Legacy of Canada’s ban on Chinese immigration lasted longer than the law
OTTAWA — When Matthew Yan looks at the stoic and determined expression on his father’s face in the black and white photo affixed to the identification papers he carried for decades, he mostly feels pity.
The photo features Bing Sun Jun in borrowed clothes: a grown man’s suit sagging on his adolescent shoulders, making him look far older than his 13 years.
The boy’s jaw is set and his eyes are focused, as if he’s trying to be the man he’s been dressed up to be.
It’s the face of a person Yan scarcely got to know.