Jin Tao Wu has survived Japan’s invasion of China, the rise of the Communist Social gathering and the massacres of the Cultural Revolution.
Now, hundreds of miles and lots of many years later, the 93-year-old sits in a beige-walled public housing condominium in Manhattan’s Chelsea neighborhood, confronting what he sees as the most important disaster of his life.
The New York Metropolis Housing Authority has instructed Wu that he and his 90-year-old spouse, Qiong Zhong, who has dementia, should vacate their condominium in a seniors-only improvement as quickly as doable, relocate one other improvement for as much as 4 years, after which transfer but once more into a brand new non-seniors-only constructing.
“I’m not going to maneuver,” he stated not too long ago, talking in Cantonese by an interpreter. “I’m 93. When you’re going to maneuver to a common [public] housing, it’s not going to be good. It’s not going to be wholesome. It’s not going to be secure. I really feel I don’t have that a few years left.”
Wu and his spouse are amongst 24 households in NYCHA’s Chelsea Addition refusing the authority’s demand to relocate twice whereas their constructing is demolished and changed. The authority insists the twin strikes are mandatory first steps in its grand plan to demolish 18 NYCHA buildings in Chelsea and exchange them with 15 new towers.
If all goes as deliberate, the brand new buildings will home the displaced residents of Chelsea Addition and the Fulton, Elliott and Chelsea Homes, and add one other 2,500 market-rate residences and 1,000 completely inexpensive ones.
Below this $1.2 billion venture, the mega-developer of the close by Hudson Yards, The Associated Firms, and their companions, Essence LLC, would deal with demolition and building. NYCHA would keep possession of the properties however flip over administration of the buildings to their non-public sector companions.

The primary part of the plan, which requires the demolition of Chelsea Addition and one close by constructing, was slated to start out this spring. However the complete plan is on maintain as one lawsuit contests the legality of all of it and one other fights the eviction of the seniors who’re resisting shifting, together with Wu and his spouse.
‘There Was Warfare’
For Wu and his spouse, NYCHA’s proposed transfer is a traumatic prospect, after an extended and momentous journey from the cities of China’s Guangdong province to the streets of Manhattan.
Wu was born in 1934. When he was nonetheless a baby, the Japanese military invaded China, in a brutal occupation till their give up to the Allied Forces in September 1945. In the course of the battle, Wu acquired simply three years of intermittent elementary college training.
“No center college. No highschool,” he stated. “There was a warfare. We have been combating Japan.”
4 years after the warfare’s finish, Mao Zhedong and the Chinese language Communist Social gathering got here to energy. When he was in his 30s, Mao unveiled the Cultural Revolution, a marketing campaign to purge what he declared have been capitalist influences compromising his imaginative and prescient. Throughout China, combating between factions erupted, and in 1968, a collection of massacres came about in Guangdong Province the place Wu lived.
Wu declined to additional talk about his years in China besides to say, “I’m 93 years outdated. I’ve seen fairly just a few kings.” Requested if there have been any he admired, he replied, “Not one in all them.”

He married Qiong Zhong and the couple had one daughter, Li Ching Wu. All three emigrated to New York Metropolis, with Jin Tao Wu and his spouse arriving when he was 60 in 1994. Quickly he discovered a job slicing string in a Garment District manufacturing unit.
Wu retired just a few years later and the couple’s sole earnings turned Social Safety. They lived in Chinatown off Canal Road, which is the place they resided on Sept. 11, 2001, when Islamist terrorists flew planes into the World Commerce Heart and the resultant fallout blanketed the encompassing neighborhoods, together with Chinatown, with poisonous mud.
Later the couple signed up for NYCHA’s ready checklist and snagged an condominium within the Taft Rehab Homes on W. 117th St. close to Columbia College. This was Wu’s first expertise with the Housing Authority’s common inhabitants developments — and it didn’t go effectively.
In the summertime of 2021, Wu heard knocking at his door.
“I opened the door and so they pushed their means in and robbed the place,” he recalled. “I referred to as 911. The police couldn’t catch him. They requested if we have been scared. After all we have been scared.”
He says his neighbor knew the robbers and wouldn’t cooperate with police. Due to that, he says, NYCHA granted their request to switch to an all-seniors improvement. In August that 12 months, they moved into a comfortable one-bedroom in Chelsea Addition.
The constructing sits throughout from athletic fields the place youngsters from a close-by public college fill the air with their voices throughout recess on college days. The road is in any other case quiet, as their fellow tenants are throughout 60 and there’s a safety guard assigned to patrol the constructing and the encompassing space seven days per week. Lots of Wu’s neighbors are, like him, immigrants from China who communicate little English.
“It’s higher right here. It’s peaceable. No harassment,” he stated.
Additionally it is the place he and his spouse anticipated to spend their last days. They stay off of a mixed Social Safety earnings simply in need of $1,500 a month whereas paying NYCHA round $450 in hire — the required 30% of earnings all public housing tenants pay.
Their circumstances don’t enable them to enterprise removed from their condominium.
Wu’s spouse, affected by dementia, has every so often turn into misplaced within the neighborhood. Wu presents a five-page doc itemizing 44 medicines that he should take for a frightening conflagration of medical situations that features coronary heart illness, kidney illness, bronchial asthma (associated to his publicity to 9/11 poisonous mud) and diabetes. He depends on a walker.
The couple’s each day routine is overseen by home-health aides who monitor them 24 hours a day, seven days per week in shifts. They often exit to close by eating places however should depend on the publicly sponsored and sometimes unreliable Entry A Journey.
“If we don’t have transportation, we don’t go,” he stated.
NYCHA v. Wu
Final summer time Housing Alternatives Limitless, a non-profit employed by the builders overseeing the NYCHA venture, started knocking on doorways of Chelsea Addition residents, slipping notices below doorways and calling them, advising that they wanted to right away signal an settlement to relocate to a close-by common inhabitants NYCHA improvement.
“I received a lot of notices,” Wu stated. “They got here and knocked on the door. They referred to as. They have been at all times calling.”
The non-profit confirmed Wu an condominium within the close by non-senior-exclusive Chelsea Homes, however he stated the lavatory was solely accessible by the only real bed room, an association the house well being aides wouldn’t settle for, he stated. He declined to signal NYCHA’s relocation paperwork, mentioning the theft that came about within the common inhabitants NYCHA improvement on W. 117th ST.
In October, NYCHA filed go well with in opposition to Wu, claiming that he had violated the phrases of the lease by refusing to consent to relocation.
Their daughter, Li Ching Wu, who’s elevating a household in Queens and works lengthy hours at a Chinese language restaurant, says she is upset in regards to the twilight-of-life disruption her father and mom have been pressured to endure.
“After all this isn’t good. They’re already so outdated, how are they imagined to pack themselves up?” she instructed THE CITY. “The federal government already says it desires to assist the elders. Why does it have to make use of senior housing for improvement?”
Li Chin is frightened about her dad and mom’ security now that NYCHA desires them to maneuver again to an everyday improvement, noting, “Even younger folks get robbed within the streets. After all I’m a minimum of just a little frightened about my dad and mom.”
And he or she says two strikes would doubtless confuse her mom.
“My mother has to readjust to a wholly new atmosphere and be taught to acknowledge it,” she stated. “She already doesn’t bear in mind many locations close by. However you may’t cease her from going outdoors — or generally you don’t even catch her going outdoors. It’s assured bother when she will’t acknowledge her means again.”
“Everybody’s already of such outdated age,” she added. “If the federal government must take again the constructing, they need to simply allow them to stay out the remainder of their lives there and take the items again step by step, one after the other, once they cross over to the opposite aspect. That means the elders aren’t thrown into such chaos.”
In December NYCHA withdrew its violation-of-lease go well with in opposition to Wu and greater than a dozen different Chelsea Addition holdouts, shortly after Manhattan Supreme Courtroom Justice David Cohen denied the authority’s movement for a preliminary injunction forcing tenants to signal their relocation settlement.
That lawsuit is now pending earlier than an appeals court docket that final month suspended the venture whereas it considers the case. After that occurred NYCHA started providing to relocate residents of Chelsea Addition in different seniors-only buildings.
Thomas Hillgardner, a lawyer for Wu and the 23 different holdouts, contested the notices in a separate go well with filed in civil court docket in March. That litigation can also be pending.
Just lately THE CITY visited the couple of their condominium. Wu’s spouse sat in silence, gazing on the ground. Dried lettuce and scallion held on the again of the condominium’s entry door as an outdated nation custom commemorating the New Yr. In opposition to one wall of the lounge, packing containers stuffed with meals have been stacked subsequent to a bag of yams spilling throughout the ground. Wu’s walker rested close by.
When THE CITY advised taking a photograph of the couple, Wu requested to placed on a nicer shirt first. He and his spouse then sat on the sofa and posed in silence.
Outdoors their window the blue-glass towers of Hudson Yards — an enormous venture of the Associated Firms, the developer getting ready to demolish and rebuild the Wu’s constructing —- glimmered within the distance.

