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Nick G.

Diamond

Celebration

Diamond

Resilience

Diamond

Solidarity

Diamond

Resistance

When I first moved to the San Francisco Bay Area I began to uncover the immigration stories of my family. I learned that my great grandfather migrated from Southern China in the 1910s to the United States to work as a farm laborer in Salinas, CA hoping to secure resources for his family back home. Following his father, my grandfather immigrated to the United States in 1940 to begin his life as a bachelor in a new society, and found himself living in San Francisco Chinatown at 48 Spofford Street before he moved to Texas. When World War II broke out, he served as a line cook abroad serving and cooking meals for his battalion. I didn’t have a chance to meet my grandfather to ask him about his experience in the army, but believe he may have served as a way to show his loyalty to a country that struggle to accept him during a time of Chinese Exclusion – a form of Asian hate & discrimination at the time. After the war was over he returned home to be with his wife and children in Texas. He settled down and ran a grocery story with his family.

Little did my family know, 80 years later I would find myself moving to the Bay Area to work in San Francisco Chinatown an organizer and tour guide just downhill from where grandfather began his journey in the States. Today, I honor my family’s legacy by partnering and advocating with the community through my work at Chinese for Affirmative Action (CAA), a co-founding partner of Stop AAPI Hate.

One way I honor my family and the AAPI community is through leading CAA’s Justice Walk. This past spring, my team and I developed an interactive walking tour of San Francisco Chinatown to showcase the power of community organizing, resilience, and resistance capturing almost 150 years of history. We built community partnerships, asked questions of why Chinatown’s exist, and explored snapshots of the Civil Rights Era. I was inspired to lead this project after learning about countless moments of Asian American activism in the Bay and how it had rippling impacts across the nation for equity and justice. These are the stories that must be told and shared with the community. I hope programs like this can inspire and launch us into direct action for racial justice while holding with intension the complexity and power of our collective experiences when we are in movement together.