CHINESE IN AUCKLAND. GLIMPSES
OF THEIR LIFE. OLD TRADITIONS FAILING. INFLUENCE OF THE EUROPEAN. Although the
sight of the Chinaman j working industriously in his trim garden, reckoning
change with amazing accuracy in a fruit shop or handing out the week's laundry,
is a very familiar oto Aucklanders, comparatively little is known of the local
conditions under which these I sons of the Celestial Empire are living, j f
There are at present about 400 Chinamen I in Auckland, and perhaps 10 Chinese
wives. Nearly all the others, however, have wives and children in their own
land, and are patiently adding day by day to the little hoard that will some
day enable them to go back to their homes and families. The family tie is a
very strong one with the Chinese, and their sojourn in a foreign land usually but the I stepping-stone to a return
home and prosperity among their own folk that it would be very hard to obtain
in the ordinary run of life in Chirm. The ancient traditions of the Chinese 1
still hold strong sway in some respects, jbut in others even the manners and 1
customs of the oldest Empire are waning I and undergoing the change inevitable
j when Occident and Orient come into close and continuous contact. The pigtail
has gone, and the quaintly-trousered women, with shy eyes and tiny sandalled
feet, have given place to smart young misses wearing tailored skirts and French
heels. But the average Chinaman is still the frugal, industrious worker of the
age old East; even in prosperous Auckland he still lives mainly on rice,
although his I needs in this respect, have gone unfilled for some time past on
account of the prevailing acute shortage. Chinese Delicacies. An inquiry made
yesterday as to how j local Chinese residents were faring in view of this
dietary difficulty resulted in some interesting information being given with
regard to the general trend of life amongst Chinese in Auckland. As in other I
respects, the Orientals are conforming more and more to European ideas with
regard to foods, and, although rice still is, or was until recently, their
staple diet, the white man's menu is gradually being adopted by the Chinaman. A
few traditional Chinese dishes are still regarded as a great delicacy: dried
sharks' fins are in strong demand, and luxury fare is provided at the banquets
occasionally held in Auckland. A glance at a list of delicacies forwarded from
China for local consumption revealed some weird and wonderful dishes. An item
of dried shrimps and oysters looked more or less familiar, but sugared
watermelon rind, fishes' eyes in vinegar, onions in treacle, bamboo shoots in
syrup, beche-de-mer, or sea-slugs brought to mind visions of a banquet truly
Oriental. Other items ware-.— Chinese medicines and wines, canned bean cure,
salt cucumber, hen albumen, and a quantity of the Asiatic egg" so well known to local pastrycooks. The Chinese are not given to riotous living,
but, by all accounts, local banquets lack few of the traditional delicacies
associated with these sumptuous repasts, allowance being made, of course, for those
dishes requiring ingredients which China j alone can produce. j Keeping in
Touch With Home. There is in Auckland a strong branch of the Chinese
Nationalist Society, which receives all the newspapers and current literature
of China. This is widely read by local Chinese residents, who follow the
occasionally-stormy course of home politics with keen interest. There are also
two Chinese Freemasons" societies in Auckland, in which the trend of
politics is reflected, although party feeling is apt to be little less
pronounced than is sometimes the case with regard to local politics. That is
"to say. the Celestials i usually agree to differ politely. One interesting
point mentioned yesterday by a well-known Chinese resident was that the ancient
dread of surgical operations is to a large extent dying out among Chinese living
abroad. The Chinese physician is traditionally a herbalist amputations were
unknown in China until students of the present generation migrated to the West,
where they learned Western methods of healing and treatment of the sick.
Consequently Auckland doctors frequently tend Chinese patients and perform
operations and send them to the General
Hospital in a way that would have been undreamed of among the Orientals of a
past generation. At the same time, the use of herbs is very popular, and the
only Chinese herbalist in the Dominion, who has a shop in Wellington, does a
fairly wide trade among his fellow-countrymen. Another point of interest, as
showing the general acceptance of Western ideas. is that the old tradition that
the bones of every Chinaman must be taken back to his own land is not so
inexorably observed as in the past. During the epidemic about ten Chinese
residents of Auckland died; some of these were buried in the ordinary way and
will rest for- i ever in alien soil, but the others were embalmed and provision
made for shipment I of the remains back to China. This cannot be done, however,
for at least one year after interment, and even the ultimate carrying out of
the old tradition will depend very largely upon prevailing shipping conditions.
New Zealand Herald, Volume LVI, Issue 17251, 29 August 1919, Page 9
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