Snapshots of the Migration Estrangement That Tore My Asian-American Family Apart
<p>In an unmarked manila envelope that smells of mildew, I discover letters from opposite sides of my family’s Chinese-American divide. One is from my paternal great-grandfather W. Herbert Trescott, the other from my grandfather Liu Chengyu. These two consolation notes are emblematic of the divisions within families that so often occur as a result of what I’ve come to call <em>migration estrangement</em>.</p>
<p>Especially in the last century, when one generation set sail for a foreign country, many lost forever the family members left behind. In my family, this estrangement began even before geographic migration, with the crossing of cultural boundaries.</p>
<p><a href="https://humanparts.medium.com/snapshots-of-the-migration-estrangement-that-tore-my-asian-american-family-apart-f09d7b1ee5f8"><strong>Visit Now</strong></a></p>