This article originally appeared in Zmag.
It's as if the spotlight that Hurricane Katrina cast on the inequities
of disaster relief never happened. San Francisco's high and mighty
are in full-throated self-celebration of the City's "rising from
the ashes" of the April 18, 1906 earthquake and fire.
Forgotten are people like my great-great grandfather Lee Bo-wen who
immigrated to San Francisco Chinatown in 1854 and reared two generations
at 820 Dupont Street. My whole family was forcibly evacuated, never
to return.
Even Dupont Street itself vanished forever, as post-disaster faux Chinese
architecture buried the people's Chinatown and made its successor, the
now famous Grant Avenue, the centerpiece of the City's newly minted
Chinese tourist industry.
Indeed the same scandalous profiteering, racism, incompetence and mendacity
that have characterized the response to Katrina had an antecedent in
the San Francisco earthquake and fire of 1906.
It is now fully documented that during and after the 1906 disaster,
developers, insurance companies, corporations led by the Southern Pacific
railroad, City leaders, newspapers and Army brass shamelessly lied and
promoted anti-Chinese racism to downplay and distort the disaster in
order to advance their own selfish agendas.
The 1906 earthquake and fire rendered homeless half of San Francisco's
population of 500,000. It destroyed 28,000 buildings and 498 city blocks.
Authorities claimed that only 300 people had died, the better to undercut
claims against the city and the business community. It took decades
of painstaking documentation by Gladys Hansen, the city's archivist,
to prove that in fact more than 3,000 had died.
The newspapers and city leaders talked only about the fire because it
was considered a more normal event than an earthquake, which they feared
would terrify potential investors and affluent homeowners. The San Francisco
real estate board met a week after the earthquake and passed a resolution
that the phrase "the great earthquake" should no longer be
used; it would be known instead as "the great fire."
The Army and the police blamed their failure to control the fire on
a lack of water. Later it was proved that this was a bald faced fabrication.
Water was plentiful: the problem was that the City and the Army grossly
failed to mobilize enough manpower to pump the water and fight the fire.
Meanwhile insurance companies paid up to $15,000 per photo – real or
falsified – that could "prove" that a building was damaged
by the earthquake rather than the fire, because they were not required
to pay for earthquake damage. Businesses and building owners countered
with massive arson in order to collect on fire insurance.
And everyone from the Mayor to labor unions promoted gross racism in
order to justify their attempt to grab the prime real estate upon which
25,000 Chinese lived.
The San Francisco Chronicle railed: "Great as the recent
catastrophe has been, let us take care lest we encounter a greater one.
We can withstand the earthquake. We can survive the fire. As long as
California is white mans country, it will remain one of the grandest
and best states in the union, but the moment the Golden State is subjected
to an unlimited Asiatic coolie invasion there will be no more California."
Take care they did: A recent article
by the National Park Service reports that Hugh Kwong Liang, only 15
at the time, recalled, "I turned away from my dear old Chinatown
for the last time& city officials directing the refugees' march
approached us and told us to proceed toward the open grounds at the
Presidio Army Post." Despite the presence of the military newspaper
reports tell of extensive looting, including "the National Guard&
stripping everything of value in Chinatown."
At the same time, the police and National Guard were unleashed against
any Chinese suspected of looting. Historian Connie Young Yu recounts
that her great-grandfather was suspected of looting in his own store
and bayoneted. A white crowd stoned to death a young man who was trying
to salvage items from his home.
Chinese refugees quickly flooded relief camps in San Francisco, Alameda
and Oakland. As the Chinese exited Chinatown, city officials sought
to prevent them from returning. A committee of top leaders was quickly
established that focused exclusively on the permanent relocation of
the Chinese, finally settling upon Hunter's Point as a likely new location.
The Overland Monthly editorialized: "Fire has reclaimed
to civilization and cleanliness the Chinese ghetto, and no Chinatown
will be permitted in the borders of the city.... it seems as though
a divine wisdom directed the range of the seismic horror and the range
of the fire god. Wisely, the worst was cleared away with the best."
But for the active fight waged by the Chinese community and actively
supported by the Chinese consulate, this racist prediction might have
been fulfilled.
The San Francisco Examiner reported, "The committee's protestations
that what it intends is for the benefit of the Chinese is received with
suspicion on the part of the Chinese." In fact, few Chinese voluntarily
took advantage of relief help when they discovered it meant being held
as virtual prisoners in squalid, segregated camps. Despite their estimated
population of 60,000, only 186 Chinese refugees remained at the Fort
Point camp by May 8.
Meanwhile, Chinatown merchant/property owners who owned one-third of
the Chinatown property organized to defend their rights. Dupont Street
Improvement Club representatives pointed out that trade in Chinatown
the previous year had amounted to $30 million, that the Chinese paid
their share of municipal taxes and that property owners could rent to
anyone they wished.
The Chinese government's consulate also made clear its intention to
rebuild on its property in San Francisco Chinatown and to protect the
rights of overseas Chinese.
Although many Chinese residents were never able to return, the power
elite's plan to destroy Chinatown was foiled by a combination of Chinese
resistance and the City's desire for Chinatown taxes. That latter desire
merged with the interests of Chinese merchants in shaping the new Chinatown
around a tourist theme park. But at least Chinatown was saved for many
of its residents.
My family, like many others, finally settled in Oakland, where they
were greeted by the likes of the Oakland Herald: "One of
the evils springing from the late disaster to San Francisco, one that
menaces Oakland exceedingly, ...is the great influx of Chinese into
this city from San Francisco. Not only have they pushed outward the
limits of Oakland's heretofore constricted and insignificant Chinatown,
but they have settled themselves in large colonies throughout the residence
parts of the city, bringing with them their vices and their filth."
To frustrate Oakland's racist redliners, my great-great grandfather
anglicized his name from Lee Bo-wen to Lee Bowen and was thereby able
to record his purchase of a home in what was then the segregated, lily-white
Fruitvale district. Thousands of other Chinese took advantage of the
destruction of San Francisco's records to claim U.S. citizenship.
We failed to learn the lessons of the San Francisco earthquake before
Katrina. We must learn the lessons of both now.
It should be crystal clear that disasters are not purely natural events:
they can be caused or seriously aggravated by human action like global
warming, racism, poor city planning, economic inequality, incompetence,
greed, politics and war.
When a disaster like the SF earthquake or Katrina hits, your average
person empathizes with the appalling loss and pain of the victims, and
joins in to help by volunteering with rescue and reconstruction efforts,
contributing money or any number of other humanitarian acts.
But many businesses and politicians act like sharks in bloody waters:
they know that disasters open up new opportunities to remake the city
in their interests, to make vast sums of money and to reorganize political
power in their favor. They know these events provide a chance to rid
themselves of poor communities, especially communities of color, that
they consider a blight on their vision for the city and an obstacle
to their own enrichment.
Disasters not only reveal hidden inequalities but also grossly aggravate
the existing power imbalances between rich and poor, between white and
non-white. The power elite has usually planned ahead for disaster, suffers
less and recovers faster from the shock. They have lawyers, bankers
and politicians, ready to fight for their interests.
For most of us, the most vital response to natural disasters – before,
during and after the event – is organizing our communities and workplaces
to survive, rebuild and fight for our interests against the predators
in our midst. In areas susceptible to disaster, it is critical to integrate
disaster planning into our day to day organizing against gentrification
and for social justice.
For example, in the Bay Area we should include planning for the next
big earthquake in the ongoing struggle against the gentrification of
the Bay View, West Oakland and other poor communities in the region.
And of course the fight in the Gulf region is still at fever pitch.
It is crucial to support the fight to prevent the transformation of
New Orleans from a largely black working class city into a gentrified
theme park featuring jazz, creole food and gambling.
Bob Wing is an Oakland Bay Area based activist and writer. Thanks
to Nicole Derse, Donna Linden, Richard Marquez, Jane Kim and David Ho
for organizing the Ruin, Rubble and Race symposium in San Francisco
that inspired and informed this article.