who tried to swim ashore came from around Wenzhou16.
Wenzhou City is one of the largest cities in Zhejiang province. Though the province of Zhejiang is largely mountainous and isolated, it has a diverse economy. Zhejiang produces more tea than any other province and has a wide variety of manufactures, including paper, silk textiles, generators and large appliances17. As in Guangdong and Fujian, the economic success of Zhejiang seems to fuel rather than dampen emigration.
Conclusion
From Guangdong, Fujian and Wenzhou decades of illegal
immigration to the United States have originated from the East Coast of China. Cantonese immigrants have been supplanted by the Fujianese as the dominant group in U.S. Chinatowns. In the future, large Wenzhounese communities may replace the Fujianese communities.
-- Researched and compiled by Karen Mah, Washington File staff writer
Notes:
1 Peter Kwong, Forbidden Workers: Illegal Chinese Immigrants and American Labor (New York: New Press, 1997), p. 92. (back)
10 Willard H. Myers III, "Of Qinqing, Qinshu, Guanxi
and Shetou: The Dynamic Elements of Chinese Irregular Population Movement," Human Smuggling: Chinese Migrant Trafficking and the Challenge to
America's Migration Tradition, Paul J. Smith, ed. (Washington, D.C.: The Center for Strategic and International Studies, 1997) p. 119. (back)