Hi everyone! We are so thrilled to announce that following the success of our Fuzhou video series, we are hosting a group trip to China in December this year that includes Fuzhou, Quanzhou, Xiamen, Guangdong, Taishan, Shantou, and Chaozhou as destinations of the trip because many Chinese Americans can trace their roots back to Fujian or Guangdong provinces. This group trip (10 participants plus Yongjian and Grace) is targeted towards overseas Chinese who haven’t had much exposure to China and want to explore various cities in China with others who hope to rediscover their Chinese roots. If you are interested in joining us on this trip, please apply on our website: fromrootstobridges.com
Congratulations! To you and your family. An insightful present so wonderful to learn in our biased and uninformed world about China, thank you! Please continue to honor, enjoy, and share your heritage with an exceptional bicultural perspective......for years to come...........
Seeing your grandparents' and mom's excitement serving you food, showing you the temple with your name, and their childhood growing up is precious ❤ Thank you and your family for sharing more about yourselves with us!! And I cannot believe your mom would sleep on a slab of rock!!! 🤯
Oh I loved this so very much! My family comes from Idaho, USA, and before that, from Britain, Denmark, Sweden, and Germany. I just love that you were able to visit your hometown and that so many buildings were still there to see and recapture memories with! Our family histories are so important , aren’t they? They give us a root, and help us to see the shoulders we stood on in order to be where we are today. I often think of my pioneer ancestors and I am filled with gratitude and awe for the hardships they lived through and the efforts they put forth so that I can be standing where I am now. I feel like we have a debt to pay to those ancestors, and we should try to honor their efforts by living good lives and being good people, so that our own children, grandchildren, and great grandchildren can be also live better happy lives. I don’t mean by money, because while that’s useful , I think family happiness is more important. Thank you for this wonderful video ~ I hope your children and grandchildren will appreciate your efforts as well! What a lovely village and family that you came from. God bless you! ❤❤❤
Thank you for sharing your story and family’s history. I’m also from FuZhou and grew up in a very similar situation. I can’t wait for the opportunity to go back and visit where my family originated from.
My name is Hu Qing Rong. I am a Malaysian Chinese. My grandparents were from Gutien, Fuzhou. We all still speak Fuzhounese in our small town(Sitiawan, Perak, Malaysia). Love this video, making me want to go visit Gutien, Fuzhou. Thanks for sharing your ancestral village.
Hi Hu Qing Rong! We are actually in Malaysia right now (Penang) for the next few weeks or so and we would love to come visit you in Sitiawan to learn more about the Fuzhounese community in Malaysia. Can you email us at graceandyongjian@gmail.com? Thank you!
Hi Grace, thank you so much for sharing your story. My dad immigrated from Fuzhou to the US in the 90s and I visited when I was 2. I don’t really know much about my Chinese heritage but I’d love to be able to visit with him someday to explore my story.
Thanks for these amazing videos, Grace! It's clear how much heart and effort you put into each one, and they just keep getting better and better. - bleu
love the video! My family on my mom's side is actually from the same village, really cool to see all the progress the village has gone through. Thanks for sharing
ON THE EDGE OF MY SEAT when I saw you breaking the news to your managers and parents!! I'm so happy everyone is cheering for you!! Much love from SF you both ❤
I’m Canadian but I lived in China for 8 years and I love it. I’m not there now but I plan to go back to visit. In the past year I’ve been to Hong Kong and Shanghai. I went to Xiamen once and took a ferry to Taiwan. I’m going to Taiwan again this summer. Thanks for the video!
My ancestral home is in Clayton New York. I grew up there and visit there often, Last summer I visited there with my girlfriend, Meiyue, and daughter, Xinlin. They grew up in a little town near Fuzhou, much like the place where you grew up. Until I met her I had never even heard of Fujian. Since then I ask my Chinese friends where they're from and many say Fujian. Meiyue, Xinlin and I are visiting China in the summer or 2025 and we will go to the town where she grew up too. Thank you for your video.
Very interesting. I just have seen a minute ago the video in wich the blogger Ryan Lin tell his story. Lin was born in a village near Fuzhou, lives in NYC and after ten years he returned to visit his family in that village, missing old times. It's amazing that his video shows two images similar to this video...
I’m from a nearby village called MinAnTing, similar to your parents, I left there when I was very young. My children are around your age, but do not speak much Chinese. Your video is very inspiring, i wish to take them there someday and get them interested in finding their root!
Great document - thanks! I am Fuzhounese in Singapore. My dad was from the Gan’Jia village, literally Sugarcane village. I feel nostalgic when you showed the red yeast wine chicken. We grew up eating this yummy dish with mee’sua. Plus Fuzhou fishballs (with minced meat in them) as well as Yan dumplings. Yan, according to my mom, is pork, pressed down and spread out so thinly to dry on wicker trays. Upon drying, they are smeared with flour and is so thin and translucent. They are trimmed into oblong pieces, whilst the leftovers can be used as just strips to flavour and thicken soups. The rectangular Yan is further cut into smaller pieces to wrap more meat and made into Yan dumplings. And of course this comment wouldn’t be complete about my mom, who was a local Fujian girl, learnt how to make Fuzhou red yeast wine and lees… the indispensable ingredients for hearty bowlfuls of the renowned Fuzhou dish mentioned earlier… the Fuzhou red yeast wine chicken broth with mee’sua - including lots and lots of love, then, more love. Shalom, memories from a Fuzhounese descendant in Singapore
Aww thank you so much sharing all these culinary knowledge that your family passed down. We are actually traveling in Malaysia and Singapore soon and would love to connect and learn more about the Fuzhounese communities here. Could you please email us at graceandyongjian@gmail.com? Thanks and looking forward to hearing from you!
Hi guys! What a beautiful video you made😁 we are enjoying watching your content! Thanks for sharing this sweet story of your family! We would LOVE to visit China soon 🥰 Many greetings from Sunshine House in Penang, Alex and Coni
So many Fuzhou pioneers here. I'm also from Ma Wei District though it seems from another neighborhood because there are high-rise condos there now. My neighborhood is near the Min River.
I love this!! So cool to see the preservation of the Fuzhounese villages! Until I make way back to Fuzhou, I’m living vicariously through your travels ❤️❤️
In the bad old days as far as several centuries ago due to war and famine in China. Many people along the coastal provinces migrated to overseas mainly Southeast Asia. my forefather was one of them from Zhong San Canton. He went to Singapore and my father was borne there and so was I. My hunch is, with the development of a more affluent and stronger China as we have seen in recent decades. I think more ethnic Chinese living overseas will pay homage to their ancestry land ! Enjoyed viewing your video. Thanks.
Now spelt in Pinyin as: Fuzhou. Used to be spelt: Foochow. These are exonyms, in Mandarin, in that that's not how they refer to themselves in the Fuzhou dialect. In the Fujian (Hokkien) areas further south, who speak the Minnan dialect, we refer to Fuzhou as: Hockchew.
Just stumbled on your TH-cam video. It resonated with me. A friend is actually visiting her Fuzhou roots so I shared the link with her. Double resonance! Good Job!
hi I am a fujianese living in ninde city , i like to watch travel vlog on youtube , nice to see your video in coincident , it really conveys the efforts of old immigrate generation
It's really stories of all over sea Chinese, individual story may vary, life were sure hard in China for many generations before and we all span out to all over the world but our roots are deep and our drive resolute! Not forgetting where you're from ground us even if we manage to achieve our individual accomplishment all over the world! We're all Chinese and we all share same heritage even many generations apart and may not understand each other dialect!
I love your video grace . I didn't know that Fuzhou Village could be like this I knew about Shanghai, Chongqing is so modern But Fuzhou is ..... By the way I love Fuzhou and i would like to visit there one day
My family’s ancestral homes are actually close by in shan tou and chang an. My grandparents now live in guangtou for convenience sake but it was an experience seeing the ancestral homes and seeing the actual city of Fuzhou in how different they are. Overall huge culture shock visiting from America, I always wonder what life would be like if my family stayed in Fuzhou
That's so cool! Your family's ancestral homes are not too far away from mine! I agree, it is definitely a surreal experience seeing our families' ancestral homes and I often wonder as well what my life would have been like if my family stayed in Fuzhou
Thank you for your support William!! We are actually traveling around Malaysia right now and would love to learn more about the Fuzhounese communities in both Sitiawan and Sibu. Could you please email us at graceandyongjian@gmail.com? We would love to visit a Fuzhounese community here feature it in our of our videos.
WOW...love this..i had a student tenant once from Fuzhou. Never did ask him much as he was busy studying and we were busy with our jobs, Only when i met my wife's friend whose ancestors were from Fuzhou did i noticed her culture were a little different from ours. They love the noodles made with red wine. I had a chance to taste the fuzhounese sausage. It was really tasty. I am a hokkien mself and never visited Fujian myself. Perhaps one day we will visit our ancestors' village in Xiamen.
wow i can see my grandparents house from ur video. Both of them passed aways few years ago, but i still visit changbing everytime when i get the chance to visit China
Hakka people values his Hakka identity more than his Chinese identity, I have seen that in Indonesia as the museum built was called the Hakka museum in Jakarta, not called the Chinese museum or the Fujian /Guangdong museum (their source)
It looks like a small town rather than a village. It is still considered new if it was built in the 1950s. My ancestral village building in kaiping, Guangdong is over 150 years old.
Grace: May I suggest you are very lucky your parents are proud enough of their heritage to speak the Fuzhou dialect at home, so that you and your brother can also speak it. Your trip to your ancestral village has more meaning to you than the children of Chinese parents who choose not to speak to their children their own tongue. I see many many case here in Australia: Chinese parents speaking only English to their children. Many, I suppose, are not proud to be Chinese.
I love Chinese people. There's a lot of Chinese-Filipinos whose great grandparents were from Fujian, China. I myself is a Filipino with around 1/8% Chinese blood but I hate how China treats its neighbor countries. I just hope and pray that China will be nicer to its neighbors because after all most its own people are living all over the East and Southeast Asia.
You have a very misinformed view of the Chinese, mostly propagated by the West. For example, if you think China is being aggressive to Taiwan, then you are taking the view that Taiwan is an independent country. Taiwan is part of China, deliberately kept apart by the Americans. Over the last 70 or so years, because of their separation, the Chinese in Taiwan developed a local identity - considering themselves Taiwanese. If you speak Taiwanese, you are speaking the Hokkien dialect. Your Chinese ancestor probably came from Jinjiang (Chin Kang locally) would be speaking close to Taiwanese.
You should learn about the history of China's first transoceanic ships which were also the world's first, they aided many countries, including the Philippines. At the time, China was the only country with ships capable of sailing on huge areas of open sea; if you don't believe this, check into how Ming Dynasty China had massive sail ships sailing all over the South China Sea when no other countries could; Europeans hadn't learned to build transoceanic ships until China taught them!! This is widely documented and supported by international historians. Wherever Chinese ships went to, the ship men never invaded any local people; they brought Chinese goods to exchange with the locals. Some sailors stayed behind and did not return to China, instead settling down among the locals; perhaps this is how your Chinese ancestors landed in the Philippines. Don't be fooled by the Philippines and U$A governments; what they accuse China of is false.
You and your friend Tammy are probably related. If you do a DNA test, you’ll probably see you share the same great grandparent or great great grandparent.
Since china open door 78 ,Hence During mid 80 large Numbers Fuzhonese 福州 , fu qing ,福清 going to usa as migrants workers seeking better life in usa ... Since then currently Fuzhoniese New Yorker as second generation .. Before that Cantonese either from guanzhou or Hong Konger much earlier explore anywhere in usa cities or Uk .. widely spoken Cantonese. 目前都是 😅 *Putonghua*
Fukien was a monstrous transliteration of Fujian in the olden days. If you ask a local in Xiamen(Amoy) or Quanzhou(Chuan Chew): "Excuse me, are you Fukienese?", he won't have any idea what you are talking about.
Hi everyone! We are so thrilled to announce that following the success of our Fuzhou video series, we are hosting a group trip to China in December this year that includes Fuzhou, Quanzhou, Xiamen, Guangdong, Taishan, Shantou, and Chaozhou as destinations of the trip because many Chinese Americans can trace their roots back to Fujian or Guangdong provinces.
This group trip (10 participants plus Yongjian and Grace) is targeted towards overseas Chinese who haven’t had much exposure to China and want to explore various cities in China with others who hope to rediscover their Chinese roots.
If you are interested in joining us on this trip, please apply on our website:
fromrootstobridges.com
Congratulations! To you and your family. An insightful present so wonderful to learn in our biased and uninformed world about China, thank you! Please continue to honor, enjoy, and share your heritage with an exceptional bicultural perspective......for years to come...........
Seeing your grandparents' and mom's excitement serving you food, showing you the temple with your name, and their childhood growing up is precious ❤ Thank you and your family for sharing more about yourselves with us!! And I cannot believe your mom would sleep on a slab of rock!!! 🤯
Oh I loved this so very much! My family comes from Idaho, USA, and before that, from Britain, Denmark, Sweden, and Germany. I just love that you were able to visit your hometown and that so many buildings were still there to see and recapture memories with! Our family histories are so important , aren’t they? They give us a root, and help us to see the shoulders we stood on in order to be where we are today. I often think of my pioneer ancestors and I am filled with gratitude and awe for the hardships they lived through and the efforts they put forth so that I can be standing where I am now. I feel like we have a debt to pay to those ancestors, and we should try to honor their efforts by living good lives and being good people, so that our own children, grandchildren, and great grandchildren can be also live better happy lives. I don’t mean by money, because while that’s useful , I think family happiness is more important.
Thank you for this wonderful video ~ I hope your children and grandchildren will appreciate your efforts as well! What a lovely village and family that you came from. God bless you! ❤❤❤
I am so glad that you are willing to travel to your parents’ home country and made this amazing video ❤
Thank you for sharing your story and family’s history. I’m also from FuZhou and grew up in a very similar situation. I can’t wait for the opportunity to go back and visit where my family originated from.
My name is Hu Qing Rong. I am a Malaysian Chinese. My grandparents were from Gutien, Fuzhou. We all still speak Fuzhounese in our small town(Sitiawan, Perak, Malaysia). Love this video, making me want to go visit Gutien, Fuzhou. Thanks for sharing your ancestral village.
Hi Hu Qing Rong! We are actually in Malaysia right now (Penang) for the next few weeks or so and we would love to come visit you in Sitiawan to learn more about the Fuzhounese community in Malaysia. Can you email us at graceandyongjian@gmail.com? Thank you!
@@GraceandYJ , check your email.
Hi Grace, thank you so much for sharing your story. My dad immigrated from Fuzhou to the US in the 90s and I visited when I was 2. I don’t really know much about my Chinese heritage but I’d love to be able to visit with him someday to explore my story.
Thanks for these amazing videos, Grace! It's clear how much heart and effort you put into each one, and they just keep getting better and better.
- bleu
My dad comes from the same village as your mom. It’s so nice to see that village being shown.😊
I can tell by you last name li😂
What a coincidence! I wonder if we are related 😂
love the video! My family on my mom's side is actually from the same village, really cool to see all the progress the village has gone through. Thanks for sharing
ON THE EDGE OF MY SEAT when I saw you breaking the news to your managers and parents!! I'm so happy everyone is cheering for you!! Much love from SF you both ❤
wow, thank you for sharing your story. i feel like i was able to learn so much about your family history.
please continue to share and storytell ❤️
I'm so glad you enjoyed hearing about our family's story! We will def keep up the storytelling format! 💞
That is NUTS that you and Tammy met! What are the odds?! I love it
I’m Canadian but I lived in China for 8 years and I love it. I’m not there now but I plan to go back to visit. In the past year I’ve been to Hong Kong and Shanghai. I went to Xiamen once and took a ferry to Taiwan. I’m going to Taiwan again this summer. Thanks for the video!
My ancestral home is in Clayton New York. I grew up there and visit there often, Last summer I visited there with my girlfriend, Meiyue, and daughter, Xinlin. They grew up in a little town near Fuzhou, much like the place where you grew up. Until I met her I had never even heard of Fujian. Since then I ask my Chinese friends where they're from and many say Fujian. Meiyue, Xinlin and I are visiting China in the summer or 2025 and we will go to the town where she grew up too. Thank you for your video.
Very interesting. I just have seen a minute ago the video in wich the blogger Ryan Lin tell his story. Lin was born in a village near Fuzhou, lives in NYC and after ten years he returned to visit his family in that village, missing old times. It's amazing that his video shows two images similar to this video...
THIS IS SO CUTE AND FANTASTIC! What a coincidence with Tammy, to hear your different paths and finding each other through fate!!
I’m from a nearby village called MinAnTing, similar to your parents, I left there when I was very young. My children are around your age, but do not speak much Chinese. Your video is very inspiring, i wish to take them there someday and get them interested in finding their root!
I lived in small cities in China and saw a lot of places like this. I love visiting places like this
Amazing video! thank you for sharing your family's story! Such an insightful and uplifting story that will resonate with many, including myself!
Great document - thanks! I am Fuzhounese in Singapore. My dad was from the Gan’Jia village, literally Sugarcane village. I feel nostalgic when you showed the red yeast wine chicken. We grew up eating this yummy dish with mee’sua. Plus Fuzhou fishballs (with minced meat in them) as well as Yan dumplings. Yan, according to my mom, is pork, pressed down and spread out so thinly to dry on wicker trays. Upon drying, they are smeared with flour and is so thin and translucent. They are trimmed into oblong pieces, whilst the leftovers can be used as just strips to flavour and thicken soups. The rectangular Yan is further cut into smaller pieces to wrap more meat and made into Yan dumplings. And of course this comment wouldn’t be complete about my mom, who was a local Fujian girl, learnt how to make Fuzhou red yeast wine and lees… the indispensable ingredients for hearty bowlfuls of the renowned Fuzhou dish mentioned earlier… the Fuzhou red yeast wine chicken broth with mee’sua - including lots and lots of love, then, more love. Shalom, memories from a Fuzhounese descendant in Singapore
Aww thank you so much sharing all these culinary knowledge that your family passed down. We are actually traveling in Malaysia and Singapore soon and would love to connect and learn more about the Fuzhounese communities here. Could you please email us at graceandyongjian@gmail.com? Thanks and looking forward to hearing from you!
Hi guys! What a beautiful video you made😁 we are enjoying watching your content! Thanks for sharing this sweet story of your family! We would LOVE to visit China soon 🥰 Many greetings from Sunshine House in Penang, Alex and Coni
So many Fuzhou pioneers here. I'm also from Ma Wei District though it seems from another neighborhood because there are high-rise condos there now. My neighborhood is near the Min River.
I love this!! So cool to see the preservation of the Fuzhounese villages! Until I make way back to Fuzhou, I’m living vicariously through your travels ❤️❤️
So glad you love it! I agree, isn't the village being preserved so well? When was the last time you went to Fuzhou and what was it like?
What an awesome video!! So inspiring to see you follow your passion traveling and getting to connect with your roots! Keep up the awesome work! ❤❤
In the bad old days as far as several centuries ago due to war and famine in China. Many people along the coastal provinces migrated to overseas mainly Southeast Asia. my forefather was one of them from Zhong San Canton. He went to Singapore and my father was borne there and so was I. My hunch is, with the development of a more affluent and stronger China as we have seen in recent decades. I think more ethnic Chinese living overseas will pay homage to their ancestry land ! Enjoyed viewing your video. Thanks.
An amazing story to tell !
wow feels like travelling to Fuzhow...i am 4th generation of Fuzhow from Indonesia.
Now spelt in Pinyin as: Fuzhou. Used to be spelt: Foochow. These are exonyms, in Mandarin, in that that's not how they refer to themselves in the Fuzhou dialect. In the Fujian (Hokkien) areas further south, who speak the Minnan dialect, we refer to Fuzhou as: Hockchew.
I loved hearing about your story! There must've been so many changes to the village throughout the years
So awesome! I'm also from the Mawei, Fujian!
great videos made my grandparents happy...... im actually like one of your third cousins.......salute to a job well done
Just stumbled on your TH-cam video. It resonated with me. A friend is actually visiting her Fuzhou roots so I shared the link with her. Double resonance! Good Job!
SO glad your friend is revisiting her roots, please let us know how that goes for her!
hi I am a fujianese living in ninde city , i like to watch travel vlog on youtube , nice to see your video in coincident , it really conveys the efforts of old immigrate generation
It's really stories of all over sea Chinese, individual story may vary, life were sure hard in China for many generations before and we all span out to all over the world but our roots are deep and our drive resolute!
Not forgetting where you're from ground us even if we manage to achieve our individual accomplishment all over the world!
We're all Chinese and we all share same heritage even many generations apart and may not understand each other dialect!
Amazing video!
I love your video grace . I didn't know that Fuzhou Village could be like this I knew about Shanghai, Chongqing is so modern
But Fuzhou is .....
By the way I love Fuzhou and i would like to visit there one day
all very sweet ~ Thank You!! Good for our heart(s)
My family’s ancestral homes are actually close by in shan tou and chang an. My grandparents now live in guangtou for convenience sake but it was an experience seeing the ancestral homes and seeing the actual city of Fuzhou in how different they are. Overall huge culture shock visiting from America, I always wonder what life would be like if my family stayed in Fuzhou
That's so cool! Your family's ancestral homes are not too far away from mine! I agree, it is definitely a surreal experience seeing our families' ancestral homes and I often wonder as well what my life would have been like if my family stayed in Fuzhou
Greeting from a 5th generation Fuzhouness in Malaysia
Thank you for your support William!! We are actually traveling around Malaysia right now and would love to learn more about the Fuzhounese communities in both Sitiawan and Sibu. Could you please email us at graceandyongjian@gmail.com? We would love to visit a Fuzhounese community here feature it in our of our videos.
WOW...love this..i had a student tenant once from Fuzhou. Never did ask him much as he was busy studying and we were busy with our jobs, Only when i met my wife's friend whose ancestors were from Fuzhou did i noticed her culture were a little different from ours. They love the noodles made with red wine. I had a chance to taste the fuzhounese sausage. It was really tasty. I am a hokkien mself and never visited Fujian myself. Perhaps one day we will visit our ancestors' village in Xiamen.
Love this, Grace!
wow i can see my grandparents house from ur video. Both of them passed aways few years ago, but i still visit changbing everytime when i get the chance to visit China
That's amazing! Let us know when you'll be in China again, we will be here for a while!
@@GraceandYJ next summer will be the earliest
Wowow amazing 👏🤩 great job friends!
Thank you, Jonathan! What was your fav part?
very nice video
im from Ting Jiang
Chang an village
Thank you. A Hakka from Peru.
Hakka people values his Hakka identity more than his Chinese identity, I have seen that in Indonesia as the museum built was called the Hakka museum in Jakarta, not called the Chinese museum or the Fujian /Guangdong museum (their source)
It looks like a small town rather than a village. It is still considered new if it was built in the 1950s. My ancestral village building in kaiping, Guangdong is over 150 years old.
Very interesting video, Grace. Very touching. You got a new subscriber (and greetings from 中国) ✌🏼
Grace: May I suggest you are very lucky your parents are proud enough of their heritage to speak the Fuzhou dialect at home, so that you and your brother can also speak it. Your trip to your ancestral village has more meaning to you than the children of Chinese parents who choose not to speak to their children their own tongue. I see many many case here in Australia: Chinese parents speaking only English to their children. Many, I suppose, are not proud to be Chinese.
My parents are from fuzhou. Love to visit the province myself some day
That clip from inside the apartment at the beginning? My grandparents live in the exact same apartment complex
My great grand parents on my moms side are from there.
❤Hi Grace, I visited 长柄村 in year 2015 and connected to 杨人宽. Wonder do you know this gentleman?
I love Chinese people. There's a lot of Chinese-Filipinos whose great grandparents were from Fujian, China. I myself is a Filipino with around 1/8% Chinese blood but I hate how China treats its neighbor countries. I just hope and pray that China will be nicer to its neighbors because after all most its own people are living all over the East and Southeast Asia.
You have a very misinformed view of the Chinese, mostly propagated by the West. For example, if you think China is being aggressive to Taiwan, then you are taking the view that Taiwan is an independent country. Taiwan is part of China, deliberately kept apart by the Americans. Over the last 70 or so years, because of their separation, the Chinese in Taiwan developed a local identity - considering themselves Taiwanese. If you speak Taiwanese, you are speaking the Hokkien dialect. Your Chinese ancestor probably came from Jinjiang (Chin Kang locally) would be speaking close to Taiwanese.
You should learn about the history of China's first transoceanic ships which were also the world's first, they aided many countries, including the Philippines. At the time, China was the only country with ships capable of sailing on huge areas of open sea; if you don't believe this, check into how Ming Dynasty China had massive sail ships sailing all over the South China Sea when no other countries could; Europeans hadn't learned to build transoceanic ships until China taught them!! This is widely documented and supported by international historians. Wherever Chinese ships went to, the ship men never invaded any local people; they brought Chinese goods to exchange with the locals. Some sailors stayed behind and did not return to China, instead settling down among the locals; perhaps this is how your Chinese ancestors landed in the Philippines. Don't be fooled by the Philippines and U$A governments; what they accuse China of is false.
@@Anonymous------ but that doesn't mean China owns the entire South China Sea. They just travelled there, they don't own it.
hi, I am from Ting Jiang
Yall im coming yo fuzhou for the first time can you tell me about it
CHINA IS SUCH A HUGE COUNTRY. WHICH PROVINCE; CITY; TOWN; VILLAGE.
❤❤❤
👍Found your family village 长柄村 on Google map. 👏👏👏
✋✋ Philippines
You and your friend Tammy are probably related. If you do a DNA test, you’ll probably see you share the same great grandparent or great great grandparent.
From same village with same last name we always call brother and sister
Since china open door 78 ,Hence During mid 80 large Numbers Fuzhonese 福州 , fu qing ,福清 going to usa as migrants workers seeking better life in usa ... Since then currently Fuzhoniese New Yorker as second generation ..
Before that Cantonese either from guanzhou or Hong Konger much earlier explore anywhere in usa cities or Uk .. widely spoken Cantonese.
目前都是 😅 *Putonghua*
You might want to consider using the Chinese dialog unless you want to limit your audience to those of English speaking.
USED TO CALL FOO-CHOW//////
Fu-kinese took over Cantonese dominated NYC Chinatown in the late 80s. Sigh - that was the end and down fall of the Chinatown we all know.
Fukien was a monstrous transliteration of Fujian in the olden days. If you ask a local in Xiamen(Amoy) or Quanzhou(Chuan Chew): "Excuse me, are you Fukienese?", he won't have any idea what you are talking about.