Monthly Archives: November 2005

Ricepaper Magazine loves Save Kogawa House concert with Harry Aoki, Raymond Chow, Vancouver Opera Touring Ensemble

NOV. 12 SAVE KOGAWA HOUSE special concert

Ricepaper magazine
is Canada's only nationally distributed magazine covering Asian
Canadian arts and culture.  Editor Jessica Gin Jade and Publisher
Jim Wong-Chu were interviewed on CBC Radio's Sounds Like Canada by
Sheila Rogers on Thursday Morning.

Jenny Uechi, writer and managing editor attended the November 12th
Celebration and Awareness concert for Save Kogawa House.  Jenny
wrote:




“Naomi's Road” a huge success at Vancouver Public Library!

Jenny Uechi, November-13 2005

November 12, 2005

Renowned artists and community spokespeople gathered in the Alice
MacKay Room of the Vancouver Public Library on Saturday, November 12 to
express their support to save the Joy Kogawa home from demolition. The
free public concert was organized by Todd Wong, founder of the annual
Gung Haggis Fat Choy and writer Ann Marie-Metten, the Vancouver
coordinator of the Save Kogawa House committee.

Raymond Chow, Harry Aoki, Alison Nishihara, Andrea Nann, and the
Vancouver Opera cast of “Naomi’s Road” gave moving performances to
audiences who gathered to rally their support against the demolition of
Joy Kogawa’s childhood home, which appears in her awardwinning novel
Obasan. … read more

for more click on
http://www.ricepaperonline.com/index.php?id=102

SAVE KOGAWA HOUSE concert Saturday Nov 12, 2pm, Vancouver Public Library



Here's the program for our special


Save Kogawa House


Celebration and Awareness Concert

November 12, 2005
Alice Mackay Room

Vancouver Public Library

350 West Georgia Street
Vancouver, BC

Presented by

Save Kogawa House Committee

The Save Kogawa House Committee welcomes you to this celebration of our
120-day moratorium on demolition of the childhood home of author Joy
Kogawa.

This 1915 home at 1450 West 64th Avenue stands as reminder of the 1942
removal from their homes of men, women and children of Japanese
descent. Joy’s memories of her happy life in this modest home in
Marpole stayed with her throughout internment in Slocan and inspired
parts of her 1981 novel Obasan and the children’s story Naomi’s Road,
on which this opera is based.

The opera Naomi’s Road, which premiered on September 30 as Vancouver
Opera’s
second-ever commissioned original work, is now touring 140
schools and community centres throughout British Columbia.

On November 1, a graft of the cherry tree from Joy’s childhood home was
planted at City Hall and Mayor Larry Campbell proclaimed the day Obasan
Cherry Tree Day. On November 3, Vancouver City Council voted
unanimously to pass an unprecedented order to delay demolition of Joy’s
childhood home. This 120-day period allows us time to raise funds so
that the house can be purchased and converted into a writers’ centre.

Charitable donations can be made online through the Vancouver Heritage
Foundation website at
http://www.vancouverheritagefoundation.org/Kogawa.html.

For more information, visit www.kogawahouse.com and www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com or contact
Todd Wong at gunghaggis@yahoo.ca or 604-240-7090 and Ann-Marie Metten at ametten@telus.net or 604-263-6586.

SAVE KOGAWA HOUSE

Celebration and Awareness Concert
 November 12, 2005
2:00pm         Introductions
2:05pm         Harry Aoki & Friends
2:25pm         Raymond Chow  Special Presentation
2:40pm         Naomi’s Road – Vancouver Opera Touring Ensemble
3:25pm         Questions and Answers
3:40pm         Closing Remarks and Thank You

Vancouver Opera Touring Ensemble

Cast and Crew
Naomi ………………………………………… Jessica Cheung
Mother, Obasan, Mitzi …………………………….….. Gina Oh
Stephen ……………………………………….…… Sam Chung
Father, Trainmaster, Rough Lock Bill, Bully …….. Sung Chung

Pianist: Angus Kellett
Stage manager: David Fuller

Music by Ramona Leungen
Libretto by Ann Hodges
Music director: Leslie Uyeda

Commissioned by Vancouver Opera, James W. Wright, general director

Running time is approximately 45 minutes.


Raymond Chow
Internationally recognized as an artist, Raymond Chow’s drawings of
Vancouver, Victoria, Seattle, Portland, San Francisco and Los Angeles
form a unique history of the heritage of the Pacific coast. Raymond is
also a pianist and composer who has produced music for ballet, CD and
video.

Harry Aoki
Harry’s personal story mirrors that of the role of 10-year-old Steven
in the Naomi’s Road opera. Harry had to leave behind his beloved
violin, when he was removed from the West Coast in 1942 because he is
Japanese Canadian. Today Harry hosts First Friday Forum, a monthly
evening of music and discussion at the Nikkei Centre in Burnaby.


Special Thanks
to Vancouver Opera, Vancouver Public Library, Mayor Larry Campbell,
Councillors Jim Green, Raymond Louie and Ellen Woodsworth, Vancouver
City Council, Parks Commisioners Suzanne Anton and Heather Deal, Gerry
McGeough, Diane Switzer, Vancouver Heritage Foundation, Heather
Redfern, Marion Quednau, Jackie Byrn, James Wright, Paul Whitney, Ellen
Crowe-Swords, Scott McIntyre, James Johnstone, Yosef Wosk, Alma Lee,
Hitomi Nunotani, Asian Canadian Writers’ Workshop, Don Montgomery,
Ricepaper Magazine, ExplorASIAN, Ross Bliss and the many writer
associations across the country.

Rememberance Day 2005 – My Uncle Daniel Lee

Rememberance Day 2005 & My Uncle Daniel Lee

Today is Rememberance Day.

When I was a child I remember standing in the Laura Secord Elementary
School gymnasium listening to a reading of the poem Flanders
Field.  I liked the images of fields of poppies – but I disliked
the images of dead soldiers.

Today, I watched the Victory Square cenotaph ceremonieson CTV.  I
excitedly looked for my uncle Daniel Lee, a WW2 veteran and very active
with the Pacific Unit 280 Veterans.  As the television camera
panned the veterans in attendance, I  spotted his friends Ed Lee
and Alex Louie, also vets.  Uncle Dan and Ed also help organize
the Victory Square ceremonies, and finally during the laying of the
wreaths, I saw Uncle Dan handing the wreaths to some of the dignitaries
laying them at the cenotaph.

I am very proud of my Grand-Uncle Dan, and inspired by his dedication
and committment to service.  Every year, he is out in the cold
selling poppies on street corners.  But he does far more than just
that.   Here is the article I wrote last year about my Uncle Dan.

It was very nice that the CTV commentator John Stanton, mentioned the
tremendous courage of Chinese Canadian veterans – who had enlisted when
they were not able to vote for the country they were born in. 
They wanted to prove their loyalty and worth to Canada.  They made
enormous contributions in Asian operating in the Burmese jungles like
my Uncle Victor Wong did, in small espionage units.  Uncle Dan was
stationed in England along with his brothers Howard and Leonard.

Below is a picture taken last year at the Chinatown pioneer and
veterans cenotaph, as Mayor Larry Campbell and Councillor Jim Green
greeted and thanked my Uncle Dan.

SAVE KOGAWA HOUSE Celebration and Awareness Concert Nov 12


November 7th, 2005



SAVE KOGAWA HOUSE Celebration and Awareness Concert



NAOMI’S ROAD opera performance By Vancouver Opera Touring Ensemble

Special guest, Musician Harry Aoki and friends

Saturday November 12, 2005 2:00pm

Vancouver Public Library

350 West Georgia Street

Alice Mackay Room

Admission is free, all are welcome.

This past week, a cherry tree graft from Kogawa House was planted at
City Hall on November 1st, which was proclaimed Obasan Cherry Tree Day.
On Thursday, November 3rd, the Vancouver City Council’s Planning &
Environment Committee voted unanimously to pass an unprecedented
120-day demolition delay order for Joy Kogawa's childhood home to allow
the raising of funds so that the house can be purchased and converted
into a writers' centre.

To celebrate these milestones in the Save Kogawa House campaign, a
performance of the opera Naomi’s Road by the Vancouver Opera Touring
Ensemble
will be presented free to the public on November 12 at 2:00
pm. It will take place in the Alice MacKay Room of the Vancouver Public
Library downtown.

The Marpole home is featured in Joy's award-winning novel Obasan and
the children’s story Naomi's Road, which premiered on September 30 as
Vancouver Opera's second-ever commissioned original work and is now
touring to 140 schools and community centers throughout B.C.

Special guest musician is Harry Aoki. His personal story mirrors that
of the role of 10 year old Steven in the Naomi’s Road Opera. Harry had
to leave behind his beloved violin, when he was forced to leave the
West Coast because he was Japanese Canadian.

For further information contact Todd Wong at gunghaggis@yahoo.ca
Phone: 604-240-7090

More information at www.kogawahouse.com, www.kogawa.homestead.com and www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com

This event is sponsored by Vancouver Public Library, Vancouver Opera,
ExplorASIAN, Asian Canadian Writers’ Workshop and Ricepaper Magazine.

Coalition marks 120th anniversary of completion of Canada's first transcontinental railway


Media   Advisory: November 7, 2005


Coalition marks 120th anniversary of completion of Canada's first transcontinental railway

TORONTO. The   Ontario Coalition of Chinese Head Tax Payers
and Families (Ontario Coalition)   will host a commemoration
of the 120th anniversary of the completion of the   Canadian
Pacific Railway at 12:30 pm EST today at the Monument to the Chinese
Railroad Workers in Canada in Toronto.

“November 7, 2005 is a significant date in the history of Canada,” Doug
Hum, Co-Vice Chair of the Ontario Coalition said today, “It’s the 120th
anniversary   of the driving of the last spike in 1885 on
November 7th at Craigellachie, British Columbia which completed the
final railway link that joined Canada from the Atlantic to the Pacific
Oceans.”

At this event, the   Chinese Canadian National Council (CCNC)
will present the “Last Spike”, a “commemorative iron spike” received
from celebrated Canadian historian and author Pierre Berton before his
passing.  

Through this precious gift to   the CCNC, Mr. Berton
recognized the early Chinese contribution to the building  
of Canada. “We are pleased to have the support of the Teamsters Canada
Rail Conference,” Victor Wong, Executive Director of CCNC said today.
“The union shares a common history with
the Chinese men who helped Canada achieve its National Dream – a
railway linking the country from the Atlantic to the  
Pacific.”

To complete this final   link, the Government of Canada had to
recruit thousands of Chinese workers   mostly from Guangdong,
China when almost no one else could be found or were willing to do the
work. There was tremendous opposition to Chinese workers in British
Columbia at the time which prompted the first Prime Minister of Canada,
Sir John A. McDonald who being fearful that the completion of the
railway might be jeopardized,
to lash out at opposition to Chinese workers saying that, “either you must have this labour or you can't have this railway.”

“Immediately following   the last spike in 1885, the
Government of Canada in pandering to racist elements at the time,
slapped a head tax on all Chinese immigrants to Canada,” said Susan
Eng, Co-Chair of the Coalition.  “It began initially at $50, then
was raised to $100 in 1900 and finally to $500 in 1903.”  This
“Chinese Head Tax” failed to deter Chinese immigration which led the
Canadian Government to finally close the door on almost all Chinese
immigration by enacting the “Chinese Exclusion Act” in 1923 which was
not repealed until 1947.

To mark November 7th,   the Ontario Coalition of Chinese Head
Tax Payers and Families is hosting a   commemoration of
Chinese railroad workers in Canada and a press conference
to   outline its plans for redress of the Head Tax and
Chinese Exclusion Act.  In attendance will be direct descendents
of the builders of the railway that helped to build Canada.

The Ontario Coalition   of Chinese Head Tax Payers and
Families consists of head tax payers, their   surviving
spouses and descendants.  They are joined in the campaign
for   Head Tax redress by the Chinese Canadian National
Council, the Association of Chinese Canadians for Equality and
Solidarity Society, Metro Toronto Chinese   and South East
Asian Legal
Clinic, BC Coalition of Head Tax Payers Spouses and   Descendants, and other equality-seeking groups.

DATE:            Monday, November 7, 2005
TIME:             12:30 p.m. EST*
LOCATION:  The Monument to the Chinese Railroad
Workers in Canada at Blue Jays Way and Navy Wharf Ct. west of the dome stadium (Rogers Centre)

*The last spike was driven at 9:30 a.m. PST.

 -30-

For further   information and to arrange interviews, please contact:

Doug Hum, Chinese Head   Tax Payers and Families, Toronto, (416) 706-7886

Victor Wong, Chinese   Canadian National Council, Toronto, (416) 977-9871

Sid Tan, BC Coalition of Head Tax Payers Spouses and Descendants, Vancouver, (604)   433-6169

The Age of Opulence: Turning Point Ensemble + Heritage Vancouver create a musical afternoon of tea and heritage

The Age of Opulence: Turning Point Ensemble + Heritage Vancouver create a musical afternoon of tea and heritage

Turning Point Ensemble
Heritage Vancouver

Sunday, November 6th, 2005
The Age of Opulence, Vancouver 1915-1930
Stanley Park Walking Tour, & Vancouver Historic Music w/ the Turning Point Ensemble
Location: Stanley Park Pavillion, The Rose Garden Tea Room
Time: 2pm to 4:30pm
Admission: By donation
2pm Walking tour with Heritage Vancouver President, Donald Luxton
3pm – 4:30pm Parlour performance by the Turning Point Ensemble

The idea was to “Take a journey back to Vancouver's age of opulence with Heritage
Vancouver and the Turning Point Ensemble. Imagine… the date is 1915,
the Stanley Park Pavilion is newly built, and you are joining us for
tea and an afternoon performance of music and song in the Stanley Park
Pavilion Rose Garden Tea Room.


“Meet at the tea room for a walking tour of the pavilion and Malkin
Bowl, then relax to music featuring premiere arrangements of early BC
parlour songs and concert music composed by Vancouver's first
internationally trained composer, Jean Coulthard. Woven together with a
sparkling narrative, the concert will include music by Ravel,
Rachmaninoff, and Jelly Roll Morton – all featured guests in Vancouver
in the 1920's.”

So many people showed up for the tour that the guide kept saying “I
can't believe so many people showed up!”  Meanwhile inside the Stanley Park Pavillion, at the Rose Garden Tea Room,
the kitchen rushed to make up more sandwiches and the staff set up more
seats creating a new row, so that the reserved seats formerly in the
front row were now in the second row.

Guest performers Heather Pawsey and trumpeter/pianist Alan Matheson were all dressed in time period perfect costumes with the Turning Point Ensemble
Pawsey opened the show with “Here's a Ho, Vancouver” credited to B.C.
Hilliam and E. Pauline Johnson.  Her heel coquettishly raised,
Heather flirted with the audience and bequiled them to enjoy
themselves.  Her operatic soprano was perfect for the palour songs
presented from 1915 to 1930. 

Throughout the performance the Turning Point ensemble took turns
performing popular and classical arrangments in duos, trios and larger
ensembles.  Rachmaninov's Vocalise was performed by Ariel Barnes
on Cello and Jane Hayes on piano.  Narrator Alexander Browne spoke
into an old microphone that perfectly duplicated the old microphone
radio sound of the 1920's.  Looking around the Heritage Class “A”
building of the Rose Garden Tea House,
you could actually imagine that this was how high society used to enjoy
music in the afternoon salons of Vancouver.  Organizer Lindsay
McDonald and photographer Lindsey Donovan were both dressed up in period dresses, helping to create an atmosphere of glamour and fun.

The Turning Point Ensemble's mission is to increase the understanding
and appreciation of concert music composed during the past hundred
years, linking the music of earlier times to the music of today. 
I particularly enjoyed the three songs by Vancouver born, Jean
Coulthard, Spinning Song, Cradle Song and The of China's
Daughter.  Francis Poulenc's Sonata for Horn Trumpet, and Trombone
were beautiful, as Maurice Ravel's Chansons Madecasses were serious and
imposing.

The afternoon of team and salon music ended on very exhuberant notes,
as Pawsey and the full ensemble performed their encore numbers, S Nice
by William Eckstine and Sam Howard.  Again, Pawsey posed and
flirted with the audience proving what a dramatic performer she
is.  The audience was asked to join in for the “stuttering
song”K-K-K-Katy, and then the desserts came out.

Definitely a fun afternoon.  I will be that next year it will happen again, but maybe with advanced ticket sales.

Chinese Canadian History Fair in Nanaimo at Malispina College

Chinese Canadian History Fair in Nanaimo at Malaspina College

The Chinese Canadian Historical Society of BC
organized another history fair, this time at Nanaimo's Malaspina
University-College.   Nanaimo's Chinatown used to be a thriving bustling
place from 1860 to 1923.  My great-great-grandfather, Rev. Chan Yu
Tan, had ministered at the Chinese United Church around 1924.
After becoming increasingly derelict it was destroyed by a fire September 30, 1960.  CCHS board member Dr. Imogene Lim played a big part in
bringing many presenters together from Nanaimo, Cumberland, Vancouver
and Prince George. 

Here's what Imogene had to say about the event:


“Although we had a very wet and
stormy day, I think we can say the second CCHS Chinese Canadian History
Fair was a success; we drew a sizable crowd to all the featured
activities.  There was a lot of mingling and conversation between
visitors and between exhibitors; in many cases, a reunion and
reconnecting of intersecting lives.” 

Fourteen displays were presented including the Nanaimo
District Museum, Cumberland Historical Society, Chinese Women Aviators,
Trev Sue-A-Quan's Guyanese Chinese  genealogy titled “Cane Reapers,” Head Tax Redress, 1907
Riots, Chinese soccer team featuring Queene Yip, chinese cemetaries, and Chinese Canadian women pionneers.

Janice Wong presented her book CHOW From China to Canada:
Stories of Food and Family
.  This was followed by a panel
discussion with Dr. Imogene Lim, restauranteur Gerry Wong who along
with Janice all grew up in restaurant enviornments.  Gerry's
father had chinese restaurants in Nanaimo, while Imogene's uncle and
father ran
the WK Gardens in Vancouver, which she described as a “high end”
restaurant which had catered to Prime Ministers, royalty and
entertainers
such as Frank Sinatra and Gary Cooper.  Imogene even showed some of the
original menus and special event menus created for events such as
weddings and royal visits.

Karin Lee also showed her movie Comrade Dad, as well as having a
display table.  It was the Vancouver Island premiere of Comrade
Dad, a Karin Lee film about her father, Wally, who ran a Communist
bookstore in Vancouver's Chinatown in the days before China was
recognized by the Canadian government.
The NFB film featuring my cousin Rhonda Larrabee's story about growing
up half Chinese and half First Nations, Tribe of One, was also shown.

I set up a display of the Rev Chan Family, including the poster
displays that were made for our family reunions in 1999 and 2000. 
It was very cool that I had pictures of Janice Wong's parents, Dennis
and Mary, her grandparents Joseph and Rose, and her great grandfather,
the Rev. Chan Yu Tan with his wife Wong Shee, as Janice is my 2nd
cousin once removed.

Rhonda Larrabee is also a relative as her father Art is my
grandmother's elder brother, so we had pictures of Rhonda at the
reunions as well, with her brothers, daughters and grandchildren.

I had meant to phone my grand-aunt Helen who lives in Nanaimo, and
tried to reach her through Directory Assistance once I got there but to
no avail.  As I was setting up the display, I saw a white haired
woman approach the Rev. Chan Family display flanked by CCHS board
members Larry Wong and Edgar Wickberg. 

“That's my grandfather!” she exclaimed, “And my grandmother! How did you get these pictures!”

Both Larry and Ed looked over at me, as I stood silently behind my
Auntie Helen.  I held my finger to my lips asking them not to say
anything.

“That's his sister! How did you get these pictures!” my Aunt continued pointing at the pictures.

I finally spoke saying, “Please don't touch the pictures, they are very sensitive.”

“Sorry,” she said as she kept looking at the pictures saying, “That's my Aunt!  That's my Uncle!”

“Excuse me,” I said, “How are you related to these people in the pictures?”

She turned and looked at me.  Her eyes suddenly widened joyfully
in recognition.  “Todd!  What are you doing here?”

It turned out that Auntie Helen's friend had been listening to CBC
Radio's North By Northwest, and host Sheryl Mackay had talked about the
Chinese Canadian History Fair at Malispina College, and she told
herself that her friend Helen had to be there. 

“You look just like your sister!” Janice Wong exclaimed to Auntie
Helen, when I introduced them to each other for the very first time,
during the CHOW book signing, after the panel discussion with Janice,
Gerry and Imogene.  They had never met each other before, but they
knew they were family.


The Chinese Vote in Vancouver: NPA, Vision Vancouver or COPE?

The Chinese Vote in Vancouver: NPA, Vision Vancouver or COPE?

The Vancouver Sun has run an article titled Vision trying to
lure Chinese voters away from NPA
on today's page B5.  But the
article does not identify a distinction between Chinese immigrant
voters and the multigenerational Chinese Canadians born and raised in
Canada.

The reporter Frances Bula, had interviewed me on Friday afternoon asking me about
whether Vision Vancouver can capture some of the traditional Chinese
vote in Vancouver.  I immediately asked “Which Chinese community
vote are you talking about?”

“Raymond Louie, is the first Vancouver born City Councillor,” I told
Frances Bula, who was surprised at the fact. Bill Yee was the first
Chinese elected to council but he wasn't born in Vancouver. 
“Sandra Wilking was the first Chinese woman councillor but was born in
South Africa. Jenny Kwan was the first COPE councillor but was born in
Hong Kong.

“We have to go back to Douglas Jung in 1957″ to find a Chinese Canadian
politician born in Vancouver.”  Jung was Canada's first Member of
Parliament.  Even Art Lee, elected in the 1970's had come from
Alberta.

“We are what I call the 'invisible visible-minority',
multi-generational Canadian born chinese, who have integrated and
assimilated into the mainstream,” I told the reporter.

“How do I vote?  I vote according to the person, rather than
strictly along party lines.  It's important to have a healthy
opposition in government, or on civic council  That's why people
kept voting for Harry Rankin.

“I like Ellen Woodsworth of COPE, and Heather Deal of Vision Vancouver
I've gotten to know them since they were elected.  I know both Sam
Sullivan and Jim Green – Sam has supported our Asian Canadian Writers
Workshop dinners, and Jim has helped us with the Save Kogawa House
campaign.  Anne Roberts, Peter Ladner, along with Woodsworth and
Sullivan also attended my Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner earlier this year. They are all wonderful human beings.”

“I first got to know Raymond Louie through his wife, when she was
on the Vancouver Asian Heritage Month Society.  Raymond, like all
my cousins on my mom's side – all married caucasians.” This surprised
the reporter.

Raymond wants to be more than just “the Chinese councillor” – more
importantly, he identifies himself as a Canadian who happens to be of
Chinese ethnicity, as I do.  I can actually say this about many
multi-generational ethnic Canadians, because we think Canadian
first!  And we are better able to cross ethnic lines this way, and
better able to understand all cultures.

Raymond's family has been in Vancouver for a long time.  We gave
shared stories about early Chinatown experiences.  George
Chow's grandfather paid the head tax, and he immigrated to Vancouver in
the 1960's.  Personally, I don't expect
the newer immigrant counsellor candidates to understand some of these
issues about head tax or the experiences of the pioneer chinese of the
1800's and early 1900's.  But I think Raymond and George
can.  They are also people I can relate to and trust. 
Then again, I can't expect myself to understand a lot of the immigrant
Chinese
issues.  But because I am more familiar with Chinese culture, and
work with and know a lot of immigrant Chinese, I am probably more
knowledgeable than somebody who is non-Chinese and hasn't experienced
similar issues.

Raymond I and were both at the opening of the 3 Chinese Canadian Pioneer Familes
exhibit at the Chinese Cultural Centre Museum and archives in
2002.  I am descended from Rev. Chan Yu Tan, and he is a distant
relative of H.Y. Louie, who were both featured along with Lee-Bick, the
ancestor of former UBC Counsellor and Vancouver businessman Bob Lee.

I think that it is a myth that the Chinese vote traditionally goes to
the NPA, and it may be simply that the NPA were better at recruiting
candidates such as Tung Chan, Don Lee, and Daniel Lee, who as native
Chinese speakers were better able to speak to Chinese media.  Even
the Chinese Canadian voters didn't fully support Douglas Jung in his
re-election bid, nor did Don Lee and Daniel Lee get re-elected in the
last civic election, even though Raymond Louie was elected.

I know that I have also had the pleasure to meet Alan Wong and John
Cheng, the COPE and NPA Vancouver School Board Trustees.  They are
also both wonderful men, but I relate a bit better to Alan maybe
because he grew up here in Canada, and we are closer in age.

I think that when people vote, they want the people who can best
represent their interests.  And this may also mean voting for
people that come from similar backgrounds, hence immigrants may be more
likely to vote for other immigrants of similar background.  But
they may also vote for people who are multigenerational, and represent
how their children will grow up as integrated Canadians and
Vancouverites.

I forgot to tell the reporter that I'll be attending the Libby Davies' COPE
chinese
dinner fundraiser on November 10th at the Rich Ocean Seafood Chinese
Restaurant on 777 West Broadway.  It's being organized by my
friend Meena Wong, who is helping COPE as a chinese voter
strategist.  And I may even be wearing my
kilt as a performer with my accordion.  How Chinese is that? 
Not very…. but very multicultural Vancouver!

Vancouver Asian Film Festival – Gala Opening + Motel + What Are You Anyway?

Vancouver Asian Film Festival + Gala Opening + Motel + What Are You Anyway?

There was a good fun crowd at Tinseltown for VAFF's
opening night. I immediately joined friends Elwin and Fanna, and while
standing in line to go in we said “Hi” to friends Jim Wong-Chu,
film-maker Poping Au, Kathy Leung, Tom Chin, Joyce Lam as well as VAFF
executive director Peter Leung and VAFF founder Barbara Lee.

This year's VAFF opening featured two films.  The award winning animated short What Are You Anyways? by Jeff Chiba Stearns,
and Motel by Michael Kang.  Both films were very enjoyable and
expressed aspects of Asian-ess that the audience could releate
to. 


What Are You Anyways? is a classic animated short that consisted of a
series of vignettes about growing up half-Japanese, or “Hapa” as the
main character describes the Hawaiian term for “Half-Asian.”  This
film is hilarious, as situations unfold such as dealing with
“red-necks”, dating Japanese girls, and falling in love.


Motel
, is a live drama about the awakening adolescence experienced by a
chubby 13-year old American Chinese youth named Ernest Chin (Jeffry
Chyau) whose family owns and runs a blue motel.  He has a crush on
an older teenage Chinese American waitress whose family owns and runs
the Chinese restaurant up the road.  Comic situations develop when
a charismatic Korean-American guy (Sung Kang, Better Luck Tomorrow)
checks into the motel becoming an older brother type mentor figure to
the fatherless Ernest.

The Motel was workshopped at the Sundance Filmmakers Lab and
ultimately received the Sundance/NHK International Filmmakers Award.
What Are You Anyways? won the Best Animation Award at the 2005 Los Angeles ARPA
International Film Festival

THE VAFF GALA
As always, the VAFF Gala is one of my favorite Asian Canadian Cultural
events.  It is a great place to see the movers and shakers in our
Asian Canadian literary and arts community.  I was greeted by
Charlie Cho (CBC Radio) and Prem Gill (City TV) with cheers for the
work I have been doing with the Save Kogawa House committee.  Prem
told me that City TV did a piece on Kogawa House that evening.

It was great to see Eunhee Cha, who made the NFB documentary Tribe of
One
last year about my cousin Rhonda Larrabee.  She passed out
postcards of her new film Blue Bird of Happiness telling me that I
would love her new film in which “A neighbourhood activist decides that
a 7-year-old asian girl being raised by white parents needs his help.”
Writer Liz Nonuda seems to have a great sense of humour.

Ray Shum, friend and photographer for our Asian Canadian arts
community, was taking lots of pictures for VAFF.  It was great to
introduce him to Jeff Chiba Stearns, who told him, “During the Q&A,
I noticed you were taking pictures and I was thinking – I want some of
those pictures!” 

Jeff was accompanied by his real-life girlfriend Jenni Kato. 
Joyce Lam, founder of Vancouver Asian Canadian Theatre, shared with
Jenni that when Jeff announced that the woman whom the character
“Jenny” was based on was taking pictures in the audience during the
Q&A, everybody was craning their necks to see her.  Jenni is a
stunningly attractive and immediately likable woman, and it is easy to
see how Jeff fell in love with her – just like in his movie!

Joyce's partner Tom Chin is always great to see.  I invited him to
again be a co-host for Gung Haggis Fat Choy: the dinner.  Tom told
Jeff and me that he has now redesigned his half Canadian lumberjack
shirt / half Chinese jacket outfit… it is now half hockey
jersey!  Can't wait to see it!  But is it the Canucks, Maple
Leafs or Canadiens?

It was nice to talk to Susan Gordon of Vancouver Parks, and Eric
Erickson if the NFB, whom I discovered was the executive director of
“Tribe of One.”

Don Montgomery, executive director of ExplorASIAN and  Iris Chen
sat with our ACWW / Ricepaper community with Marlene Gates, Grace Chin
(organizer of Scripting Aloud), and Ricepaper collective Michelle Siu,
Jenny and Carol.  It was great to invite them all to the Naomi's
Road performance at the Vancouver Public Library, and for the
organizations to come on board as sponsors for the event.

Raymond Liens, an ExplorASIAN board member was there with Richard
Teterault, whom I discovered was the News Producer for Radio Canada
Television, and had assigned the story to cover the Save Kogawa House
presentation at City Hall.  It's really a small world, but a great
community.

Kudos to VAFF founder Barbara Lee, executive director Peter Leung and
all the VAFF directors and volunteers.  This is definitely a good
contribution to our Asian Canadian arts community.

Check out the Ricepaper review of VAFF's opening night
http://www.ricepaperonline.com/index.php?id=91