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Culture

Portraits of perseverance(3)

1
2016-10-25 11:02China Daily Editor: Xu Shanshan ECNS App Download
A newly wed Chinese couple in 1975 by Ronald D Wolf at a Beijing exhibition focusing on the history of Chinese migrants in New Zealand.(Photo provided to China Daily)

A newly wed Chinese couple in 1975 by Ronald D Wolf at a Beijing exhibition focusing on the history of Chinese migrants in New Zealand.(Photo provided to China Daily)

He settled in Nelson, New Zealand in 1842, and became the first recorded Chinese migrant to that country.

Large groups of Chinese from southern Guangdong province followed in the 1860s, prompted by a gold rush in the Otago region.

"After the gold rush faded, the green grocery became a common business for Chinese migrants," says Li. "These groceries not only sold vegetables and fruit, but also functioned as job agencies and banks, which helped people remit money to China."

Some Chinese tycoons were nurturing when it came to Chinese migrants. For instance, Choie Sew Hoy in Dunedin, a principal city in Otago, first offered immigration information and sold instruments to gold miners, and gradually established a business empire.

His family, now in its sixth generation in New Zealand, still plays an important role today.

  

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