Community associations in Chinatowns, often referred to as tongs, family clans, or benevolent societies, are synonymous with what it means to build a community from the ground up. Dating back to as early as the 1880s, they emerged across Canada as a way for newly landed people from China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, and Vietnam to find one another, acting as integral hubs for generations of immigrants. With deeply embedded social histories, they are still essential to Chinatowns today, having built models of mutual aid that developed organically to counteract the racism and discrimination their members experienced. Operating out of the basement or top floor of the buildings owned by members, these associations carved out a space to exchange knowledge, language, and history, acting as the de facto support networks for…