I Wor Kuen

I Wor Kuen (traditional Chinese: 義和拳; simplified Chinese: 义和拳; pinyin: Yìhé Quán; Cantonese Yale: Yih-wò Kyuhn) was a radical Marxist Asian American collective that originally formed in 1969 in New York City’s Chinatown. Borrowing from the ideologies of the Young Lords and the Black Panthers, IWK organized several community programs and produced a newsletter series promoting self-determination for Asian Americans. Initially consisting of students from Columbia University, the group worked in conjunction with residents of New York City’s Chinatown to address the community’s needs for healthcare reform, draft counseling, and childcare. The group expanded nationally with the Red Guard in San Francisco in 1972 to create a nation IWK.

Founding

The organization established itself in New York’s Chinatown in late 1969 and is named after the peasant group that fought against foreign intrusion and influence in China in 1898 during the beginning of the Boxer Rebellion, which officially began in 1900. Translated to “Righteous and Harmonious Fists,” IWK was established by a group of young people and students who participated in the Triple A and Columbia’s AAPA, and eventually other radical Chinese nationals (Wei 212-3). Inspired by their namesake from the Chinese Boxer Rebellion and with Mao Tse-tung, the members of IWK were heavy proponents for self-determination and community service on varying levels. Within New York City, IWK worked predominantly around issues affecting the immediate Manhattan Chinatown. They protested the tourist buses that came into the community; participated in a “housing crimes trial” forum at Columbia U with Metropolitan Council on Housing, Black Panthers, Young Lords, City Wide Coordinating Committee of Welfare Rights Groups, Social Service Employees Union; hosted free movie screenings about the People’s Republic of China; organized the first Chinatown Health Fair in 1971 with other organizations in the neighborhood as a reaction against the CCBA’s neglect to the community [1] and worked on demonstrations to raise awareness on how to avoid the draft.[2]

In addition to their public organizing, IWK was also known for their nationally distributed and bilingual newspaper, Getting Together. In it, IWK focused on “national liberation struggles around the world but paid particular attention to the People’s Republic of China…[and] the oppressive conditions in Chinatown."[3] By pushing out a publication such as Getting Together, IWK believed that they would be able to share their particular observations and stories of oppression to the rest of the nation. Eventually, IWK spreads out nationally towards the Bay Area, joining forces with the Red Guards (a similar organization based in San Francisco). The group was also generally persecuted by more conservative groups within the Chinese and Asian American community, like the CCBA, who denounced IWK’s revolutionary activities as being disruptive to Chinatown (Wei 215). They were also under FBI surveillance when they began to use the Chinese Progressive Association (CPA) as a means of public recruitment.

In 1978 I Work Kuen and the Chicano Marxist–Leninist organization August 29th Movement were both dissolved and a new organization, the League of Revolutionary Struggle was founded.

References

  1. "Youths in Chinatown Open Health Fair". New York Times. 1 August 1971. Retrieved 10 May 2014.
  2. Ching, Frank (12 November 1971). "Peking Backers Here Stage Welcome". New York Times. Retrieved 10 May 2014.
  3. Wei, William (1993). Asian American Movement. Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press.
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