Courtesy of Calvin Ong
Calvin Ong today
Imagine leaving your family and friends to move to a new country. You don’t speak the language, and you know almost no one there. To get to your new home, you have to spend 18 days at sea on a ship crowded with strangers.
That’s what 10-year-old Calvin Ong did in 1937, when he said goodbye to his mother and brother in China and headed to California. He planned to start a new life with his father, who had moved there before Ong was born.
“America was a land of opportunity,” says Ong, now 93.
But he soon found out that the American dream wouldn’t be easy to achieve. His first stop in the U.S. was Angel Island near San Francisco. The immigration station there was built to keep out immigrants from Asia, not welcome them.