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Encyclopedia > Douglas Jung

Douglas Jung (鄭天崋, pinyin: Zhčng Tiānhuá) (February 24, 1924 - February 1, 2002) was the first ethnic Chinese Member of Parliament (MP) for the Canadian House of Commons.

Douglas Jung
Douglas Jung
Contents

Early life

Douglas Jung was born in Victoria, British Columbia on February 24, 1924. During his childhood, the Government of Canada passed numerous pieces of legislation that disenfranchised Chinese in Canada. So he, and a group of young men from British Columbia, thought that serving in the Canadian Army during World War II could change the fortunes of Chinese in Canada.


Although Jung enlisted himself in the Canadian Army back in 1939, he did not receive his first assignment until 1944, mainly because the politicans in Ottawa and Victoria did not want to deal with the issues of enfranchising the Chinese after the war. Jung and a group of Chinese-Canadian soldiers were sent to British Malaya as a special operation to train the local guerillas to resist the Japanese Imperial Amry occupying Malaya and Singapore.


After the war, Chinese in Canada were enfranchised in 1947. The Department of Veterans Affairs granted Jung and his Chinese-Canadian comrades a university education. Jung graduated from the University of British Columbia in 1953 with degrees in Bachelors of Arts and Bachelors of Law. He was called to the British Columbia Bar in 1954.


Political career

Douglas Jung joined the Progressive Conservative Party in the early 1950s (he vowed not to join the Liberal Party because of its racist legislation against Chinese in the past). Jung was elected as an MP in 1957, representing the riding of Vancouver Centre, under the John Diefenbaker government. In his maiden speech in the House of Commons he urged Canada to take a leading role in serving as a bridge to the Pacific Rim Countries.


Jung's other achievements include introducing a Private Member's Bill in 1962 that granted amnesty to illegal immigrants from Hong Kong, also known as "Paper Sons". He also represented Canada in the United Nations as Chairman of the Legal Delegation to the United Nations.


His profusion of honour included the Order of Canada and the Order of British Columbia, the highest honours a citizen can receive from the federal and provincial governments, respectively. Other awards came from the Chinese Benevolent Association, S.U.C.C.S.S. Chinese Cultural Centre, Chinese Canadian National Council and Chinese Association in Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan, Thunder Bay and Toronto, Ontario, as well as the Quebec Japanese Canadian Citizenship Association in Montreal.


Other achievements

Jung was also a prominent figure in the community, especially the Vancouver Chinese community. They include: Life President of Army Navy Air Force Veterans in Canada Unit #280, Patron of S.U.C.C.E.S.S.: Director of the Vancouver Symphony. B.C.: Deputy Director of the Governor General's 1992 Regional Celebration of Canada 125th Anniversary. Director of the Far East Relations of the Former Parliamentarians Association and the President of Japan Karate Association of Canada which awarded him a sixth degree Black Belt.




Preceded by:
Ralph Campney, Liberal
Member of Parliament for Vancouver Centre
(1957-1962)
Succeeded by:
Jack R. Nicholson, Liberal

See Also


  Results from FactBites:
 
Douglas Jung (498 words)
Douglas Jung was born in Victoria, British Columbia on February 24, 1924.
Jung and a group of Chinese-Canadian soldiers were sent to British Malaya as a special operation to train the local guerillas to resist the Japanese Imperial Amry occupying Malaya and Singapore.
Jung was elected as an MP in 1957, representing the riding of Vancouver Centre, under the John Diefenbaker government.
Reference.com/Encyclopedia/Analytical psychology (3053 words)
Jung identified the anima as being the unconscious feminine component of men and the animus as the unconscious masculine component in women.
Jung stated that the anima and animus act as guides to the unconscious unified Self, and that forming an awareness and a connection with the anima or animus is one of the most difficult and rewarding steps in psychological growth.
Jung's theory of etiology of psychopathology could almost be simplified to be stated as a too rigid conscious attitude towards the whole of the psyche.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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