Canada’s Chinese diaspora: How the Tiananmen Square protests changed Vancouver
STORY BY PAIGE JASMINE GILMAR
“It was the end of innocence and idealism in a way,” political science professor Yves Tiberghien wrote to UBC News, the University of British Columbia’s communications’ hub. “The sense of hope and infinite possibility, the fresh idealism of the mid-1980s is gone.”
That idealism, however, was not just gone after the Tiananmen Square protests, it was trampled, shot and wiped clean by martial law in the public space in China’s capital. It was an effective end to any hope for greater freedoms in the country and, to some, a better future. And as Asian communities throughout Canada commemorate the 34th anniversary this month of the infamous protests and massacre, they also stopped to remember the day that also impacted Canada’s cultural makeup.
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