Monthly Archives: January 2006

First Media sighting for Gung Haggis Fat Choy on Anne Garber's Evalu8 website







First Media sighting for Gung Haggis Fat Choy on Anne Garber's Evalu8 website
   


Scottish Hogmanay New Year + Asian Canadian style = Gung Haggis Fat Choy

Anne Garber's Evalu8 is a great website full of community events, and reviews of this, that, and lots of other things.

I particularly enjoyed reading her movie reviews of Narnia before I went to actually see it this past weekend.

Anne has graciously put my “Gung Haggis” icon on her homepage with a link to a longer article

I
will have to return to spend some time browsing all her restaurant
reviews, as I am looking for somewhere to take my sweetie, after all
this GHFC event stuff is over.

Bought my haggis today…. 75+ pounds of it from Peter Black & Sons


Ordered my haggis today…. 75+ pounds of it from Peter Black & Sons


I
like the haggis that Peter Black of Park Royal makes.  It is a
lovely haggis with wonderful spices and Peter's secret recipe, that may
or may not include mince meat (so a friend tells me).

The first
time I tasted haggis, I gagged.  It's true.  I have said this
many times.  I since found out it was from a lard recipe. 
Who eats lard?  It was 1998, at the first Gung Haggis Fat Choy
dinner that a lovely woman named Fiona brought a haggis to our first
dinner for 16.

For the following years, I went on a quest…
searching butcher stores for the elusive haggis, trying different
stores.  Then one year, I bought my haggis at Peter Black &
Sons, located in Park Royal South.  People actually came up to me
and said… “This haggis is good.”  They liked it.  And I
didn't gag… and neither did they. 

The following year,
I left it too late to purchase my haggis.  Peter Black was all
sold out.  I found a butcher store with some haggis.  I
bought them all.  I shouldn't have.  It was back to the gag
reflex. 

So… I made dropped by Peter Black & Sons
early the following December and told them I wanted to place an advance
order.  They told me to come back in early January.  I
did.  And I ordered lots.  They couldn't believe it. 

Today
I had a great talk with the man himself, Peter Black.  I ordered
70 one-pounders for each table + a banquet haggis “as lang's my
arm”.  And I also ordered a bucket of haggis – without the
wrappings… so we could make our won tons and spring rolls. 
Peter told me that he was making the haggis on the weekend, and he was
preparing the spice mixture as we spoke.

He also told me that a
patron brought him a picture of a Chinese guy wearing a kilt, hosting a
Robbie Burns Dinner.  Peter nodded and smilied, saying all the
right multicultural things…  never once saying that he is the
“official supplier” to the Gung Haggis Fat Choy Dinner, and that it is
only his haggis that I use to my my special “Gung Haggis Won
Tons.” 

Okay, so it may have been a rare moment of grace
and humility for the man.  But I like him, and I like his
haggis.  And tomorrow I will take him a copy of my new poster for
the 2006 Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner.  And Peter may put it up
above the little cage he has with the “wild haggis” inside.  Maybe
he will tell people that when the little creature grows up, he will
look like this:

Ha Ha Ha Ha…….  A Wild Chinese Haggis…..  that's me!

Head Tax film: Karen Cho's IN THE SHADOW OF GOLD MOUNTAIN on Rough Cuts on CBC Jan 3 & 7


Head Tax film: Karen Cho's IN THE SHADOW OF GOLD MOUNTAIN on Rough Cuts on CBC Jan 3 & 7

Karen Cho's IN THE SHADOW OF GOLD MOUNTAIN
is an incredible film that examines the hardships faced by Chinese Canadian pioneers who paid the head tax, and endured the Chinese Exclusion Act, and harsh rascist climate of Canada.

Karen is a Eurasian-Canadian, of both Chinese and British ancestry.  In the movie, she shares that her British grandparents and family are more outraged at the injustice of the head tax and exclusion act and the refusal of the Canadian government to make redress, than her Chinese side of the family.

IN THE SHADOW OF GOLD MOUNTAIN
airs on Rough Cuts on CBC Newsworld on Tuesday Jan. 3rd at 10pm ET, 1am ET and 4am ET.  or…. 7pmPT, 10pmPT and 1amPT).

It repeats on Sat. Jan. 7th at 3pm ET, 10pm ET and 1am ET (adjust minus three hours for Pacific time zone).

It is an incredible film that brought tears to my eyes, and excellent look at the hardships faced by Canada's Chinese forbears, the impact of head-tax and exclusion and how the mighty Lo Wah Kiu (old overseas Chinese) overcame it all.  When my girlfriend of British-Canadian ancestry watched the film last fall, she was amazed and angry that the country she grew up in and loves, could have such a deliberately racist history, and still refuse to address redress issues.

Interviews with Charlie Quan, Roy Mah, Gim Wong and Hanson Lau and some music by Sean Gunn, writer of the song “Head Tax Blues.”

Please tell your friends to watch this film documentary,

For additional information on Head Tax issues
Go to www.headtaxredress.org  and www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com/ChineseHeadTaxissues

Also check out:

Todd Wong's short review of In the Shadow of Gold Mountain and his description of meeting Karen Cho at the Vancouver premiere.
http://www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com/blog/_archives/
2004/11/21/189693.html

Toronto Star Nov 6, 2004 Interview of Karen Cho
Immigrants from China recall woes for Karen Cho Film won't let us Canadians forget `skeletons in closet'
by Nicholas Keung
http://www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com/blog/_archives
/2004/11/6/176305.html


Settling the Score: Hope for redress in the Year of the Rooster
by Sean Rossiter  (includes interview with Gim Wong, who was featured in the Karen Cho documentary “Shadow of Gold Mountain”)
http://www.shared-vision.com/2005/sv1801/headtax1801.html

REDRESSING THE PAST OF THE LO WAH KUI
(includes interview of film maker Karen Cho, Sid Tan and Mary-Woo Sims)
http://www.langara.bc.ca/prm/2005/past.htm

articles and pictures of 83-year old Gim Wong and his Ride For Redress across Canada
http://www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com/blog?cmd
=search&keywords=gim+wong+ride+for+redress



LIBERAL POSITION ON CHINESE HEAD TAX REDRESS SOFTENS WITH KEY RIDINGS AT RISK


From the BC Coalition of Head Tax Payers, Spouses, and Descendants

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

LIBERAL POSITION ON CHINESE HEAD TAX REDRESS  SOFTENS WITH KEY RIDINGS AT RISK

Toronto, January 2, 2006: Prime Minister Paul Martin and several key cabinet ministers appear to be trying to give the impression that they are softening their stance on an apology and redress for the Chinese head tax and Exclusion Act, according to comments in the Chinese-language media.

            “We are asking the Prime Minister to clarify for all Canadians exactly what is his stance on a parliamentary apology and redress for 62 years of legislated racism against Chinese Canadians,” said Avvy Go, legal counsel for the Ontario Coalition of Head Tax Payers and Families.

            Martin, who is being directly challenged on the head tax issue in his own riding of Lasalle-Emard in Montreal by Bloc Quebecois candidate May Chiu, was quoted Thursday, Dec. 29, 2005, in Ming Pao Daily as saying “it was wrong to collect head-tax from Chinese immigrants.  It was morally wrong.”

            In what appears to be a capitulation to the Opposition and public demands for justice, Martin said he recognized the deep divisions in the Chinese Canadian community resulting from his government’s policy on how to deal with the head-tax issue.

            “The Prime Minister is beginning to feel uneasy about his government’s treatment of this issue, which resonates as much for voters who see it as a fundamental issue of social justice as it does for Chinese Canadians,” said Susan Eng, co-chair of the Ontario Coalition of Head Tax Payers and Families.

            “But be forewarned: Mr. Martin’s pronouncements to the Chinese press are little more than campaign promises made when his party is on the ropes.”

            Indeed, the Liberals appear to be back-peddling on a $2.5 million agreement in principle with the National Congress of Chinese Canadians, a group that has many Liberal supporters but no track record on human rights issues, including head tax redress.

            Earlier this month, Industry Minister David Emerson, currently contesting the riding of Vancouver-Kingsway where Chinese Canadians comprise 42% of the population, told Sing Tao Daily that if elected he would become an advocate “to take another look” at the head tax settlement. Health Minister Ujjal Dosanjh, running in Vancouver South where Chinese Canadians account for 42% of the electorate, supported head tax redress when he was a B.C. cabinet minister.

            Given the Liberals’ policy under the ACE Program of “no apology, no compensation,” drafted by junior Minister of State (Multiculturalism) Raymond Chan, the Ontario Coalition, with the Chinese Canadian National Council and other groups representing head tax payers, demand that Mr. Martin clarify his party’s position.

            “We are sending an open letter to the Prime Minister to ask if his recent comments amount to a reversal of policy on redress – particularly overturning the conditions of ‘no apology, no compensation’ under the ACE Program,” Eng said.

            All major Opposition parties have declared their support for a full apology in Parliament and for broad-based negotiations on appropriate redress for the estimated 250 surviving head tax payers and their spouses, as well as for the whole Chinese Canadian community.

 –30–

MEDIA CONTACTS:

Ontario Coalition of Head Tax Payers and Families
(Toronto and Ottawa)
Susan Eng, co-chair, (416) 960-0312
Avvy Go, legal counsel, (647) 271-9357
Yew Lee, co-chair, (819) 827-3357

B.C. Coalition of Chinese Head Tax Payers, Their Spouses and Descendants
(Vancouver)
Bill Chu, spokesperson, (604) 261-6526

Sien Lok Society of Calgary
(Calgary)
Raymond Lee, past president, (403) 288-3903

Chinese Canadian Redress Alliance
(Montreal)
William Dere, (514) 488-0804

 

 

 

Open letter to the Prime Minister

Dear Prime Minister:

We believe you are sincere when you say you want to do something about the 62 years of legislated racism under the Chinese head tax and Exclusion Act. And your budget announcement this year of funds to back up your intentions was welcomed by those of us who have been campaigning for head tax redress for over 20 years. Yet, your government’s actions since then have only undermined your purpose.

No doubt you are aware of the widespread opposition to the official stance of “no apology, no compensation” and to your rushed agreement with the National Congress of Chinese Canadians while refusing to deal with the people most directly affected, the head tax payers and their families. All the opposition parties have called for an apology and good-faith negotiations with groups that represent actual head tax families.

Your recent comments quoted in a Chinese-language newspaper, Ming Pao, suggest that you may be reconsidering your position and we need to ascertain exactly what you mean. A simple yes or no will suffice.

According to the article, you expressed “deep sorrow” for the head tax and state that it was morally wrong. Most Canadians would accept that as an apology. But to be a proper apology from the government for its own past injustice, your words must be spoken in Parliament, as was the apology given by the Prime Minister of New Zealand on the Chinese New Year in 2001.

Your Multiculturalism Minister Raymond Chan has repeatedly stated that a full apology would expose the government to lawsuits although he knows the courts have ruled clearly that there is no legal liability but a strong moral obligation to provide redress. You acknowledge that collecting the head tax was morally wrong. So wouldn't it be morally correct to simply apologize?

If you are re-elected Prime Minister, will you sponsor an all-party Parliamentary resolution to acknowledge the injustice and racial discrimination, and to recognize the suffering of individual Chinese Canadians, their families, and the entire Chinese Canadian community that resulted from this legislated racism, including the emotional and financial hardship, and the forced separation of families?

You state your love and respect for Chinese Canadians. Does that extend to the 250 or so surviving head tax payers or spouses, mostly in their 90s, who deserve justice while they are still with us? Your wish to educate Canadians about this historical injustice would be best fulfilled by making a return of a symbolic amount to them. If re-elected, will you do this?

Indeed, since you have already decided to spend $2.5 million to start the process of reconciliation, why not rescind the ill-conceived agreement with the National Congress and instead re-direct those funds towards redress for those elders of our community who lived through the injustice? Most are in frail health and deserve your love and respect now, not after they pass on.

Finally, you express your willingness to start more dialogue with Chinese Canadians and gave as an example your recent meeting in Montreal's Chinatown. We note that you were meeting with the same group of people who signed your agreement with the National Congress. What we meant when we called for broader representation from the community was good-faith, transparent negotiations with head tax payers, their families and groups representing them. For example, instead of meeting with your party faithful in Chinatown, you could have visited with James Wing, 94, a head tax payer living in your riding of LaSalle-Emard. The nearly 3,000 Chinese Canadian constituents in your riding would certainly take notice of even such a simple gesture.

The process of reconciliation cannot begin until the federal government deals directly with those most affected: the head tax families and negotiates in good faith with groups that the head tax families themselves chose to represent them, not those that the government chooses for them.

If re-elected, will you support good-faith negotiations with the representatives of head tax families as to the nature and extent of redress for the impact of 62 years of legislated racism on head tax families and the Chinese Canadian community as a whole, including a transparent and legitimate process of gathering input from the head tax families and the broader Chinese Canadian community?

This is an issue of justice and reconciliation – which has become an issue in this election and will continue beyond January 23rd. For the sake of the few remaining head tax payers and their spouses, Mr. Prime Minister, we hope you will offer them justice in time.

Sincerely,

Ontario Coalition of Chinese Head Tax Payers and Families
Chinese Canadian National Council, and

B.C. Coalition of Chinese Head Tax Payers, Their Spouses and Descendants
(Vancouver)

Sien Lok Society of Calgary
(Calgary)

Chinese Canadian Redress Alliance
(Montreal)





New Year's Day in Vancouver – I wear my kilt to “kirk”

New Year's Day in Vancouver – I wear my kilt to “kirk”


“Toddish McWong” sporting a red fleece vest and red socks to go with an Ancient Fraser tartan, Kitsilano Beach, Vancouver BC – photo Deb Martin


New Year's Day is Hogmanay in Scottish culture.  It gives me a
reason to wear my kilt in public.  New Year's Day in 2006 is on a
Sunday, so I wore my kilt to church, or as they say in Scotland, to
“kirk.”

I attend the Centre for Spiritual Living in Vancouver.  We meet at the Masonic Hall at 1495 W 8th Ave, Vancouver, BC, at 11am.  Reverend Guy Johnson is the interim minister since the passing of Rev. Candace Frank
last fall.  Candace was friend who paddled on our dragon boat team
for the Taiwanese dragon boat races in 2004, and also gave a blessing
for the 2005 Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner.

I like the diversity of ideas at the Centre for Spiritual Living. 
The people attending are open minded to spiritual practices of
Buddhism, First Nations, and many other religions and
philosophies.  Reverend Guy's message today is about creating
positive beliefs for a new year, and letting go of the old beliefs that
no longer serve us.  We participate in a ceremony where we write
on flash paper, the things we want to let go of.  On the other
side we write the things that we want to create for our life.

We form three lines, and when my turn at the front comes, I hold the
flash paper towards the candles.  When it catches fire, I toss it
up in the air, and the flames grow big and hover suspended.  Very
cool!

After the service, many friends and new faces greet me, and smile at my
kilt. 

“Which tartan are you wearing,” somebody asks me. 

“It's the ancient Fraser, sometimes known as the Fraser of Lovat tartan,” I reply.

John Pifer comments that “It must be Gung Haggis Fat Choy
time again.”  He really enjoyed attending the dinner last
year.  I get a big hug from Jaime Griffiths, designer of the 2005
Gung Haggis Fat Choy poster.  My buddy Craig Brown and I attend
the social coffee time after service, where he asks people if they've
ever seen a Chinese guy wearing a kilt before, then tells them that he
attended the first dinner when we only had 16 people in a living
room.  It is a very friendly time.

Before leaving the building to go for lunch with Craig, I chat with
Reverend Guy.  He is looking forward to attending the Gung Haggis
Fat Choy dinner.  When I ask him if he will be wearing his kilt…
he gives me a look of surprise, like I let his secret out.  
Hmm…. will he or won't he?  Maybe if I bring him to Kilts Night
at Doolin's Irish Pub for a free pint of Guiness first…. dependent
upon wearing his kilt.


“Toddish
McWong” sporting a red fleece vest and red socks to go with an Ancient
Fraser tartan, Kitsilano Beach, Vancouver BC – photo Deb Martin

Joy Kogawa Haiku for the first-ever Vancouver Cherry Blossom Festival – coming in the spring

Joy Kogawa Haiku for the first-ever Vancouver Cherry Blossom Festival – coming in the spring

Joy Kogawa made the New Year's Eve Vancouver Sun edition on both page E3 and E13.

Linda Poole invites haiku submissions for the first-ever Vancouver Cherry Blossom Festival which will occur in March 2006.

Here is Joy Kogawa's haiku submission

A window opens

Cherry Blossom Festival

Look! Friendship growing



 – Joy Kogawa

Submission deadline is January 31st for the Haiku Invitational event. 

Hopefully we will also be able to celebrate in March with a possible announcement that Kogawa House has been saved.

Page E3 was a Kevin Griffin story titled
Non-profit leads fight to save Kogawa home
http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/news/arts/story.html?id
=e79e6447-9360-42f0-bdd3-11930b4876bc&k=57530&p=1

Vancouver Sun: Non-profit leads fight to save Kogawa home

Vancouver Sun: Non-profit leads fight to save Kogawa home

Check out this Vancouver Sun story by Kevin Griffin Vancouver Sun

Published: Saturday, December 31, 2005 

In fewer than 90 days, the south Vancouver home that writer Joy
Kogawa grew up in and wrote about in the novel Obasan faces being
demolished and lost forever as a physical reminder of the internment of
22,000 Japanese-Canadians in B.C. during the Second World War.

In
an effort to save the wood-frame house at 1450 W. 64th Ave., The Land
Conservancy of B.C. has decided to lead a campaign to raise $1.25
million to save the modest bungalow.

Bill Turner, TLC's executive director, said the Kogawa House is a very important part of the province's heritage.

“Joy
is a very well-respected Canadian writer — the house is important
because it was her childhood home,” Turner said. “It's also
historically important when you tie that together with her book Obasan
and with the internment of Japanese-Canadians during the Second World
War.

Kogawa lived in the house in the Marpole neighbourhood with
her family when she was a child. In 1942, at age six, she and her
family were removed from the house under the War Measures Act and
interned in a camp in the Slocan Valley. As with thousands of other
Canadians of Japanese ancestry, many of whom lived in the Marpole area,
Steveston and in what was called Japantown in the Downtown Eastside,
the Kogawas had their property auctioned off by the federal government
without their consent. After the war, Japanese-Canadians were
prohibited from moving back to Vancouver and other coastal areas and
instead were dispersed across the country.

Kogawa went on to
become one of the country's most celebrated writers. Obasan, described
as one of the 100 most important Canadian books ever written, reflects
Kogawa's internment experiences and includes many references to the
home she lost as a child. It tells the story of internment through the
eyes of Naomi Nakane who is protected by her aunt Obasan.

Obasan was selected by the Vancouver Public Library as the selection for One Book, One Vancouver in 2005.

In
November, Vancouver council delayed issuing a demotion permit for 120
days starting Nov. 30. The deadline expires Tuesday, March 30.

Turner
said the campaign to save the Kogawa house starts in earnest in
January. He said the $1.25 million fundraising goal includes $670,000
for the house and property, $170,000 for restoration, and $300,000 for
an endowment so that the Kogawa house can become a residence for
writers of conscience.

He said anyone wishing to donate to help
save the Kogawa house can go to TLC's website at www.conservancy.bc.ca
or call TLC at 604-733-2313. So far, the campaign has raised $35,000.

In
the first week of January, pledge forms will be distributed to
independent bookstores around Greater Vancouver such as Duthie's, Hagar
Books, Characters Books, Vancouver Kidsbooks, and 32 Books Co.

“I think the timeline is short but the people of Vancouver will be up to it,” Turner said. “We can pull this off.”

Usually
known as TLC, The Land Conservancy is a non-profit, charitable land
trust founded in 1997. Modelled after the National Trust of Great
Britain, TLC selects important cultural and natural landscapes for
protection. Properties saved by TLC include Victoria's Abkhazi Garden,
Sooke Potholes, and Burnaby's Baldwin House, the Arthur
Erickson-designed post-and-beam house by Deer Lake. The Kogawa house is
the TLC's first property in Vancouver.

Joy Kogawa said that the campaign to save her family home has caught her entirely by surprise.

“It's all too magic for words. I'm completely dumfounded by it all,” Kogawa said.

“Where does it come from? That concern, that love, that compassion?
I don't know whether it was because Obasan was chosen as the one book
for the city or that, somehow, some energy formed, just flew out of the
ground. People seem to care about it.

“It's more than gratifying — it's healing. I feel that my cup is absolutely overflowing.”

Kogawa
said with all public support for the campaign to save her childhood
home, it makes her feel as if people are standing by her and saying
that her story isn't being forgotten. She said that needs to happen for
other people all over the world who feel an internal hollowness when
their stories aren't acknowledged.

“There's a need for racism to
be understood and for us to see each other not as enemies but as
neighbours and to embrace one another. If this can serve that purpose,
it will be good for the city and for the country. That would be a
wonderful thing.”

Besides the Save Kogawa House Committee, groups
supporting the campaign include the Vancouver Heritage Foundation,
Heritage Vancouver, the Vancouver Alliance for Arts and Culture as well
as the Writers' Union of Canada and the Federation of BC Writers.

kevingriffin@png.canwest.com

© The Vancouver Sun 2005

Happy Hogmanay – listening to BBC Radio Scotland Live!


Happy Hogmanay – listening to BBC Radio Scotland Live!



It's almost midnight in Scotland.

I am listening live to BBC Radio Scotland, as they count down the minutes.



15
minutes ago when I tuned in, they were playing Elvis Presley, followed
by Dolly Parton's “9 to 5″…. then there was Tom Jones…




Now they are going live to Edinburgh….

A pipe major plays the bagpipes.

There is a countdown…. 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1….

Then everybody sings a song – what is it??

It's not Auld Lang Syne!?!?!

It's some song about Happy New Year!



The hosts come back and ramble on like New Year's hosts do…

They pop a champagne cork.

Now I hear accordion music… sounds like a polka – no it's not.

It's some song about Caledonia…

I've never heard it before.

“Come in, come in…here's my hand…”

Oh – it's Andy Stewart… whoever he is…



Now they thank Radio Scotland listeners from around the world.

Oh-
here's a song I recognize.  “I Would Walk 500 Miles” by the
Proclaimers.  This reminds me of the 2003 GHFC dinner when my
musician buddies Pat Coventon and pd wohl played their own version with
a “Eat Haggis” bridge, and words about Toddish McWong.




Happy New Year everybody!!!!