By Emily Maxwell
Jan. 24, 2023
"Reclaiming Denver's Chinatown" was inspired by an email Linda Lung sent to the Office of Storytelling in early 2021 regarding her family’s story and the lack of representation of Chinese families in Western history. Since one of the missions of the office is to share the stories of underrepresented communities often left out of history books, the team jumped at the opportunity to dig deeper.
As is often the case for storytelling about Denver’s marginalized communities, research yielded few items about Chinese living in the city in the late 19th century, only about a dozen photographs and a plethora of racist newspaper articles and illustrations.
The majority of the historic imagery used in the documentary came from interviewees’ personal archives. Sisters Linda Jew and Carolyn G. Kuhn had conducted exhaustive research into their family’s legacy over the years, which included the contributions of their great-grandfather Chin Lin Sou, whose stained glass portrait is featured in the Colorado State Capitol.
“The reason my sister Carolyn did all this research was because of her daughter and our cousins’ children. They don't know anything about this,” Jew said. “Even my cousins, my generation, many of them don't know the story.”
Jew connects her family’s silence to the pain of the racism earlier generations endured.
“I'm sure it was not something they want to remember,” she said. “It was tough times for them.”
Many featured in the documentary spoke about their own family’s manner of dealing with racism even after living multiple generations in Colorado. Ahmoy, the Lung family matriarch, stressed the importance of assimilating. The entire family attended Christian churches and wore more American style clothing. Their Chinese traditions and customs were kept private.
“The Chinese Exclusion Act was not even repealed until 1943,” said Lung. “We just didn't want to make a big issue out of a lot of things. We weren't going to rock the boat.”
The Office of Storytelling set out to do a short video on the history of Denver’s Chinatown but quickly realized the stories warranted more. In the end, we created a 50-minute documentary that celebrates the legacies of these families, their contributions to the West and the resilience of subsequent generations, and four short films about the individuals we interviewed.
The storytelling coincided with national discourse about the history of Chinatowns across the West. In April 2022, Denver Mayor Michael B. Hancock issued a formal apology for the city’s racist actions and lack of accountability during the anti-Chinese race riot of 1880. Denver was the fifth city in the country and the first outside of California to express such remorse. The event made international headlines, and descendants featured in “Reclaiming Denver’s Chinatown” were recognized and honored. The Storytelling Team was proud to include the ceremony in the film, as well as a follow-up in which a racist plaque was removed from a building in LoDo.
In August 2022, filming wrapped up. Three months later, the documentary premiered at the 45th Denver Film Festival. Local, regional and international media outlets, including China Global Television Network, wrote about the film.
Since then, numerous groups have reached out to ask the Storytelling Team to screen the film for their community. Stay tuned for an opportunity near you.
You can watch “Reclaiming Denver’s Chinatown” in the YouTube video above. You can also explore the individual stories of the families featured in the documentary in the four YouTube videos below.