Monthly Archives: March 2006

ORIGAMI: huge folded paper figures at Holt Renfrew in Vancouver, by Joseph Wu

ORIGAMI:  huge folded paper figures at Holt Renfrew by Joseph Wu

I love origami. I would spend hours and hours folding paper eagles, dragons, fish etc.
When I was recovering my cancer in 1989, I folded lots of paper cranes. I was inspired
by the story of Sadako when she attempted to fold 1000 cranes after developing
leukemia following the WW2 bombing of Hiroshima.

But today... go see the wonderful window display at Holt Renfrew.

Joseph Wu has taken over their shop windows inside and one facing Granville Street.

He has said it's a "filler" for them and he'll load some pictures up
on his website soon but here's a preview from another website showing two
samples:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/lanrui/tags/origami/


Thomsett Elementary School Children visit Kogawa House with Joy

Thomsett Elementary School Children visit Kogawa House with Joy

On
Tuesday, February 21st, Grade 3 and 4 students from Tomsett Elementary
in Richmond went to visit Kogawa House.  The students had been
reading Naomi's Road, which is touring BC schools as a production by
Vancouver Opera Touring Ensemble.

Joy Kogawa met with teacher
Joan Young and students at the house, which resulted in the students
being inspired to write letters for Vancouver Mayor Sam Sullivan,
pleading to help save the treasured house. Here are the pictures from
the event and thank you letters between author Joy Kogawa and teacher
Joan Young.

image
“Save
Kogawa House” banner made by Thomsett Elementary school children,
cheering for the camera  with author Joy Kogawa – photo Joan Young

The following is written by teacher Joan Young, of Tomsett Elementary School in Richmond, BC.


Our Visit to Historic Joy Kogawa House




On Tuesday February 21st, an excited group of 23 boys and girls ages 8
to 10 from Tomsett Elementary School in Richmond arrived at 1450 West
64th Avenue in Vancouver.  The students and their teacher, Mrs. Joan
Young and their principal, Ms Sabina Harpe were here to meet Joy Kogawa
and to tour her childhood home.  This was a much anticipated day for
the children since they had been engaged in many learning experiences
in the classroom before arriving.




This adventure began last fall when the students first read the novel, Naomi’s Road by Joy Kogawa.  After the students read the novel, they attended a performance of the Vancouver Opera’s production of Naomi’s Road.
 Through the story, the students learned about the experiences of the
Japanese Canadians during the Second World War and  about the life of
the author.  Through their research, the students learned about Joy
Kogawa’s childhood home in Vancouver and of the campaign to save it.
 The class felt that this was an important project and decided to
support it by making a donation to the  Save Kogawa House campaign.
 The students also wrote letters to Joy Kogawa expressing their
feelings about the novel and the opera.




In January, 2006 the class was thrilled and surprised to hear from Joy
Kogawa herself!  Mrs. Kogawa invited the class to become actively
involved in the campaign to save her childhood home.  The class eagerly
took up the challenge.  The children thought of dozens of ideas for how
they might be able to make a meaningful contribution to the campaign.
 In the end, it was decided that they would do two things:  make a
large banner which would draw attention to the cause and they would
 write letters to the mayor of Vancouver, appealing to the city to
preserve the home as a valuable historic landmark.




The banner was constructed during a busy week at school.  Every student
in the class  made a contribution.  On February 21st It was with great
pride that the students unfurled the banner in front of the house and
showed Mrs. Kogawa the results of their efforts.  The banner depicts
the house surrounded by details from the past which the children had
learned  from the story such as the cherry tree, the peach tree, birds,
butterflies, and children playing.  The banner also contains images of
the future.  The children envision a welcoming happy place where
friends can come together.




The students thoroughly enjoyed their morning with Mrs. Kogawa.  They
listened intently as she recalled her memories of her life at  the
house as a young girl.   They embraced the spiritual significance of
the cherry tree, the tree of friendship and each one of them touched
the tree and felt empowered by it.  Mrs. Kogawa read to the children
from her book and taught the children a Japanese song, “ The Farewell
Song”.  Everyone who shared this time at the house that morning  was
touched in a special way.  At the end, the students presented Mrs.
Kogawa with some stories that they had written about her cherry tree.




We would  like to thank Joy Kogawa for spending this special time with
us. Thank you for helping us to learn about the power of love and
understanding.  We will never forget this experience.




Joan Young


Teacher, Division 4, Grade 3/4


Tomsett Elementary School,


Richmond, BC

image

Joy Kogawa signs books and autographs for Thomsett Elementary school children  – photo Joan Young

image

Thomsett Elementary school children pose at cherry tree with author Joy Kogawa – photo Joan Young


Hello Joy,
Thank you so much for spending the time with my class today.   It was
a  very special time  for the  children as well as for myself.

Your
recollections of your childhood were precious and brought to mind
some of my own memories as well.  I know that the students loved the
experience, and that they learned so many valuable lessons from you. Many
said that the house was better than anything that they had imagined.  
Being in the house  has made the  campaign so real to the
students and has helped to lay the foundation for the letters which they will write to the mayor.

The children have
developed a very genuine affection for you and the house which will allow them  to
write and speak from their  hearts.  I  am looking  forward
 to seeing the results of their efforts during  the next phase of  this
 project.


Again, thank you for being so generous with your time and for taking such
interest in the children.  This will be an  experience that we will
never forget.

Sincerely,
Joan

Dear Joan,

My thanks go to you, spectacular teacher that you
are, for a special time for me too. I also will never forget this day. I just
wished so much that my granddaughter who is the same age, could have been
there. The little books the children made are wonderful treasures. And the
banner!  Can’t wait for everyone to see it! Good luck for us all
when you see the mayor.

Joy

image

Teacher Joan Young with author Joy Kogawa – both share Japanese Canadian Heritage – photo courtesy of Joan Young.

Globe & Mail: Out of the mouths of babes, a plea for Kogawa's house

Globe & Mail:  Out of the mouths of babes, a plea for Kogawa's house


photo courtesy of Joan Young (not printed in Globe & Mail article)

Out of the mouths of babes, a plea for Kogawa's house

VANCOUVER
— If the innocence and passion of children were enough to save the
childhood home of celebrated author Joy Kogawa, the campaign to
preserve her old residence from imminent demolition would be a slam
dunk.

Twenty Grade 3 and 4 students made the trek to Vancouver City
Council chambers yesterday to issue a heartfelt plea on behalf of the
historic house, a plea that left councillor Kim Capri on the verge of
tears.

“I didn't expect to get so emotional. I welled up a little bit,” Ms.
Capri told the schoolchildren after listening to each of their
individual, one-sentence messages.

The pleas, made in turn, tumbled into one another in quick succession.

“Please save the house. Everyone will be happy. . . . The house is
so beautiful. I want to save it. . . . It is a beautiful house of
memories. . . . Please help us.”

And at the end, the most poignant of all: “If the house is destroyed, my heart will be a pool of tears.”

Ms. Kogawa's early home is a major image in her quasi-autobiographical, bestselling novel Obasan, about the wartime internment of a Japanese-Canadian family.

It is also central to her children's book on the same topic, Naomi's Road.

The story moved the students from Tomsett Elementary School in
Richmond to embrace Ms. Kogawa's tale and pitch in to try to save the
home where she lived happily for the first six years of her life.

The cultural landmark, a striking bungalow in the heart of the
city's Marpole area, is scheduled to be demolished by its owners at the
end of the month.

A grassroots campaign to buy the home and ward off its destruction
has been taken over by the Land Conservancy, which is seeking to raise
$1.25-million.

That would cover the purchase price, renovations and an endowment fund to establish a writer-in-residence program there.

But the task is daunting. With four weeks to go, the total stands at $170,000, almost all from relatively small donations.

The Richmond students donated $1 each to the fund, prompting Ms.
Capri, who had already made a donation, to cough up again to match
their contribution.

“I think what moved me was the fact that the students had been touched so deeply by this issue,” she said in an interview.

“They saw it, they learned it, they lived it. And what they said captured all of that. Their sincerity was very moving.”

Last month, the class toured the threatened house with Ms. Kogawa, who shared many of her childhood memories with them.

They paid particular attention to the stricken, backyard cherry tree that Ms. Kogawa played on as a child.

“I've just been amazed at how well they have responded,” said the
children's teacher, Joan Young, herself a Japanese-Canadian, whose
mother was interned in the Interior of B.C.

“It's been such a rich learning experience for them. I think they
were struck by the cherry tree, which was such a happy tree for Joy
Kogawa, and then the war came along.”

Yesterday, the students had been planning to present personal
letters to Mayor Sam Sullivan, but Mr. Sullivan had to cancel at the
last minute. Then, the letters were inadvertently left behind on the
bus.

But nine-year Carol Hu, a mere wisp of a child, was able to recite her letter from memory.

“Dear Mayor Sam Sullivan,” she began. “I am writing to you because I
want to save the Kogawa house. I want to save it because when I went
and touched the cherry tree, I felt the energy of love, peace and
friendship there.

“And when I went into the rooms, I felt I was living there with a
warm family. It was like I had four layers of cotton blankets on me.

“It would be a terrible shame if the house had to be destroyed.
Think how many memories would be destroyed and how many tears will come
down.

“We put a lot of work into it to save the house. If it does get destroyed, I would feel like knives coming through my heart.”

A TV crew was so impressed, they asked her to do it again. She did.

Canadian Press: Canada's leading writer's groups ask Ottawa for grant to save historic house


Canada's leading writers' groups ask Ottawa for grant to save historic house

Published: Monday, February 27, 2006

VANCOUVER (CP) – Canada's leading writers' groups are appealing to the
federal government for an emergency grant of $350,000 to save the
childhood home of novelist and poet Joy Kogawa.

Kogawa was six in 1942 when she and her family were forcibly removed
from their Vancouver home by the Canadian government during the Second
World War. The government used the War Measures Act to send 22,000
Japanese-Canadians to one of two internment camps in British Columbia
because they were considered enemies of Canada.

The Kogawa home was auctioned off without the family's consent and has been bought and sold several times since then.

The current owner wants to demolish the house and build a bigger one.

Vancouver city council has delayed issuing a demolition permit until
March 31 so the Land Conservancy of B.C. can raise $1.25 million to buy
the house and restore it for writers in residence.

The conservancy is supported by over a dozen organizations,
including the Writers' Union of Canada, the Writers' Trust of Canada
and the League of Canadian Poets.

So far, the groups have raised $170,000

, but Bill Turner, executive director of the Land Conservancy, said money continues to trickle in.

Supporters of the Save the Joy Kogawa House Committee say the simple
wood-frame house that was featured in Kogawa's award-winning book
Obasan needs to be saved as a symbol of Canadian history.

The committee is calling on all four major political parties for support.

Turner said he's trying to set up a meeting with Heritage Minister Beverley Oda.

“We're moving through the process but we don't have a lot of time
and of course, the government is just getting itself established so
it's an unfortunate time to have this,” Turner said.

“We have tremendous support but a lot of these (writers) are not very wealthy so that's one of the challenges.”

Several fundraising events, including one in Toronto on March 9, are
helping to get the word out about the campaign, Turner said.

© The Canadian Press 2006

See story by Canadian Press

Theatre: Sex in Vancouver “Doin' It Again, More please….

Sex in Vancouver: Doin' it Again,  More please….



Waterfront Theatre
Granville Island, Vancouver BC
Feb 24th to March 5th
For tickets go to
www.vact.ca

“Fun,” is the first word that comes to mind when thinking of the latest
incarnation of Vancouver Canadian Theatre’s running theatrical soap
opera, Sex in Vancouver.  Based on “Sex in Seattle” created by
Kathy Hsieh and Serin Ngai, VACT president Joyce Lam wanted to create
opportunities for Asian Canadian actors beyond small walk on parts in
stereotyped characters.  

After seeing the first 2 productions, I have to say that “Doin’It
Again” is the best edition yet.  VACT has now moved from The
Roundhouse into Waterfront Theatre, Mainstream media is finally taking
notice by running a preview.  There is a new level of maturity
both in the production and the acting.

Shari, Jenna, Tess and Elizabeth, are the four female characters around
which all the action revolves.  Elizabth is the old flame and
ex-fiance of Kenneth, who is now married to Shari, but they are now
going through a separation.  Jenna is Kenneth’s younger sister who
once had a crush on Tess, who is Elizabeth’s best friend.  George
is Kenneth’s college buddy who has a crush on Elizabeth, and Adam is
dating both Jenna and Tess, until he found out Tess is married to Zane
who is gay.

This all makes for lively action on stage and lots of theatrical sight
and verbal laughs.  Enhancing the production are video flashbacks
that share past history and help bring the audience up to date. The
action is fast paced, with many inventive scene changes as furniture is
seamlessly moved on and off stage.  The lines are well delivered
and there are no lag times… which are deadly in a comedy.

It was great to see Grace Kim back in the role of Elizabeth.  She
is a great girl-next-door innocent foil to the conniving self-serving
bitchy Shari Song Sheng, played viviviously by Janet Ip, who has been
in all five Sex in Vancouver productions.  These are the central
two roles playing tug of war with their love interest Kenneth Sheng
played for the first time by Jonathan Lee, who had previously played
the role of Colin.  Both Kim and Ip show maturity in their roles
and clearly love them and the production.

Candice Macalino does a great job as Jenna Sheng, love-puzzled but with
the most  relationship action happening, having dated her
brother’s childhood friend Nathan, lived with Colin, and now dating
Adam.  Jenna is like the impressionable sex kitten to the fiery
dragon lady of Andrea Yu’s Tess Matsudaira, if they are to be linked to
archetypal figures.  But what makes Andrea’s performance riveting
is that Tess plays against all the stereotypes of Asian women. 
She is tough talking, assertive and marries the gay guy.

There is much much more to the latest incarnation of “Sex in Vancouver”
than meets the eye.  Despite all the relationship soap opera
shenanigans and missteps, the characters find the reflective time to
comment on what it means to be Asian Canadian.  This is done
subtlety as the characters find themselves in situations dating white
males, or dealing with family expectations.

Much credit goes to director Peter Leung who has adapted this
production from the original Sex in Seattle scripts, with additional
video and dancing creations.  I talked with Leung after last
Friday’s opening night, and he was very pleased with “Doin’ it Again.”
 

This is to be VACT’s final performance of the Sex in Vancouver series,
even though Sex in Seattle has gone on for a total of 13
episodes.  VACT wants to concentrate on more original work. 
VACT has done wonderful work in creating a community that really
supports their work.  The 20 to 40 something demographic is unique
and hard to find in the live theatre audience.   Wonderful
kudos to president Joyce Lam, director Peter Leung and producer Betty
So, for making the Sex in Vancouver series happen.  Go see this
production, tell your friends, and ask VACT to keep on doin’ it again!