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Originally Posted by someone123
I wonder about this too but then again the riots that happened in Halifax were tame compared to a lot of other cities. It sounds like there were no fatalities from this for example. Anti-Chinese sentiment was certainly not a Halifax-specific thing either.
These stories from the early 1900's remind me of what you might hear from a developing country today. The standard of living, education levels, communication, policing, etc. were probably similar in a bunch of ways. Lots of ignorant people with very tough lives.
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Good point, perhaps it was mostly due to the size of the city and/or its Chinese community not being large enough to support a localized Chinatown, as much as anything else.
I get the feeling that Halifax wasn't exactly a happy place in February 1919, only being a year and two months out of the Explosion, along with those returning from WWI. I imagine that it wouldn't have taken much for situations like this, fueled by misinformation and displaced anger, to boil over into conflict and violence.
It helps to drive home the point that, although currently not perfect, things are much better in Halifax now than they were 100 years ago.