Finding Samuel Lowe: China, Jamaica, Harlem

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Finding Samuel Lowe: China, Jamaica, Harlem

Finding Samuel Lowe: China, Jamaica, Harlem


Finding Samuel Lowe: China, Jamaica, Harlem


PDF Ebook Finding Samuel Lowe: China, Jamaica, Harlem

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Finding Samuel Lowe: China, Jamaica, Harlem

Thanks to her spiteful, jealous Jamaican mother, Nell Vera Lowe was cut off from her Chinese father, Samuel, when she was just a baby, after he announced that he was taking a Chinese bride. By the time Nell was old enough to travel to her father's shop in St. Anne's Bay, he'd taken his family back to China, never learning what became of his eldest daughter. Bereft, Nell left Jamaica for New York to start a new life. But her Asian features set her apart from her Harlem neighbors and even her own children - a difference that contributed to her feeling of loneliness and loss, which she instilled in her only daughter, Paula.

Years later, with a successful corporate career behind her and the arrival of her only grandchild raising questions about family and legacy, Paula decided to search for Samuel Lowe's descendants in China. With the support of her brothers and the help of encouraging strangers, Paula eventually pieced together the full story of her grandfather's life, following his story from China to Jamaica and back and connecting with 300 surprised relatives who were overjoyed to meet her.

Product details

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Audible Audiobook

Listening Length: 7 hoursĀ andĀ 11 minutes

Program Type: Audiobook

Version: Unabridged

Publisher: Tantor Audio

Audible.com Release Date: June 30, 2015

Language: English, English

ASIN: B00ZYKRTSC

Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

Paula Williams Madison has accomplished an extraordinary feat: in one book and a few short years, she has brought together the history of her family, the society that is Jamaica, the history of the Hakka people of China and her own evolving understanding of a globe crisscrossed long before our time. The intensity of her telling of the search for her mother's Chinese father and her honesty in describing the broken relations as well as the mended ones make this an important book for those who seek to know what intercultural, interracial understanding might look like.

This memoir of Paula Williams Madison, an African American born and raised in Harlem largely by her mother of mixed African-Jamaican and Chinese decent, is an incredible story that is once highly touching and gripping. It is not necessarily a unique story, the search for one's roots to bring closure to endless wonderment about one's ancestors and lineage, but it's a lot better written than most in expressing and understanding why the urge to source these roots is so strong in those who lack this connection.In the case at hand the author knew of her mother's Jamaican past and that she was part Chinese but any real knowledge of her maternal grandfather who bears the name in the title was piecemeal at best and a confounding mystery at worst. Suffice it to say that the author weaves a very readable account of how she went about her search, ladling in along the way some interesting factoids and history about the emigration of Chinese Hakkas to other lands during the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. Highly entrepreneurial and business savvy, Hakkas often became very successful merchants in foreign lands and such was the case for Samuel Lowe. The search for Samuel Lowe begins in Jamaica and from there moves to Shenzhen and Guangzhou in China, roughly the ancestral home of the Hakka's and the Lowe's.There are many poignant moments in the book, starting with the author's upbringing in Harlem. Her mother could be the stuff of a novel. Her Jamaican antecedents the raw material for a doctoral dissertation in sociology. What really brings the story home is the author's almost aside that for most African Americans family genealogy that is truly traceable may date back three or four generations. By contrast, in China family lineage may go back hundreds of generations. By the author's calculation her Chinese family can count 159 generations or roughly a thousand years before the birth of Christ. It's mind boggling.Finding Samuel Lowe is an easy read, being well organized and having a goodly mix of family story telling, history, sociology, mystery and intrigue. It takes a special person to pursue a family past shrouded deeply in vagueness. The author, though, is not just another ordinary person pursuing her roots. She brought to the search some real advantages including a mother that was relentless in the welfare and future success of her three children, a highly successful career in journalism and television, a husband that faithfully supported the near single-minded investigative work to locate the Chinese side of the family, and the Chinese family itself whose members embraced the author and her Jamaican and New York family from the get go. Think about that for a moment. A knock on the door (actually an email out of the blue) and then someone claiming to be your long lost relation that you didn't know you had in the first place. It is all these elements that keep you glued to the book's pages.My only critical observation is that once Samuel Lowe (long deceased before his descendants were located by the author) and family are found and a rightful narrative about the Chinese family in the years from the 1930s (including some tough observations by the author of Mao's Cultural Revolution in the 1960s) is provided, the story starts to run out of steam as the author focuses on family reunions that just don't add to the story. Memoirs oftentimes evolve to the overly sentimental and while it's not excessive here it probably best could have been edited out.

This is a timeless story of loss, heartache, reunion, and joy.In telling the story of her mother, Nell Lowe Williams, and her grandfather, Samuel Lowe, Paula Williams Madison also tells the tale of so many immigrant families who lose their connection with their homeland. The difference is that in this instance, the storyteller is also an extremely accomplished journalist and entrepreneur who doggedly sets out to find her Chinese roots, to delve deeper into her Jamaican roots, and to share the history that helped to shape her family's experiences.This book is the incredible record of a woman who is 1/4 Chinese, 3/4 Jamaican and 100% American.Read this; you will love it too.

If you travel the Caribbean, you don't have to go far to see shops and stores owned by Asians. What few travelers realize is that certain groups like the Chinese have lived in the Caribbean for generations and had families that crossed ethnic boundaries.This is the compelling, beautifully written journey of one African-Caribbean-American family to find their grandfather Samuel Lowe. Although they are too late to meet their grandfather, they are able to get to know him through their relatives in China who knew about them!The book weaves the past with the present and touches on the future of the Lowe Clan.

This book was somewhat interesting, but very repetitive. I did not know of the connection between China and Jamaica. This book was a selection from Silicon Valley Reads 2019 along with two other books on the theme of family and heredity.

really found very touching certain childhood vignettes in the stories that reflected racial differences that only made sense when they occurred again with their own children...happened to me...loved the positive message...what a great family despite all they have been through

My Paternal ancestry in Han People living in China Paternity done by African Ancestry.com results received August 27,2010! 100% match!

Really good and detailed. I didnt understand why she focussed so much on her chinese side. I guess as a Jamaican i was a bit biased and felt like she was ignoring her Jamaican side, then i remembered that both of her parents were Jamaican. I sometimes forget that most Jamaicans have ancestors from somewhere other than africa. We tend to ignore the other ancestors we have as if they aren't a part of our blood but the reality is that they are part of us. This book was lovely to read because it explored ancestors that i as a Jamaican usually ignore.

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