2015.048.002 The Family Journey of Fay Chew Matsuda
Fay Chew Matsuda is the current program director at Hamilton-Madison House City Hall Senior Center. She is also an Asian American woman, a mother, a community member, an activist, and a feminist. Since 1989 she has served in the New York Chinatown History Project. She later became involved with the Museum of Chinese in America for a total of two ten-year terms. She shares many stories and ideas about Chinatown and how it has evolved. Fay also shares about her early childhood in Lower East Side, her school years at Hunter High School and Barnard College, and her career serving the community. This interview was conducted on July 9, 2015, by Nancy Yao Maasbach.

0:00 - Introduction, Work with MOCA (since 1989), the NYCHS, definition of activism, Family from Toishan, Immigrant experience led helping people, Attending competitive schools, Best friends Jewish/German, Mandarin-spoken kids with economic stable backgrounds, Racism, Growing up in the back of laundry, Attending elite girl High School and Barnard College, Becoming confident making changes, Customers called her father Charlie, Life in Lower East Side, Columbia University protests of 1968.

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11:19 - Parents positively affecting her, Mother’s way of life, Father’s career (artist, musician, laundryman, and restaurant worker), Parents being supportive, Language ability (English, Toishanese, Cantonese, and Mandarin), Interpersonal skill.

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18:18 - Feminism, Leadership, Working at Hamilton-Madison House (1972-1986), Two years in Chinatown Health Clinic (now known as Charles B. Wang Community Health Center), Joining the New York Chinatown History Project, Going back to MOCA for the second time (1997-2004), Between the two ten years at MOCA (Brooklyn Children’s Museum and the Asian American Federation of New York), Relationship with mother, Re-joining Hamilton-Madison House City Hall Senior Center.

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28:59 - Not a traditionalist, Confucius Plaza demonstrations, Seen by father at the press conference at Chatham Square near Kimlau War Memorial, Details of the demonstrations, Chinese workers were not hired in the construction site, Anticipation when she was young.

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39:45 - Her identity as Asian American woman, Observation of Chinatown, Thoughts about gentrification, Interactions with Chinese students at Hamilton-Madison House City Hall Senior Center, Diversity in the senior center (Mandarina speakers, Cantonese speakers, Toishanese speakers, and Fujianese speakers).

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48:04 - Top Three priorities to improve Chinatown: (1) Housing, (2) Development of job, (3) Racial relation, Witnessing discrimination toward non-Chinese people of color in the community, Asian American feminists (Grace Lee Boggs, Suki Terada Ports, and the first director of CPC Project Reach).

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55:39 - Asian American feminist movement, Thoughts about Asian parents’ expectations, Parents did not push her a lot, Taking the best from both Chinese and American cultures, Values passed down from parents.

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