WASHINGTON, DC—A traveling exhibit at the Smithsonian Museum, whose theme is based on one of renowned Filipino-American writer Carlos Bulosan’s poems, will make its next stop in Los Angeles next month.
The exhibit, titled “I Want the Wide American Earth,” will end its run at the Smithsonian National Museum of American History on Aug. 25. It will open next at the Japanese American National Museum in Los Angeles on Sept. 14 and run until Dec. 1.
In an interview with the Inquirer, Konrad Ng, director of the Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center, said Bulosan’s poem was selected because “it captured that aspiration and that vision of America” being home for Asian Pacific American immigrants.
Ng is a brother-in-law of US President Barack Obama, who is pushing for an immigration bill that would provide a pathway to citizenship for 11 million undocumented immigrants, one million of them Filipinos.
Bulosan’s poems and stories deal mostly with the racism and discrimination he experienced as an Asian immigrant in America.
“You have someone who was born in the Philippines and, soon after the US-Philippine war, lived in the United States in pursuit of better opportunities. Like most immigrant communities, the life in the land of opportunity became an experience of hardship. And Bulosan wrote these great poems and stories [about the experience],” said Ng.
“‘I Want the Wide American Earth’ for us captured that aspiration and that vision of America being the home for everybody, specifically for Asian Pacific Americans.”
Chicken skin
Ng said he was a fan of Bulosan.
“I love [Bulosan’s] work. His work… as they say in Hawaii, [gives you] chicken skin… when you think about something that inspires you and makes you feel something deeply. I think Carlos Bulosan has got some terrific poems,” Ng said.
An excerpt from Bulosan’s poem reads: “Before the brave, before the proud builders and workers/ I say I want the wide American earth/ For all the free./ I want the wide American earth for my people./ I want my beautiful land./ I want it with my rippling strength and tenderness/ Of love and light and truth/ For all the free.”
The exhibition—the first of its kind undertaken by the Smithsonian—celebrates Asian Pacific American history across a multitude of cultures and explores how Asian Pacific Americans have shaped and been shaped by the course of American history.
Images on 30 panels tell the story of the first Asian immigrants’ participation in the gold rush, the transcontinental railroad, on both sides of the American Civil War and the building of the nation’s agriculture.
The Asian Pacific American population now stands at more than 17 million and growing. Filipinos, numbering 3.4 million, make up the second-largest Asian group in the US according to the latest census. The number is believed to be much higher than the census count. There are an estimated one million undocumented Filipinos in the US.
Chinese-Americans make up the largest Asian group, with more than 4 million. Indians from the subcontinent are the third-largest, with 3.2 million. Other large Asian groups include the Vietnamese, with 1.7 million; Koreans, with 1.7 million; and Japanese, with 1.3 million.
“I Want the Wide American Earth” is a collaboration with the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service. The exhibit is on the third floor of the Smithsonian National Museum of American History.