Monday, January 19, 2009

Lost In Transliteration

[Intro] | Life Began In Saigon City [Previous] |
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NGUYÊN QUÁN: QUẢNG ĐÔNG - TRUNG QUỐC

[stating the Guangdong (廣東) province of Greater China (中國) as the country of origin]

It was a line of engraving on my grand-uncle's tombstone that inspired me to take a closer look into our family history.

Where it started...with a name

Grand-uncle, Tao Vien (Tào Viễn), was born Tao Cuu (Tào Cửu), to a younger brother of great-grandmother whose name is Tao Su (Tào Sự). Whereas grand-father, Thoi Hon (Thôi Hơn), was born Thai Hung (Thái Hưng 蔡興) to great-grandfather named Thai Nhat (Thái Nhật 蔡日).

Thời Thôi Thái - A common case of "off" transliteration


The Thai [蔡] (Vietnamese National script Quốc ngữ: Thái, Cantonese Chinese romanization: Choi) surname is pronounced as Choi or in variations of Tsai, Tsoi or Tsui.

One could have guessed, things would get lost; especially, in the process of mapping the sounding of word in one language to the equivalent scripting of the same word in another language. And that our family name was not among the avoidable ones!

As a result, the Thai surname was transliterated and registered as Thoi (in Vietnamese Thôi instead of Thái).

Yet in spite of the transliteration spelling mistake, we take pride in our special family name and come to accept the writing in both ways, Thoi or Thai.

But what has cracked us up the most was the way a nurse at the Cho Ray (Chợ Rẫy) Hospital calling out our last name as "Thời." Even though we were at the hospital for physical checkup in fulfilling the requirement of medical examination for immigration to the States decades ago, we often recall the event every one and a while as it is a part of our history behind the name.

[Intro] | Life Began In Saigon City [Previous] |
[Next] |

Sunday, January 11, 2009

Life Began In Saigon City

[Intro] | Starting Anew [Previous] |
Lost In Transliteration [Next]

On a business trip to the Saigon’s Chinatown District of Cho Lon, grandfather was introduced by a friend to meet up with a Singaporean businessman named Sai Tung, who owned block after block of real estates in the Chinatown District which he rented out to various shop owners.

At the time, Mr. Sai Tung was interested in hiring someone to take over the job of collecting monthly rents and running his daily errands. Convinced by grandfather’s fluency in both Vietnamese and Cantonese, he immediately offered grandfather the job. Taking on the job meant that grandfather had to move his family to Saigon and Mr. Sai Tung had agreed to let grandfather and his family living in the two stories house, number 31 on Nguyen Cong Tru Street, located in the Saigon’s District 1. By day, it was Mr. Sai Tung’s office. By night, it became home for the Thai family.

And this time around, it was grandfather leading his family adjusting to the new life in the city.

[Intro] | Starting Anew [Previous] |
Lost In Transliteration [Next]

Starting Anew

Intro: Long Distance Travelers [Previous] |
Life Began In Saigon City [Next]

Came to settle in the Mekong Delta region of southern Viet Nam, great grandparents were determined to make it in Ba Dua, a town of Cai Lay district in the Tien Giang province.

After taken on a job at the local meat processor, great grandfather found a means to support his family of a wife, two children and a younger brother-in-law. Together, the small family managed to adjust to the new life in unfamiliar surroundings of people, places and culture that were quite different from the southern China coastal province of Guangdong, where the family was originally from.

With the birth of grandfather, Ba Dua was no longer just a town to live and make a living. It became the place one would long for whenever s/he is far way.

Intro: Long Distance Travelers [Previous] |
Life Began In Saigon City [Next]

Long Distance Travelers

[Next] | Starting Anew

Though it is cliché, one cannot help to say "life is a journey." Whether the journey is considered as changes in physical location or to be comprised of living events, what matters most to life travelers is the ability to immerse in the culture of a place and how they would interact, endure, overcome and live out their life.

Since family stories tended to be told often without a specific date and time, the actual beginning of a family history is usually unknown. As for our family history, there is no difference. There are stories about ordinary people, like many others, who had traveled through life and I’m just a representation of their continuation.

Documented here is a collection of stories resulting from my ongoing research in preservation of family history for members of the younger generation - nieces and nephews - to carry it forward.

Starting Anew
...in Ba Dua, a town of Cai Lay district in the Tien Giang province

Life Began in Saigon City
Number 31 on Nguyen Cong Tru Street

Lost In Transliteration
Guangdong, China


To be continued...


[Next] | Starting Anew
PLEASE RESPECT ONE'S WORK BY CITING THE ORIGINAL SOURCE.