Angel Island Part 1: A Haunting History

EPISODE DESCRIPTION

Welcome to Angel Island. With stunning views of San Francisco Bay and lush hiking trails, it’s nestled between the promise of the Golden Gate Bridge and California’s sun-soaked mainland coast.Colloquially known as the “Ellis Island of the West,” this tiny island processed hundreds of thousands of new immigrants between 1910 and1940. But those who landed in the San Francisco Bay received a decidedly less hospitable welcome than the European masses who disembarked in New York. Asians arriving at the Angel Island Immigration Station faced separation, interrogation, and often deportation under the longstanding Chinese Exclusion Act. 

The ghosts of Angel Island, however, endure. Poems carved into the soft wooden walls of the detention barracks give voice to long-remembered frustration, humiliation, and loneliness of the immigrants detained there. Though plastered and painted over throughout the years, these inscriptions in Chinese calligraphy link that shameful past to our present immigration debate, bringing history into the reality of our current lives.

How do you tell a story as vast, challenging, and immediate as Angel Island? You begin in the detainees' own words, of course. 

In Part One of this series, violist and founding member of the Del Sol Quartet, Charlton Lee, introduces both Angel Island's history and the creatives behind The Angel Island Project. A collaboration between Del Sol and composer Huang Ruo, this haunting and beautiful oratorio for string quartet and chamber choir weaves together poetry and music in a poignant, powerful expression of history, hope, and humanity, and has rippled into collaborations around the world. 

“The purpose of Angel Island,” says Huang Ruo, “is to create dialogues and to bring people together in hope that we treat people different from us in a better way than what happened, in hope that history will not repeat itself.”

Listen for insights and stories from collaborators, like the poet who helped translate the Angel Island poems for English-speaking audiences, the arts educator who’s preserving Asian American history for future generations, and the executive director of the Angel Island Immigration Station Foundation, whose work shines a light on a dark period in US history.

PART 1 FEATURES

Charlton Lee, Del Sol Quartet violist

Huang Ruo, Composer and conductor

Kathryn Bates, Del Sol Quartet cellist

Hyeyung Sol Yoon, Del Sol Quartet violinist

Ben Kreith, Del Sol Quartet violinist

Ed Tepporn, Executive Director, Angel Island Immigration Station Foundation

Andi Wong, Teaching Artist and Arts Advocate

Genny Lim, Poet, Playwright, Performer, Pioneer

RESOURCES

Huang Ruo

Angel Island Immigration Station

Angel Island Immigration Station Foundation

Immigrant Voices Oral History Project

Island: Poetry and History of Chinese Immigrants on Angel Island 

Genny Lim

The Last Hoisan Poets

ArtsEd4All

The Chinese Historical Society Of America

William & Flora Hewlett Foundation

UC Berkeley Global Urban Humanities Initiative


MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE

Chinese Exclusion Act Of 1882

BTS - Saturday Night Live

Michelle Yeoh

Everything Everywhere All At Once

University Of California - Berkeley

Los Alamos Laboratory

Fermilab

Santa Fe Opera

Dr. Sun Yat-sen

Calligraffiti

Flo Oy Wong

Mak Takahashi

East-West News

Him Mark Lai

Marshall Trammell

QUOTES

“It’s able to tell a story that's really hard and something that we don't always want to hear, but it's so critical to actually making us whole, even if we don't even think that story is ours.” - Emiko Ono

“One of the surprises we discovered is that the controversy over the southern border of the U.S was not originally about keeping Mexicans out, but rather, the Chinese.” - Charlton Lee

“What's also important to recognize is that the experience for immigrants was different if you were Asian versus if you were European.” - Edward Tepporn

“Immigration to this country on the West Coast for Asian Americans or Chinese Americans was a very different experience than you often read in the history books, of everybody coming to America, and you are greeted by the Statue of Liberty.” - Andi Wong

“That chapter on Angel Island is so graphic. I mean, you can walk in there and just feel that history. You could feel the ghosts, you could smell the wood, you could see the calligraphy.” - Genny Lim

LEARN MORE

https://www.delsolquartet.com/podcast

Del Sol Quartet on Spotify

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YouTube

CREDITS

Hosted by Charlton Lee

Produced by Andrea Klunder, The Creative Impostor Studios, Charlton Lee, Kathryn Bates, Hyeyung Sol Yoon, Ben Kreith

Story Editor: Andrea Klunder

Sound Design: Andrea Klunder

Technical Director & Post Production Audio: Edwin R. Ruiz

Field Producer & Recording Engineer: Kathryn Bates

Field Producer: Verena Lee

Podcast Manager: Alex Riegler

Show Notes: Lisa Widder

Cover Art: Felicia Lee

Theme Music: composed by Charlton Lee, performed by Del Sol Quartet

Executive Producers: Andrea Fellows Fineberg, Don Fineberg

Featured music from The Angel Island Oratorio composed by Huang Ruo. Performed by Del Sol Quartet & United States Air Force Band's Singing Sergeants / National Museum of Asian Art, Smithsonian Institution, recording and edited by Suraya Mohamed.

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Hyeyung Sol Yoon