From the Great Wall to the High Sierras: The Cantonese Spirit of "Yuk-Faat"
History has a strange way of folding space and time, connecting a 17th-century Ming Dynasty general to a remote mountain peak in California. On the surface, Yuan Chonghuan (袁崇煥)—the tragic hero who defended the Ming from the Manchu invasion—and Tunamah Peak in Kings Canyon National Park have nothing in common. But look closer, and you find a linguistic thread woven by the defiance of Cantonese laborers.
The General’s Curse: "Mo-Wan-Di!"
Yuan Chonghuan is a legendary figure in Cantonese culture, particularly in his birthplace of Dongguan.
In Cantonese culture, this isn't just profanity; it is "Yuk-Faat" (豁出去)—the spirit of going "all in" against impossible odds. It represents the darker side of human nature: the realization that when the system betrays you, your only power lies in your defiance and your audacity.
The Peak of Profanity: Tunamah
Fast forward to the late 19th century in California. Thousands of Cantonese immigrants were the backbone of the mining and trail-building industries. These men were treated as disposable tools by the American government, facing brutal conditions and systemic racism.
The story goes that a group of Cantonese laborers, exhausted and frustrated by the demands of their surveyors in the High Sierras, gave a name to a prominent 11,895-foot peak. When asked what it was called, they replied: "Tunamah." The surveyors, ignorant of Cantonese, dutifully recorded it on official maps. For decades, "Tunamah Peak" and "Tunamah Lake" sat on federal records, a hidden joke at the expense of the "civilized" bureaucracy. It is, of course, a phonetic transliteration of "Diu na ma"—the same defiant oath attributed to Yuan Chonghuan.
The Learning: Bureaucracy is Blind to Subversion
This linkage shows the universal irony of power. Whether it’s the Ming Emperor executing his best general out of spite, or the U.S. government recording profanity as geography, the "top-down" structure is always vulnerable to the "bottom-up" wit of those it oppresses. We spend billions on "legal webs" and "tax codes," but we can't even stop a group of laborers from naming a mountain after a curse word.