Monthly Archives: October 2006

Vancouver's Two Solitudes… 2001 Census results: Scottish? Chinese? How many?

Vancouver's Two Solitudes…
2001 Census: Scottish? Chinese? How many?

Many people ask me why the fascination of Scottish culture, or the
unlikely fusion of Scottish and Chinese traditions for Gung Haggis Fat
Choy?

I usually reply that the Scots and Chinese are really Vancouver's
earliest pioneering cultures, along with First Nations of course. 
I regard the Scots and Chinese as British Columbia's “Two Solitudes,” which  Wikipedia describes as “A phrase expressing Canada's bilingual and bicultural nature.
Traditionally, French and English Canadians have had little to do with
each other — hence the “two solitudes”, together but separate, alone
but together.

The phrase originally comes from Hugh MacLennan's 1945 novel  “Two Solitudes” which the McGill-Queens University Press describes as “

“A landmark of
nationalist fiction, Hugh MacLennan's Two Solitudes is the story of two
races within one nation, each with its own legend and ideas of what a
nation should be. In his vivid portrayals of human drama in prewar
Quebec, MacLennan focuses on two individuals whose love increases the
prejudices that surround them until they discover that “love consists
in this, that two solitudes protect, and touch and greet each other.”

Gee… it's kind of a love story similar to the hate between the
Montague and Capulet families in Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet
story.  Maybe this is the reason there are so many people with
Scottish  names in my extended family tree now.

According to the 2001 Census results for Vancouver

The top ten total responses for ethnic origins were:

Total population:  1,967,480

English                   
475,075
Canadian                 378,545
Chinese                   347,985
Scottish                   311,940
Irish                       
234,680
German                  187,410
East Indian             142,060
French                    128,715
Ukrainian                 76,525
Italian                      
69,000

These results are for people who checked these responses in the
ethnicity box.  In reality they could choose as many boxes as
applied to them, or as they wanted.  But ideally, these are the
people who most count English, Chinese, Scottish as the ancestry.

Of people who selected only one ethnic group the results are:

Total responses:   1,226,280

Chinese                   312,180
East Indian              123,570
Canadian                 141,110
English                   
112,910
Filipino                    
48,510
German                    
44,470
Scottish                    
41,920
Italian                       
29,665
Korean                     
27,745
Irish                          
23,125
Dutch (Netherlands)  21,115

These are the people who chose only one ethnicity.  These numbers
also would most likely represent the newest immigrant groups. 
People who checked “Canadian” most likely did so, because they did not
want to be defined by “ethnic origin” or simply didn't have a clue as
to what to check.  Former Governor General Adrienne Clarkson
admitted that she checked “Canadian” even though it is documented and
widely known that she was born in Hong Kong.

Now it gets more interesting with people who chose multiple ethnic
boxes.  Groups below can be said to represent the groups that have
inter-married most with a different ethnic culture.  Although this
could be misleading if you lump English, Scottish and Irish together as
“British”- just make sure you don't separate them into Catholic and
Prostestant because some Irish Catholics would be more likely to marry
a Filipino Catholic rather than an Irish Protestant.  But in
Canada, we are all “Canadian” and the great thing is we are more likely
to be open-minded about race, religion, and culture…. aren't we?

Total responses:    741,195

English                   362,165
Scottish                   270,020
Canadian                 237,435
Irish                    
    211,555
German                   142,945
French                     113,655
Ukranian                   58,375
Dutch (Netherlands)  46,050
Italian                        
39,335
Polish                        
36,760
Nowegian                  35,735
Chinese                     
35,800
East Indian                 18,495

Georgia Straight: Head-tax redress fails to account for total toll

Here's a Georgia Straight story
about how the Harper Conservative government falls short on their
promise to provide a redress that is fair to everybody. 

Harvey Lee and I both became active in the Head Tax redress campaign
at the November 25th rally against then Prime Minister Paul Martin's
feeble attempt to provide redress – by no apology, and no individual
compensation or head tax refund.  It was a day that will go down
in Chinese Canadian history, when head tax descendants told the
government that they wanted a fair redress with negotiation, similar to
the Japanese-Canadian 1988 redress.  We did it with placards,
chants and media interviews.  We told our truth.  see
article: 
Chinese Head Tax: Protest in Vancouver Chinatown


The
Conservative's redress package will give $20,000 to surviving head tax
payers and spouses.  But if your father, mother, grandparents, or
great-grandparents died before the Conservatives came to power, then
you are out of luck.  An estimated 81,000 paid the the head tax,
including my grand-father, my great-grandfather and many other family
members. They have all passed on now.  Under the Conservative
program, only and estimated 430 people will recieve a redress
compensation package.  This is 0.6% of the people who paid. 
The Mulroney Conservative government gave $21,000 to each
Japanese-Canadian person born before 1947.

My friend Sid Tan reports that today's
(Oct. 12/06) Sing Tao has Mary Yang's exclusive interview with PM
Harper. In the interview, Harper says “that's it”for head tax/exclusion
redress from his government.   Sid Tan says”

“Harper
has shown political acumen for buying votes but no sense of justice and
honour. Shame on him and his government for taking an issue of justice
and honour and trying to pander for votes. As far as I'm concerned, the
gloves off. Was never good at the touchie-feelie-smilie-schmoozie stuff
and will work to ensure Harper and his government loses or at least
does not acrue any political capital from this incomplete redress.

A
just an honourable redress requires good faith negotiations between the
government and  representatives of head tax families seeking
individual redress and direct refund of head tax.  Our movement is
strong and lasting. We have outlasted the Trudeau, Mulroney, Chretien
and Martin governments. We are growing stronger by the day and will
outlast Harpers's government if a just and honourable redress is not
coming.”


Head-tax redress fails to account for total toll

http://www.straight.com/content.cfm?id=21219

By charlie smith

Publish Date: 12-Oct-2006

Harvey Lee, whose family was forced apart by racist immigration laws, says Stephen Harper’s reparations have come to appear largely political.

Harvey Lee, whose family was forced apart by racist immigration laws,
says Stephen Harper’s reparations have come to appear largely
political.

A
Vancouver man has attributed the death of his mother to the Chinese
head tax. But he won’t be among those receiving federal compensation
because his parents died before Prime Minister Stephen Harper announced
that $20,000 payments will go to surviving head-tax payers and their
spouses.

Harvey Lee, a retiree, told his tale to the Georgia
Straight shortly before attending an October 10 dinner at Floata
restaurant in Chinatown. “There are a lot of descendants who suffered
just as much as their parents did due to the head tax and the exclusion
act,” Lee said. “Myself, I was separated from my family for years. I
was a teenager before I got to see my father.”

At the dinner,
Prime Minister Stephen Harper spoke of his pride about issuing an
apology for the head tax, which he described as “a moral blemish on our
country’s soul”. Harper also emphasized how “especially important and
satisfying” it was to him that his government will make payments to
survivors.

Beginning in 1885, the Canadian government imposed a
$50 fee on Chinese immigrants, which was raised to $100 in 1900 and to
$500 in 1903. Vancouver East NDP MP Libby Davies told Parliament that
this would be the equivalent of about $30,000 in 2005 dollars. In 1923,
the government passed a law, which wasn’t lifted until 1947, banning
almost all Chinese immigration.

Lee said that his father paid
the $500 head tax when he came to Canada in 1910. His mother paid the
$500 fee when she arrived nine years later. He said his mother
eventually took the family back to China because of all the racism in
Canada, and Lee was born in Hong Kong in 1939. His father stayed in
Canada, eventually operating a restaurant in Souris, Manitoba.

When
war broke out in the Far East, the family was separated. Lee said that
his mother could have avoided the hostilities and legally returned to
Canada because she had already paid the head tax. However, Lee said,
she remained in China because she didn’t want to leave him as a little
baby with relatives. Canadian law at the time banned the children of
head-tax payers from entering the country, so Lee wouldn’t have been
permitted into Canada with his mother.

In 1943, Lee said, his
mother was killed by Japanese invaders while she was trying to flee
with her family. He was only four years old at the time. “She
sacrificed her life,” Lee said, wiping a tear from his eye. “She died
because she couldn’t bring me over.”

He then apologized, saying
that he gets emotional every time he tells this story. “My grandmother
brought me up until after the war. Then my dad sent for us, and then my
brother and I came over.”

Lee said he arrived in Canada in 1951
when he was 12 years old. He eventually went on to a career in
management, but expressed regret that he never got to know his father
very well. “We never really bonded,” he said. “That was another problem
with the separation.”

When asked how he feels about Harper’s
handling of the head-tax issue, Lee replied, “Initially, he started
well. He kept his promise of the apology. But the redress has fallen a
little bit short. It’s a little bit more politics there than it is
redress.”

At a demonstration outside the event, Sid Tan,
president of the Association of Chinese Canadians for Equality and
Solidarity, said that only 0.6 percent of head-tax families will be
redressed because the vast majority of head-tax payers and their
spouses died before Harper issued a federal apology last June. “We want
the other 99.4 percent of head-tax families to be redressed,” Tan
shouted.

Moments later, the crowd joined him in a chant, “Head tax, redress, head tax, redress…”

John Oliver and Zhimin Yu in Concert – Sunday October 15, VECC

John Oliver and Zhimin Yu in Concert 
- Sunday October 15, VECC


John Oliver and Zhimin Yu are one of Vancouver's newest intercultural
musical duos. I first met Zhimin Yu, master of the ruan (Chinese "moon guitar")
back in 2003 when she performed with Silk Road Music for the CBC
television performance special "Gung Haggis Fat Choy."


Oliver and Yu perform June 22, at the announcement for Chinese Head Tax
- photo Todd Wong


The duo of Oliver and Yu had one of their first public appearances at the June 22nd,
Hotel Vancouver site for Prime Minister's announcement for the Chinese Head Tax
redress. Oliver and Yu performed at the break time. Yu also performs with a number
of Chinese and World Music musical ensembles including Red Chamber,

You can buy tickets directly from the artists until Friday October 13
and save the Ticketmaster charge. Just call the phone numbers at the
bottom of this message or contact the artists

Tickets are also available at the door.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Here's the official PR.

Oliver Yu Duo
"From a Place Far Away"
Sunday October 15, 8pm
Vancouver East Cultural Centre

Music from China, Canada, and other corners of the world and the
imagination.

Vancouver musicians Zhimin Yu and John Oliver team up to delight with a program
of new and old music from China, Canada and other corners of the world and the
imagination, written for Chinese and Western guitars. Oliver plays classical guitar and
a beautiful fretless MIDI classical guitar. Yu plays the Chinese "moon guitar" (the ruan).
The program will feature the premiere of new works written by Oliver for ruan, guitars
and synthesizer, and music by Xing Liu and Wu Jun Sheng.

Come hear an evening of plucked music From a Place Far Away.

THE PROGRAM

Between the Sky and the Land by Xing Liu
Camel Bell on the Silk Road by Yong Ning
Song of the Mountain by Xing Liu
Evening of the Torch Festival by Wu Jun Sheng
Happy Days, traditional
Poema Singelo by H. Villa-Lobos
A Dream of Africa by John Oliver
Avoid the Cliff! by John Oliver
Dreaming of a Far Away Place by John Oliver

LOCATION AND TICKET INFO

1895 Venables Street, Vancouver
Tickets $18 General / $15 Seniors & Students
(plus applicable charges)
available at TICKETMASTER
604 280 3311 www.ticketmaster.ca

John Oliver and Zhimin Yu
http://earsay.com/oy/

Information
604-527-2358­
778 998 5375
RECENT REVIEW QUOTE from September 30 premiere.
"Both intellectually stimulating and a great deal of fun, Eagle Flies
to Mountain deserves to become an intercultural standard."
The Georgia Straight

Honouring Theatre – A tri-national tour of 3 plays from Canada, Australia & New Zealand: What Colour is Love?

Honouring Theatre – A tri-national tour of 3 plays from Canada, Australia & New Zealand:

What Colour is Love?

Windmill Baby – written and directed by David Milroy

Firehall Arts Centre

part of a repertory theatre tour

Oct 11-Oct 22

What colour is Love?  Is it Black?  Is it White?

This question is asked to the audience at a pivotal moment in the play
Windmill Baby.    Set in Australia, an aboriginal woman returns to the
now abandoned former cattle station of her young adult life.  Fifty 
years have passed as she shares her tale with the audience in a mixture
of oral story-telling, and dream-time revelations.

Pauline Whyman,
as Maymay, is a captivating performer in this one-woman play,
accompanied only on stage by guitarist Adam Fitzgerard and a simple but
amazing set.  As Maymay recognizes each object such as a bed, a
clothesline or a can – she interacts with it, bringing it to life with
a story.  Each story segues into the next, paced nicely both by
script
and by acting.  Nuances and expressions are sometimes subtle or
enhancingly dramatic.  Whyman is careful to balance her
story-telling
while also interacting with the audience.  My favorite scene is
when
she tells the story about the dog, using a surprising stage prop.

As the play unfolds, we learn that she used to live at a cattle station
which had a large windmill.  She had a husband named Melvin who minded
the livestock, and a crippled man named Wunman tended the garden.  They
worked for a white man and his dainty wife who is “like a candle that
melts in the heat”.  Racism is a fact of life in Maymay's
storytelling.  She never complains or editorializes on it.  It's just
what happens when the characters of her story interact.  Life was
different 50 years ago. This is a memory play, which makes makes the
stories so much more poignant, when we discover why Maymay must return
to the deserted Kimberley cattle station for “unfinished business.”  A
cell phone rings, and we are jarred back to the 21st Century, awakened
from our reverie.

The themes are universal: love, life and loss.  Beautifully written and directed by David Milroy, the play could have
been set in an Alabama cotton plantation with African-American slaves,
or a BC ranch with Chinese servants.  But it is culturally interesting
to hear the cadence of an Australian accent with strange words and
phrases.

Windmill Baby is the first of three plays presented at Firehall Arts Centre,
as part of an aboriginal collective from three continents.  Vancouver
is the final stop on a Canadian tour that started in Peterborough ON,
then travelled to Toronto and Regina each for a week, before closing
with a two week run here. 

Annie Mae's Movement (Canada), written and directed by Yvette Nolan
opens on Thursday, October 12.  Frangipani Perfume (New Zealand)
written by Makerita Urale, and directed by Rachel House, opens on
Friday, October 13.  Each play goes into repertory, rotating for
evening and afternoon performances until October 22nd.

By witnessing 3 different aboriginal plays from 3 different countries,
we learn that while we are different, we have many similarites. 
Cultural differences are merely cultural, and human imposed
structures.  But love, tragedy, spirituality, passion, humour and
social activism all transcend geographical boundaries.

Below is a description of each play and the schedule.  Check it out.
Here are some links:
Arthur: It’s No Spin: Windmill Baby Shows Spirit
www.publicenergy.ca/archive_details/honouring_theatre/windmill.htm

Windmill Baby – Honouring Theatre – September 19 to 24
www.publicenergy.ca/archive_details/honouring_theatre/windmill.htm

Presents
NATIVE EARTH PERFORMING ARTS
HONOURING THEATRE
A Celebration of the Human Spirit – 3 indigenous Plays from 3
Countries
 

Honouring Theatre, an ambitious global initiative showcasing a
triple bill of powerful and authentic indigenous theatre from Canada, New
Zealand and Australia, will be playing at the Firehall Arts Centre
from October 11 � 22, 2006.  
 
The theatrical stage provides the avenue for these Aboriginal nations
to reveal both their similarities and diversities.  The first of the
plays is David Milroy's Award-winning play Windmill Baby
from Australia.  It is a gentle tale that centres on Maymay, an
Aboriginal woman, who returns to the now derelict station of her youth
because she has some “unfinished business.”  It encapsulates
universal themes of love, life and loss. 
 
Annie Mae's Movement by Canadian playwright, Yvette Nolan
follows. Loosely based on the life of a Mi'qmak woman, Annie Mae Pictou
Aquash, it explores a woman in a man's movement, a Canadian in American
and an Aboriginal in a white dominant culture.
 
The final play from New Zealand is Frangipani
Perfume
,  a powerful and sensual black comedy about escape
and dreams of thousands of Pacific people who work as unskilled
labourers.  Playwright Makerita Urale flicks out satirical slaps at
Margaret Mead while bowing down to the greatness of Einstein and
mesmerizing tropical fragrances.
 
All three plays are a celebration of the human spirit sharing their
humour, passion, belief, spirituality, social activism, tragedy and
love.  The plays reiterate that no matter where people are from we
all share the same universal themes. Honouring Theatre has been touring
Canada and will head overseas in 2007.  
 
Play Schedule:
Windmill
Baby                        
Annie Mae's
Movement                      
Frangipani Perfume
Weds. Oct. 11  
8pm                 
Thurs. Oct. 12  
8pm                             
Fri. Oct. 13    8pm
Thurs. Oct. 12 
1pm                  
Fri. Oct. 13      
1pm                             
Sat. Oct. 14   2pm
Sat. Oct. 14     
8pm                 
Wed. Oct. 18    8
pm                            
Tue. Oct. 17  8pm
Sun. Oct. 15    
2pm                 
Thur. Oct. 19   
1pm                              
Wed. Oct.18  1pm
Thur. Oct. 19   
8pm                  
Sat. Oct. 21     
8pm                             
Fri. Oct. 20    8pm
Fri. Oct. 20      
1pm                 
Sun. Oct. 22    
2pm                             
Sat. Oct. 21   2pm
 
Tickets $24/$20 in advance or buy a three pack for
all three plays for $55.
Available at the Firehall Box Office 604-689-0926 or online
www.firehallartscentre.ca

Prime Minister Harper comes to Vancouver Chinatown and announces “Head Tax payments soon” – dialogue with which Chinese-Canadians?

Prime Minister Stephen Harper came to Vancouver Chinatown for a dinner
meeting with Chinese business community.  It was organized by
Jimmy Fong, president of Vancouver's Community Care and Advancement
Association. 

Several ironies appeared.  Harper made the announcement that
payments for Head Tax Compensation would happen soon.  But the two
of the leading organizations responsible for the head tax redress
awareness, ACCESS and Head Tax Families Association, were not invited
to the dinner.

Several community groups staged a protest because: the majority (99%)
of head tax families have been excluded from the redress payments; and
of the “new government's positions on the War in Afghanistan.

As well, as reporter for Ming Pao was battered because he was attacked by a frustrated motorist. 
see: http://chineseinvancouver.blogspot.com/2006/10/reporter-battered.html

Head tax compensation to be paid soon:
Harper

Updated Wed. Oct. 11
2006 11:14 AM ET

CTV.ca News Staff

Ottawa will
begin to redress the head tax once applied to Chinese immigrants with payments
to survivors in the next few weeks, Prime Minister Stephen Harper said.

Speaking
at a dinner hosted by a Chinese immigrant group, Harper said Tuesday it's
important that this happen now while some of those who paid the tax to enter
Canada
are still alive to receive the symbolic $20,000 payments.

Harper
called the tax “a moral blemish on our country's soul.”

Harper
recognized contributions that the Chinese community has made, including
building of the CP Railway.

He
said Canada
as it exists today wouldn't be possible without the efforts of the Chinese
community.

“You
are part of our family,” he said.

Harper
formally apologized to Chinese-Canadians for the tax in Parliament on June 22,
calling it a “grave injustice.”

Vancouver's
Community Care and Advancement Association president Johnny Fong, thanked
Harper Tuesday for the government's apology.

“Your
apology at the House of Commons this year has brought tremendous relief to so
many in the community,'' Fong told Harper.

The
prime minister said the government's decision was long overdue.

“Apologizing
for the head tax was simply the right thing to do,” he said.

The
Association of Chinese Canadians for Equality, however, said Tuesday that
Ottawa has been slow to
address the issue.

“He
only addressed point-six per cent of the head tax families — less than one per
cent — of the head tax families that have survivors,” the association's
Sid Tan told The Canadian Press at a protest outside the dinner for Harper.

“What
he has done is rewarded the government for dragging its feet for over 20 years.
Shame on them for that.”

It
is believed there are about 400 surviving head-tax payers or their widows from
an estimated 81,000 immigrants who paid the tax between 1885 and 1923 when the
federal government tried to restrict Chinese immigration.

The
tax, which was set at $50 when it was imposed in 1885, rose to $500 in 1903 —
then the equivalent of two years' wages.

Collection
of the tax ended when the Exclusion Act came into effect in 1923, effectively
barring immigration from China
until it was repealed in 1947.

With
files from The Canadian Press

http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20061011/head_tax_061011/20061011?hub=TopStories

 

PM lauded and protested in Chinatown

Oct, 11 2006 – 12:50 AM

VANCOUVER/CKNW(AM980)
– While Stephen Harper was being praised inside for being the first Prime
Minister in 50 years to address the historical head tax on Chinese immigrants,
protestors outside a dinner with Vancouver 's
Chinese Business community weren't as happy with Harper.

The Head Tax Families Society of Canada was one of 30 groups that supported a
protest outside last night's event.

Meena Wong says Harper's head tax re-dress recognizes fewer than one per cent of
the families who suffered under the financial weight, “There's
approximately 81-thousand who paid the head tax and the Harper Government only
addressed the survivors as well as their spouses which is about 500.”

The group
is lobbying for what they call complete and proper re-dress.

A 99-year
old head tax survivor was among those that presented Harper with a gift last
night, acknowleding his Government's apology in the House of Commons.

http://www.cknw.com/news/news_local.cfm?cat=7428218912&rem=49509&red=80121823aPBIny&wids=410&gi=1&gm=news_local.cfm

 

Chinese head tax redress payments starting soon: PM

Last Updated: Wednesday, October 11, 2006 | 8:30 AM ET

CBC
News

The federal government will begin to redress the
Chinese head tax with payments to survivors within the next few
weeks, Prime Minister Stephen Harper said.

Speaking Tuesday in Vancouver
at a dinner hosted by a Chinese immigrant group, Harper called the tax “a
moral blemish on our country's soul.”

Johnny Fong of the Community Care and Advancement Association speaks after Prime Minister Harper's announcement on the start of Chinese head-tax payments.
Johnny Fong of the Community Care and
Advancement Association speaks after Prime Minister Harper's announcement on
the start of Chinese head-tax payments.

(CBC)

The prime minister formally
apologized to Chinese-Canadians in the House of Commons in June and offered a
symbolic payment of $20,000 to the roughly 400 survivors or their widows.

Those payments will begin in the next few weeks, he said.

“Addressing it directly and honestly has been an
issue we felt strongly about for some time,” said Harper.
“Apologizing for the head tax was simply the right thing to do and it was
long overdue.”

Imposed between 1885 and 1923, the tax ranged from $50 to
$500. It's estimated about 82,000 Chinese paid the fee until the Exclusion Act
came into effect in 1923, effectively banning further immigration from
China
until 1947.

Harper said the redress payment was a token and can't
make up for the suffering caused by the tax.

Johnny Fong, president of Vancouver's Community Care and
Advancement Association, said Chinese-Canadians appreciate the recognition.

“Your apology at the House of Commons to the
affected families has brought tremendous relief to so many in the
community,” he said.

With files from the Canadian
Press

 

http://www.cbc.ca/canada/story/2006/10/11/head-tax.html

Head-tax survivors to get cash soon0

Canadian Press

VANCOUVER ¡ª Symbolic redress payments to Chinese
head tax survivors will begin in the next few weeks, Prime Minister Stephen
Harper says.

It is important that this happen now while some of
those who paid the tax to enter Canada
are still living, Mr. Harper said.

Speaking at a dinner hosted by a Chinese immigrant
group, he called the tax ¡°a moral blemish on our country's soul.¡±

Mr. Harper recognized several contributions of the
Chinese community, including building of the CP Railway.

Related to this article

Latest Comments Comments

The Globe and Mail

He said
Canada as it exists today would not
have been possible without the Chinese community's efforts.

¡°You are part of our family,¡± he said.

Mr. Harper apologized for the tax in Parliament on
June 22.

In doing so, he offered compensation for what he
called ¡°a great injustice.¡±

On Tuesday, Johnny Fong, president of Vancouver's
Community Care and Advancement Association, thanked Mr. Harper for the
government's apology to the Chinese community.

¡°Your apology at the House of Commons this year has
brought tremendous relief to so many in the community,¡± Mr. Fong said.

The Prime Minister responded that the government's
decision wasn't brave.

¡°Apologizing for the head tax was simply the right
thing to do, and it was long overdue,¡± he said.

Mr. Harper also acknowledged that many ancestors of
Chinese Canadians faced large amounts of prejudice and discrimination when they
arrived in Canada .

He said the $20,000 payments are just a token that
cannot make up for the suffering imposed on families who had to scrimp to pay
the tax or who were cut off from their families by the 1923 Exclusion Act,
which effectively banned further immigration from China until 1947.

The Association of Chinese Canadians for Equality,
however, said Tuesday that the government has dragged its feet on the redress
issue.

¡°He only addressed point-six per cent of the head tax
families ¨C less than one per cent ¨C of the head tax families that have
survivors,¡± the association's Sid Tan said at a protest outside the dinner for
Harper.

¡°What he has done is rewarded the government for
dragging its feet for over 20 years. Shame on them for that.¡±

It is believed there are about 400 surviving head-tax
payers or their widows.

They are the remnants of an estimated 81,000
immigrants who paid the tax, which was set at $50 when it was imposed in 1885.

It rose to $500 in 1903 ¨C then the equivalent of two
years' wages.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20061011.wheadtax1011/EmailBNStory/National/home

Reporter
battered

10/11/2006
02:10:00 AM

A Ming Pao reporter was assaulted when he was covering
the rally outside Floata Restaurant last night.

100+ demonstrators from 30+ community groups peacefully showed their
discontent on the streets at Keefer and Columbia
from about 5pm.

Demonstrators were blocking some streets and cars weren't able to go in or
out. Drivers were honking loudly, and demonstrators were yelling using
speakers.

One driver was outraged for being caught in the middle of the traffic. He
suddenly got out of his car, wanting to show his anger.

When he saw the Ming Pao reporter taking pictures, he rushed up and tried to
grab the reporter's camera. The reporter resisted, turning his back to
protect the camera. The man attacked him from the side, and the reporter's
eye glasses flew over and landed on the ground.

The man was taken away quickly. But the reporter suffered abrasion to his eye
and a broken pair of glasses.

Tags: demonstration, , stephen harper, chinese community,
chinese canadian,
vancouver, chinatown, head tax, reporter, demonstration, rally

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image

Direct
dialogue => monologue

10/11/2006
02:00:00 AM

Stephen Harper's “direct dialogue” dinner with
the Chinese community last night turned out to be a show place for our prime
minister.

Organizer Johnny
Fong (·½¾ýŒW) was reported saying
that
Harper would speak for 20 minutes, then he'd take a few questions from the
floor but stressed Harper wouldn't possibly answer all questions
“because of time constraint”.

However, it turned out to be a completely no answer night.

Fong has forwarded five questions for Harper before his speech. Most of them
related to China-Canada relations, trade and ADS. However, no where in
Harper's speech answered any of Fong's questions, which are seen as questions
of particular concern to local Chinese businesses in general.

Not only that, Harper didn't take any questions from the floor. He did pose
for pictures with as many guests as possible though, asking each table to
come on stage to smile with him in front of a backdrop Harper once used when
he redressed the head tax controversy.

George Chow (Öܾ¼ÈA), city coucillor
and former chair of the Chinese Benevolence Assn, said h
e was surprised that none of
the issues the community wanted to hear about were addressed by Harper.
“Though the atmosphere was good, it wasn't a 'dialogue' per se.”

Fong said he wasn't disappointed that his questions weren't answer.
“Perhaps he didn't have enough time to prepare for some answers.”

But Harper was taking notes while Fong raised the questions, according to
Fong. Fong believed Harper wanted to formulate the answers later.

Fong claimed the dinner a success and it's a good start to have a PM sitting
down, talking with the Chinese community. Fong said he wanted to hold more
community events like this with the PM.

Harper did talk about his gratitude for Chinese Canadian contribution to
building this country. Standing against a backdrop with Chinese words
“apology” written all over, Harper thanked the Chinese community
for welcoming the redress package.

But not all Chinese organizations would agree. Sid Tan (ÖÜÃ÷Ýx)
with the Association of Chinese Canadians for Equality and Solidarity Society
(ACCE
SS)
was among about the 100
demonstrators rallied
outside Floata Restaurant tonight.

Tan said Harper's so-called “redress” only addressed 0.6% of all
head tax collected. “This is a very very small amount.”

Head Tax Families Society of Canada couldn't get an invitation at the end (here).
Tin Yan Wong (üSÌì¶÷) said they first approached the
organizer to express their interest in getting an invitation. However, they
were told they should ask who and who and who and so on, and eventually no
one gave them an invitation. “That's why we are here.”

On the other hand, to the dismay of the media, reporters were ushered into a
separate room after hearing Harper's speech. They were “invited” to
have dinner in that room. But in fact they were told that even if someone
didn't want to eat, he/she still had to stay in the room. Reporters were told
“this is for security reasons.”

Reporters complained that they were like under house arrest, as there were
people guarding the door, preventing any reporter to sneak out.

When the reporters were “released”, they were told they could then
take group photos of Harper smiling with a bunch of guests.

This is the Tories' interpretation of “dialogue”.

Tags: stephen harper, conservative party,
tories, canada, politics, chinese canadian,
chinese community,
vancouver, chinatown, head tax

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image

Redress
payments to Chinese head tax survivors to begin soon: PM

10/11/2006
01:02:00 AM

From the Canadian Press, October 10, 2006

VANCOUVER
Prime Minister Stephen Harper says symbolic redress payments to Chinese head
tax survivors will begin in the next few weeks.

Harper says it¡¯s important that this happen now while some of those who paid
the tax to enter Canada
are still living.

Speaking at a dinner hosted by a Chinese immigrant group, he called the tax
¡°a moral blemish on our country¡¯s soul.¡±

Harper recognized several contributions of the Chinese community, including
the building of the CP Railway.

He says Canada
as it exists today wouldn¡¯t be possible without the Chinese community¡¯s
efforts.

The Prime Minister also acknowledged that many ancestors of Chinese Canadians
faced large amounts of prejudice and discrimination when they arrived here.

 

http://www.chineseinvancouver.blogspot.com/

 

West Coast Thanksgiving dinner: Sockeye Salmon with Cranberry Salsa

West Coast Thanksgiving dinner: Sockeye Salmon with Cranberry Salsa

What is a West Coast Thanksgiving?  What foods are part of our local harvest and culture?

My girlfriend and I cooked a dinner for my parents.  We invited
our dragon boat friend and team member who moved to Vancouver from
Thunder Bay, Ontario.  Turkey was familiar to him, but not a fully
dressed salmon for Thanksgiving dinner.

The salmon was caught up north near Haida Gwaii, and flash frozen.  I bought it from a boat at Steveston's
“Fisherman's Wharf.”  Go see Tony, on the Blue ??  and tell him Todd sent you.

We shredded cranberries to make a fresh salsa with local BC hot house
red and yellow peppers.  I added in frozen blueberries and
raspberries for sweetness.  Mixed in with jalapeno pepper, red
onion and cilantro, we continued to tweak it.  This is a great appetizer served with chips for munching.

First course was a butternut squash soup.  Okay… it came from a
boxed soup – but it was still pretty good.  We didn't have enough
time to make a soup from scratch.  My mother makes a great
butternut squash soup.  And once a made a fantastic ginger pumpkin
soup.

Seasoned wild rice complimented
the yams, baked with orange juice and brown sugar.  Green beans
were  sauteed with white mushrooms.  Brussel sprouts were
steamed
with Chinese ginger.  My girlfriend Deb's family always has the
seasoned wild rice for their Christmas dinners.  Often she will
add bacon and mushrooms, but for this dinner we kept things
simple.  My favorite mushrooms to cook are portabellos – but none
today.

The sockeye salmon was fileted, then “flash broiled” for about 2
minutes, to allow me to pull the spine off the remaining fish. 
The cranberry salsa spread on top, allowing the fruit juices, to soak
into the salmon, then broiled for 7 minutes.  yum yum yum.
delicious. with a bit of crunch from the red peppers.

We each shared something we were grateful for.

A west coast Thanksgiving dinner, complete with a stunning sunset over
English Bay, from our home in the highlands of North Vancouver. 
Perfect with pumpkin pie and ice cream for dessert.

Marty Chan – a “banana in China” or Language Barrier: Great Wall

Marty Chan is a playwright, radio drama writer, and a children's fiction writer.  He wrote the “hilarious” play “Mom, Dad, I'm Living With a White Girl.”  He is also the author of Mystery of the Graffiti Ghoul, and Mystery of the Frozen Brains.

I interviewed Marty 10 years ago, when Firehall Arts Centre first produced “Mom, Dad, I'm Living With a White Girl.”  Marty really nailed the experience of multigenerational Chinese Canadians dealing with inter-racial relationships and also with traditional Chinese parents.  Here's my interview with Marty, written for the Peak, student newspaper at SFU: 19/02/96 — Arts: Marty Chan

Marty Chan, Special to The Journal

Published: Friday, September 15, 2006

Never trust family. Like mafia godfathers, they cut deals that result in someone sleeping with the fishes.

I
learned this lesson the hard way when my Hong Kong aunt made me an
offer I couldn't refuse. She had heard that I was planning to visit
China and insisted that she book my travel plans. She claimed she could
find me the best deal on tour packages. I couldn't offend her because
she had also insisted that I stay in her spare room when I passed
through Hong Kong. I gave her the green light to book my itinerary.

My
aunt crowed about the deal she had found: a five-day excursion to
Beijing that cost half of what I would have paid if I booked through a
Canadian travel agent. I discovered one of the reasons for the bargain
the instant I joined the tour group. My thrifty aunt had booked me on
an all-Cantonese-speaking tour.

Over the years, I had lost most
of my Chinese. I remembered mostly swear words, and I used them all up
when I learned the truth. I asked the tour co-ordinator if there was
any way I could book myself on an English-speaking tour. He asked very
slowly and loudly in Cantonese, “Do you speak any Chinese?”

I
waggled the so-so gesture and explained that while I could understand
some Cantonese I could only speak enough to get me in trouble. The
co-ordinator informed me that the tour guide in Beijing might know some
English, but he wouldn't know until we got there. When I asked for my
money back, he spewed the only English he knew: “No money back.”……

Read more Language barrier: the Great Wall

Vancouver Opera: Naomi's Road to perform in Ottawa at Canadian War Museum

VANCOUVER OPERA

NEWS RELEASE

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE October 6,
2006                                         

Media
Contact: Doug Tuck, Vancouver
Opera 604-331-4823

dtuck@vancouveropera.ca

Vancouver Opera presents

at the Canadian
War Museum
in Ottawa

its acclaimed opera for young
audiences

Naomi’s Road

A
touching drama of family, home, and cross-cultural understanding

 

 

Vancouver,
BC ~
After inspiring nearly 50,000
children in schools and community venues throughout British
Columbia , in southern Alberta ,
and in Washington
State , Vancouver
Opera’s acclaimed opera for young audiences and their families, Naomi’s Road, continues to resonate in
profound ways.  From November 1 through
12, 2006, Vancouver Opera, in partnership with
the Canadian War
Museum in
Ottawa , will present twenty performances of
this very moving opera at the museum.

 

About the Opera

Commissioned
by Vancouver Opera, Naomi’s Road was
composed by Ramona Luengen to a
libretto by Ann
Hodges
and is based on the 1986 novel for young readers
by award-winning Japanese Canadian writer Joy
Kogawa
. Set during World War II, the opera depicts the dramatic
journey of nine-year-old Naomi, her older brother Stephen, and their
“Obasan” (aunt) from their comfortable and happy home in
Vancouver to a Japanese
internment camp in the interior of B.C.  Sister and brother endure the
harshness of war, racism, bullying, and loss of family to discover the gifts
that sustain them: music, words and love.  Their resilience of spirit and
the kindness of certain strangers they meet offer hope for the future and will
lead Canadian
War Museum
audiences to discover the power of understanding and the beauty of compassion.

 

In announcing these performances, James W. Wright, VO’s General
Director, said, “This meaningful work deeply touched many people,
children and adults alike, during its tour of B.C. and in locations in
Alberta and Washington
State that hold their own
unique memories of the Japanese internment.  We are delighted by the
opportunity to share this opera with young audiences in Ottawa ,
within the resonant surroundings of the
Canadian War
Museum .” 
Added Wright, “I believe that this presentation of Naomi’s Road comes at a time in
history when it is important to reflect on the ways in which war and its
by-products can not only affect the future of nations but also forever alter
the lives of children and the security of their families.  Vancouver Opera
is privileged to stage a production that has the unique ability to act as a
catalyst for audiences of all ages to enter into important dialogue on these
issues.”

 

Performance Details / Tickets

November
1-3: School performances (not open to the public) 

November 4
and 5: public performances 1:00 pm and 3:00 pm each day

November
7-10: school performances (not open to the public)

November 11
and 12: public performance each day at 2:00 pm

 

Tickets to
the public performances are now available from the
Canadian War
Museum ’s call
centre at
1-800-555-5621 or 819-776-7014. Tickets may also be
purchased in person at the Canadian
War Museum
box office.  Prices are $10 for students, and $20 for adults, plus any
applicable service charges.  Schools can purchase group tickets by calling
1-800-555-5621 or 819-776-7014. 

 

About
Joy Kogawa

Joy
Kogawa’s novel Naomi’s Road is
based on her 1981 award-winning adult book Obasan,
the first novel to deal with the internment of Japanese Canadians during and
after World War II.  Widely admired and read, Obasan was chosen for the Vancouver Public Library’s
2005 city-wide annual book club program, One
Book One Vancouver
.  Joy Kogawa was born in
Vancouver in 1935. Like Naomi’s family
in the novel, Joy’s family was interned in Slocan and later sent to
Coaldale , Alberta
after World War II, where Joy taught school. Kogawa, who now lives in
Toronto and Vancouver ,
is a recipient of numerous honorary doctorates as well as national and
international awards for her writing.  In 1986, she was named a Member of
the Order of Canada . 
“When I first heard that Naomi's Road
was being made into an opera for children, I had a sense of unreality,”
she said.  “I couldn't quite fathom it.  And even today,
knowing that somehow, through some mysterious process, the story has been
magically transformed into a wholly different and wonderful medium, I still
find it hard to believe and am left somewhat stunned.  It's more than a
dream come true.”  Adds Kogawa, “The existence of this opera
tells me once again that the unexpected is what happens — and that there are
more blessings in the air than we can ask for or imagine.  May we each
walk on our own special roads – like Naomi and [her new kindred spirit]
Mitzi – with Friendship, discovering as we go that our world is full of a
loveliness that is greater than all the grief in our lives.”

 

The Creation Process

Vancouver
Opera awarded he commission for Naomi’s
Road
in the fall of 2003 and the process of writing and composing
began.  Ann Hodges penned the
libretto in the winter of 2003/2004.  Composer Ramona
Luengen wrote the last notes of her score in September,
2004.  That same month, the libretto was read at a special event at the
Gulf of
Georgia Cannery National Historical Site ,
in Steveston, B.C., (located at the site of the seizure, in 1942, of hundreds
of fishing boats owned by Japanese Canadians). 

 

Two week-long workshops were
conducted, one in the fall of 2004 and the other in the spring of 2005, during
which the work was developed and refined.  In May, 2005, portions of the
opera were sung for an international audience at the annual OPERA
America conference, in
Detroit .  And in early June, 2005,
selections from the opera were performed at the 2005 UBC-Laurier Institution
Multiculturalism Lecture, at the Chan Centre for the Performing Arts, in
Vancouver .  The
performance and the lecture, by poet and writer Roy Miki, were later broadcast
on the CBC Radio program IDEAS.

 

During
2005-2006, Vancouver Opera’s touring production of Naomi’s Road visited more than 140
schools and community venues throughout B.C.  The experience of seeing and
hearing Naomi’s Road was
enhanced with study materials that were created and provided by Vancouver Opera
to each school in advance of the performance.  The production also
traveled to Lethbridge , Alberta
and to Seattle and
Bainbridge Island , Washington . 
It was enthusiastically received wherever it was performed.

 

 

Production Details

The
production features original sets and costumes, designed by Christine Reimer, which beautifully evoke
the 1940s period of the opera’s story and have been cleverly engineered
to fold up for touring purposes.  Stage direction is by Ann Hodges.

 

The musical
score, for piano accompaniment and four singers, is richly melodic and
dramatic.  Easily enjoyed by young audiences, the music is also deft and
sophisticated enough to be appreciated by adult audiences.  It
incorporates traditional Japanese melody and its beautiful voicings and
harmonies are influenced by Ramona Luengen’s experience as a composer of
choral music.  The Musical Director is Leslie
Uyeda

 

Cast

This
production reunites the four young singers and the nimble-fingered pianist from
the Spring 2006 segment of the 2005-2006 tour.  Soprano Jessica Cheung is Naomi; soprano Gina Oh is Mother, Obasan and Mitzi (a
non-Japanese girl whom Naomi befriends); tenor Sam Chung is Stephen; and baritone Gene Wu is Father, the Trainmaster, a bully, and Rough Lock
Bill (an eccentric but kindly man who lives in the mountains above the
internment camp).  The pianist is Angus
Kellett
. The stage manager is David
Curtis
.

 

Support

Naomi’s Road was commissioned and produced by
Vancouver Opera with the support of Canada Council for the Arts, BC Arts
Council, Opera.ca, Vancouver Foundation, RBC Foundation, Vancouver Arts Awards,
The Hamber Foundation, The Leon and Thea Koerner Foundation, and the Spirit of
BC Arts Fund.

 

This
presentation at the Canadian war Museum is made possible with the generous
support of Ms. Yoshiko Karasawa.

 

-30 –

 

Roy Miki recieves Award for Truth, Justice and Non-Violence

Roy Miki Receives Award for Truth, Justice and Non-Violence

It seems like a few days ago that I was writing about Roy Miki
recieving the SFU Sterling Award for Controversy.  Today's
Vancouver Sun had an article about Roy receiving the Thakore Visiting
Scholar Award at SFU tonight.

Okay… I must like writing about Roy.

Here is the link to a similar article at www.nowpublic.com:
Roy Miki Receives Award for Truth, Justice and Non-Violence

Roy Miki to be presented with the Thakore Visiting Scholar Award on October 2, 2006 at Simon Fraser University

The
India Club of Vancouver, The Thakore Charitable Foundation, and The
Institute for the Humanities at Simon Fraser University have joined
hands in celebrating Gandhi Jayanti on October 2nd of each year since
1991 to foster the principles of truth, justice, human rights and
non-violence.This year the Thakore Visiting Scholar Award will be
presented to Roy Miki for his long and outstanding work and
achievements in the Japanese Canadian redress movement.

A
third-generation Japanese-Canadian, Miki has long been active in the
successful Redress Movement. As well as a recognized poet, Roy Miki is
a Professor of English  at Simon Fraser University, and is a well-known
editor and biographer. The award honours his long and outstanding work
and achievements related to redress, including his book, Redress:
Inside the Japanese Canadian Call for Justice.

Created in 1991
by former SFU faculty member Natverlal Thakore, the award honours
individuals who show a concern for truth, justice and non-violence in
public life.

New quarterly e-magazine called Scotland Now

This message from Ron Macleod
Chair of SFU Scottish Studies

Greetings, for those who desire to maintain a link with Scotland. The following courtesy of Ron Sutherland.
 
There is a new quarterly e-magazine called Scotland Now created for Scotland’s
friends, alumni and diaspora around the world. It can be accessed at
 
The e-magazine is in its 3rd edition. It features “arts & culture; history and heritage, sports & leisure, your news and contact us”.
 
It appears to be an interactive link where participants can also contribute stories.
 
A quick perusal of the website suggests a worthwhile link. Regards, the other Ron