Campus, Community, Faculty, Students

Puget Sound's first Taiwan Culture Night brings Chinese community together

Aimee Roseberry 鈥21 stepped off the plane in Taiwan and panicked. As a double major in sociology and anthropology and Chinese, she had two years of Chinese language classes behind her, but was still overwhelmed by the sudden immersion into the language. 鈥淚 just remember thinking, 鈥淥h my God, I don鈥檛 know Chinese,鈥 she recalls. 鈥淚t felt like I was totally lost.鈥

It was June, and she was heading to Tunghai University for Puget Sound鈥檚 Taiwan Summer Program鈥攁n eight-week language-intensive study abroad experience. From the next two months, Aimee and her four Puget Sound classmates would be immersed in Chinese language and culture. They would speak and hear only Chinese in the classroom, room with native Taiwanese students, and experience the culture firsthand.

鈥淚t became way easier with the immersion,鈥 Roseberry says. 鈥淚t was intimidating, but I loved it.鈥

Taiwanese rapper Dr. T.

Taiwanese rapper Dr. T. performs during Taiwan Culture Night.

Back in Washington and in the classrooms of Puget Sound鈥檚 Asian Studies Program, Aimee is continued her studies. But her instructor, Lo Sun 鈥淟otus鈥 Perry, who started the university鈥檚 Chinese language program and oversees the Taiwan Summer Program, believes that learning in a classroom is not enough. 鈥淭he hope is for my students to be able to interact,鈥 she says. So this year she organized Puget Sound鈥檚 first-ever Taiwan Culture Night, held on Feb. 15. Her goal was to give students like Aimee a space to connect with other summer program alumni, students interested in Taiwanese culture, and members of the local Chinese community. The event featured a performance by Taiwanese rapper Dr. T, traditional Taiwanese food (including boba and rice balls), and a movie screening.

鈥淲e have had students studying abroad through the Taiwan program every summer since 1989,鈥 Perry says. 鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to get our students from the program together in one room and give them a venue to talk about their experiences and those interested in that. It鈥檚 really an opportunity to create that space for people to get to know each other a little better.鈥

It was also an opportunity to be reminded of Tacoma鈥檚 history and its expulsion of Chinese immigrants in 1885. On a November morning that year, an angry mob forced hundreds of the city鈥檚 Chinese citizens onto a train bound for Portland, Ore. Their homes and businesses were burned days later. The expulsion came to be known as the Tacoma Method and its effects were far-reaching. Chinese residents did not settle in Tacoma again until the 1940s and the city still does not have a Chinatown district.

鈥淏ecause of that, it鈥檚 kind of hard to become immersed in the culture,鈥 Perry says. 鈥淥ne of the goals was to bring in members of the Chinese community and say, 鈥楬ey, look. There are people here who speak Chinese.鈥欌

More than 140 people from the university and greater Seattle-Tacoma area attended Taiwan Culture Night, and Perry says she would like to make the it an annual event. 鈥淚t鈥檚 all about creating a fun, cocurricular activity connected to what students are learning in the classroom,鈥 Perry says. 鈥淭hrough food, crafts, and music, I hope students think a little bit deeper and pursue something that interests them.鈥