Yearly Archives: 2006

Redress Train to Ottawa…. Gim Wong featured in Vancouver Sun Story

imageimage
Redress Train to Ottawa…. 
Gim Wong featured in Vancouver Sun Story


My father used to joke that Canada honoured the Chinese railway workers by naming the rail line after them.

CPR….
Chinese People's Railway….

83 year old Gim Wong will be hopping on board the “Redress Train” to Ottawa for the June 22nd Ceremony and announcement for Apology and Acknowledgement for the Chinese Head Tax.  Last year Gim rode his motorcycle to Ottawa to ask Prime Minister Paul Martin for an apology for the racist head tax.  Martin's office denied Gim a meeting, but current Prime Minister Stephen Harper met with Gim during a vist on May 25th with Chinese community elders, head tax payers and descendants.

imageimageimage
I blogged Gim's 2005 Ride for Redress with pictures and contributions from across Canada.

Gim was featured in a June 15 Vancouver Sun story today on page B5

Senior recalls closed doors made him feel second-class:
Chinese RCAF veteran heading to Ottawa to hear prime minister apologize in Parliament on June 22  (see below)

Here's something I have just written… to help send off Gim at the VIA RAIL trainstation on Friday.
Main and Terminal streets in Vancouver.
4:00pm  Ceremony and Media Information at Th
5:30pm  Train Leaves.

This Train is Bound for Redress
(to the tune of This Train is Bound for Glory)
http://sniff.numachi.com/~rickheit/dtrad/pages
tiTHSTRAIN;ttTHSTRAIN.html

This Train is Bound for redress, this train….
This Train is bound for redress, this train…
This train honours the head tax payers
This train honours Chinese railway builders
This train is bound for redress this train.

This Train is Bound for redress, this train….
This Train is
bound for redress, this train…
This train is justice and fairness
This train is sharing our stories
This train is bound for redress this train.

This Train is Bound for redress, this train….
This Train is bound for redress, this train…
This train wants apology and action
This train wants symbolic compensation
This train is bound for redress this train.

This Train is Bound for redress, this train….
This Train is bound for redress, this train…
This train honours all our stories
This train honours all Canadians
This train is bound for redress this train.

Senior recalls closed doors made him feel
second-class

Chinese RCAF veteran heading to Ottawa to hear prime minister apologize in
Parliament on June 22

 

Maurice Bridge

Vancouver Sun


Thursday, June 15, 2006

 

image

CREDIT:
Ian Smith, Vancouver Sun

Wearing
his RCAF uniform, Gim Foon Wong, 83, rode this
motorcycle to Ottawa
last year to try to protest the head tax his father paid.

“Slaves
at least were worth something — you could sell a slave if you didn't want him.

“Chinese?
Dime a dozen, not even a dime a dozen. Worthless!”

There
was no mistaking the visceral bitterness in the words. In a few short minutes,
83-year-old Gim Foon Wong electrified a news
conference Wednesday, explaining the long-repealed Chinese head tax in terms of
a life bent and shaped by legislated Canadian racism.

His
father arrived in B.C. from China in 1906 and paid the $500 head tax to escape
starvation in China, thanks to two elder brothers who shovelled
coal for a dollar a day in Cumberland for a decade. A century later, Wong let
his frustration off its leash and revealed the long reach of the discriminatory
legislation.

“I'm
not saying I'm a smart guy, okay?” he said, sitting in Strathcona
Community Centre next door to the school he graduated from in 1936. “I had
potential, [but] any degree in university would have been useless, so what did
we do? Drop out in Grade 9 and go to work.

“In
1941 in a cannery in Prince Rupert,
I was getting 121/2 cents an hour. The guy next to me — the kid was 12 years
old — was earning 25 cents an hour [because] he's a white man.”

Wong
fought his way into the Royal Canadian Air Force during the Second World War,
but could not shake the feeling of being a second-class citizen.

“Invariably,
everywhere I went, I was the only Chinese. You know what that was [like], 60
years ago?”

The news
conference was not Wong's first round with the head tax. Last summer, he rode
his big Honda Gold Wing motorcycle across Canada and arrived on Parliament
Hill wearing his RCAF uniform, complete with service medals.

Paul
Martin, who was prime minister at the time, refused to speak to him.

Now he's
headed back to Ottawa, riding the rails laid
down by Chinese workers, to hear Prime Minister Stephen Harper apologize in
Parliament on June 22 for the head tax and the subsequent Chinese Exclusion
Act, which barred Chinese immigration to Canada from 1923 to 1947.

The news
conference was called by B.C. groups seeking redress for the tax.

Compensation
suggestions range from $20,000 to $39,000 per person affected, but Harper has
given no indication whether any kind of compensation will accompany the planned
apology.

“For
over three weeks, redress organizations across the country have asked for a
meeting with government officials,” said Mary-Woo Sims, on behalf of the
B.C. Coalition of Head Tax Payers, Spouses and Descendants.

“We
are ready, willing and able to meet with government any time to ensure that the
redress package is one which will ensure that justice is achieved for those
wronged by government discrimination, and which all Canadians can
support.”

Sims
said the groups are also still waiting to hear details of the “redress
train,” the highly symbolic train trip to Ottawa, which was arranged by the Ontario
Coalition of Head Tax Payers and Families with Via Rail.

Wong
says he will go, and thinks five or six spouses or descendants of head-tax
payers will leave Vancouver
on Friday with him.

There
are believed to be fewer than 20 surviving head-tax payers in Canada, about
260 spouses and a total of about 1,200 related families, or 4,000 people in
all.

Sid Tan,
president of the Association of Chinese Canadians for Equality and Solidarity
Society (ACCESS) in Vancouver, and a national director of the Chinese Canadian
National Council, said more than 82,000 Chinese paid the head tax between 1885
and 1923, effectively covering the cost of the CPR railway which many of them
built.

He
termed the request for redress “a tax refund — this is not compensation.

“We're
not a bunch of ungrateful, greedy bastards. Even if we do get our rightful
return, the money's going to be spent in Canada. We're going to be buying
fridges, hopefully a car,” said Tan.

“This
is not about the money– it's about justice and honour.
This is the dignity of a community finally finding its voice and its rightful
place in this Canadian society of ours, which I'm very proud to be a part
of.”

mbridge@png.canwest.com

© The Vancouver Sun 2006

 

Vancouver Sun: dragon boats + mention for Gung Haggis Fat Choy Kogawa House team!


Vancouver Sun: dragon boats + mention for Gung Haggis Fat Choy Kogawa House team!


Our draong boat team name “Gung Haggis Fat Choy” on page D15.
but somehow part of our name got dropped.  Our official team name this year is:
Gung Haggis Fat Choy KOGAWA HOUSE, as we are helping to raise awarness and fundraising for the Save Kogawa House campaign.


Author Joy Kogawa is our honourary drummer for the team. 
Joy has inspired many Canadians through her novels Obasan, Naomi's Road, and Emily Kato.


Last year our dragon boat team won the David Lam Multicultural Award for “best representing the multicultural spirit of the festival”

This year we our vying for the Alcan Sustainability Award, with our efforts to create cultural
sustainability with the preservation of histori Joy Kogawa House.


There
are also at least 4 head tax descendants paddling on our dragon
boat….  coach/steers Todd Wong, paddlers Dan Seto, Steven Wong and
Julie Wong.


We are also helping to organize a fundraiser dinner for Joy Kogawa House, on June 23rd.

for more information contact me:
Todd Wong
604-240-7090

More Chinese Head Tax Stories in Media for June 15


More Chinese Head Tax Stories in Media for June 15

More medial stories as everything heats up.  Sid Tan is saying that the compensation package IS a tax refund, and that “governement should not be allowed to profit from racism.”

Hmmm…. Symbolic Tax Refund for Chinese Head Tax…. retroactive… or to make it fair… retroactive charge all non-Chinese immigrants since 1885.

Mary Woo Sims says:

“Chinese descendants don't just want an apology for the head tax,
they also want an apology for the Chinese Exclusion Act that stopped
all immigration from China for 30 years starting in 1923.
They took away all choice for families to reunite when they imposed the Chinese Exclusion Act”

Gim Wong says: 

“Our parents were slaves,” the 83-year-old Wong said yesterday as he
talked about why the descendants of those who paid a head tax should
receive compensation from government.

“Do not the children of slaves suffer?” he asked. “It's not easy to talk about, OK?”

Technially…. many of the Chinese pioneers were indentured labourers, as they had borrowed money to come to Canada, then had to work it off.  Many of the pioneers who signed up to build the railroad were also indentured labourers – but the CPR reneged on the promise to provide passage back to China, leaving many to further work to try to raise more money.

– Todd

June 15, 2006

Chinese ride rails to accept apology

By SHARON HO, SUN MEDIA

Chinese head tax payers are set to ride the rails to Ottawa to finally
get an apology for having to pay a racist a tax in order to immigrate
to Canada.
Surviving payers and widows will leave
Vancouver tomorrow on a “redress train” with the last spike used to
make Canada's railroad.
About 100 people will travel from Toronto to Ottawa for the apology from the Canadian government on June 22.
The Chinese were pivotal in building the railroad, completed in 1885.
The government, however, rewarded Chinese immigrants by imposing the
head tax of $50. The tax was later increased to $100 in 1900 and $500
in 1903.
It was abolished in 1923 and replaced by Exclusion Act, which ended in 1947.
“We will bring the last spike to the railway committee room where the
decision to build the railway was made,” said Susan Eng, co-chairman of
the Ontario Coalition of Chinese Head Tax Payers and Families.
About 20 head tax payers, 270 widows and a few thousand of their
children are alive. Most of the payers and widows are unable to travel
to Ottawa.

http://calsun.canoe.ca/News/National/2006/06/15/pf-1633729.html

http://torontosun.com/News/Canada/2006/06/15/1633562-sun.html

Apology must come with redress
Jun. 15, 2006. 01:00 AM


Harper will apologize for head tax on Chinese


June
14.As the son of a Chinese head tax payer, I completely agree with MP
Olivia Chow that compensation must accompany the apology. Without
compensation there is no justice and no reconciliation. The Prime
Minister must deliver on the promised redress of the head tax.In
addition, redress must be fair, substantial and just. Whole families
were affected — husbands, wives as well as their children. The head
tax financially disadvantaged families and with the Chinese Exclusion
Act, many families were separated and even torn apart. The redress
package must recognize these hardships and financially compensate the
families in a fair and just manner.


Doug Hum, Toronto

http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_PrintFriendly&c=Article&cid=1150321811405&call_pageid=970599119419

June 15, 2006

Head-tax apology on its way
By JOHN PIGEON, 24 HOURS
What is an apology worth?
If you ask Sid Tan, president of the Chinese Canadians for Equality and
Solidarity Society, he says the June 22 apology to Chinese head-tax
payers their spouses and descendants is about restoring justice and
honour.
But he will also tell you that the apology is more
than words being said, it's about righting the wrongs that led to Prime
Minister Stephen Harper's apology.
“This is a tax refund,
this is not compensation,” Tan said. “No organization and no individual
in Canada should be able to profit from racism and keep the proceeds.”
For 83-year-old head tax descendant Gim Wong, redress is important
because it was the tax that was the harshest of racist Canadian
policies which lasted until the 1940s.
“Out of 100
nationalities, ethnic groups and religious groups from the separate
world, Chinese were the only ones that had to pay a head tax,” Wong
said. “Slaves were worth something you could sell a slave if you didn't
want them, they [Chinese Canadians during the exclusion act] were not
even a dime a dozen.”
Gim Wong will ride the VIA train to Ottawa tomorrow to hear the prime minister apologize in the House of Commons.

http://vancouver.24hrs.ca/News/2006/06/15/1633456-sun.html

Chinese seeking compensation

By CP

VANCOUVER
— Gim Wong wasn't alive in 1906 when his father paid a $500 head tax
to get into Canada, but his voice is raw with emotion when he talks
about the work it took and the discrimination his family faced to
survive in Canada.
Wong and several Chinese Canadian
groups are expecting Prime Minister Stephen Harper will apologize for
the head tax during a speech in the House of Commons next Thursday, but
they want to know the apology will come with compensation.
The federal government hasn't made any commitment to that.
“Our parents were slaves,” the 83-year-old Wong said yesterday as he
talked about why the descendants of those who paid a head tax should
receive compensation from government.
“Do not the children of slaves suffer?” he asked. “It's not easy to talk about, OK?”

http://lfpress.ca/newsstand/News/National/2006/06/15/pf-1633324.html

Chinese groups say money should come with federal government head-tax apology at 19:38 on June 14, 2006, EST.
VANCOUVER (CP) – Gim Wong wasn't alive in 1906 when his father paid a
$500 head tax to get into Canada, but his voice is raw with emotion
when he talks about the work it took and the discrimination his family
faced to survive in Canada.
Wong and several Chinese Canadian groups are expecting Prime Minister Stephen Harper will apologize for the head tax
during a speech in the House of Commons next Thursday, but they want to know the apology will come with compensation.
The federal government hasn't made any commitment to that.
“Our
parents were slaves,” the 83-year-old Wong said Wednesday as he talked
about why the descendants of those who paid a head tax should receive
compensation from government.
“Do not the children of slaves suffer?” he asked. “It's not easy to talk about, OK.”
Sid
Tan from ACCESS – the Association of Chinese Canadians for Equality and
Solidarity Society – told a news conference Wednesday the redress issue
isn't about money, it's about justice and honour.
“This is
a tax refund, this is not compensation,” he stressed. “We are asking
the Harper government for our rightful return of head-tax money because
no government. . .should be able to profit from racism.”
More than 81,000 Chinese paid the head tax ranging from $50
and $500 between 1885 and 1923.
But just 20 of those who directly paid and another 260 of their spouses are still alive.
About 4,000 descendants of the head tax payers have registered with advocacy groups.
Mary-Woo Sims from the B.C. Coalition of Head Taxpayers says there are
thousands more who have lost the head-tax certificate from their
fathers or grandfathers.
“We've heard a lot of very sad
stories from individuals who come with a tattered photograph of their
ancestor, but no more documentation.”
Sims said several
groups have made compensation suggestions to the federal government of
between $20,000 to $39,000 per individual.
“I think anything that is less than that would probably cause us to question the sincerity of the government.”
She
added Chinese descendants don't just want an apology for the head tax,
they also want an apology for the Chinese Exclusion Act that stopped
all immigration from China for 30 years starting in 1923.
“They took away all choice for families to reunite when they imposed the Chinese Exclusion Act,” she said.

http://www.940news.com/nouvelles.php?cat=23&id=61491

http://www.canada.com/nationalpost/news/story.html?id=f2b0825e-6080-4036-90c3-befc7099effc&k=82520

Vancouver Sun: Cold water poured on redress train + Karin Lee comments

Vancouver Sun: Cold water poured on redress train
+ Karin Lee comments.

Hmmm…. the Vancouver Sun writers have taken a strange turn with this article.  Guess they were looking for a unique angle that nobody else has written.

Karin Lee says “It's unfortunate that
the reporter misquoted me yesterday speaking about the logistics of the
train ride for the most elderly of the head tax payers and spouses
residing in Vancouver.   I do support the train ride,
and believe it will be historic, and meaningful for those who will ride
across the country for the apology and announcement in Ottawa. Thank
you Susan for bringing it all together.  I know it took a lot of
work on your part.  
We will be
there on Friday with lion dancers and many others to see the group
off.  It will be first day towards the end of a long, long journey
and it will culminate in Ottawa with the apology and redress.
  
I believe we have all fought
hard, and have done our best.  Sometimes we make mistakes, but
mostly we've been impassioned to bring about justice for our head tax
families.  When the small group of elderly head tax payers,
spouses and descendants met with Prime Minister Harper in Vancouver,
one could feel the honour, respect and sincerity in that
room.  We hope this will carry over into the Prime Minister's
apology and the redress package will give honour and dignity to our
head tax families. 
By the way, the head tax certificate I am holding is not my mother, it is my grandmother.  The reporter got that wrong too.”

When the suggestion of a “Redress Train” was originated in Ontario, BCers thought “Who's going to spend 5 days on a train from Vancouver to Ottawa?”  A nice idea for a short trip from Montreal or Toronto to Ottawa – but not realistic from Vancouver. 

But many of our leaders from BC will be joining the “Redress Train.”  Foon and her husban and have been active on the committee since the November 25th protest agains the ACE program.  Gim Wong, who last year rode his motorcycle from Victoria to Ottawa with his son Jeffrey, will be on the Redress Train with his wife.  This is the first time his wife is coming to a Redress event – significant and symbolic, just like the Redress Train to Ottawa.

There will be music and lion dancers at the 4:00pm celebration and send off at Thornton Park – Main and Terminal St. in front of the VIA Rail train station.  The train departs at 5:30pm.

My suggestions for a new story angle?  Find Head Tax descendants who are multi-racial, like filmaker Karen Cho, or any of the 6th generation descendants from my Rev. Chan Yu Tan family.  There are Canadians today, who can claim ethnic ancestry from China, England, Scottish, French and First Nations.

That's the story!  It's for our future, about our past, and it's happening NOW!

 

Cold water poured on redress train
Karin Lee of the BC Coalition of Head Tax Payers
has a copy of her mother's head tax certificate
 
Mike De Souza and Maurice
Bridge, with files from DarahHansen, Vancouver Sun
CanWest News Service and
Vancouver Sun

CREDIT: Peter Battistoni, Vancouver
Sun
Karin Lee of the BC Coalition of Head
Tax Payers has a copy of her mother's head tax
certificate.
Vancouver supporters of redress for the Chinese head tax poured
cold water Tuesday on the idea of a national “redress train” crossing
the country to Ottawa for a long-awaited apology from the federal
government.

The Conservative government announced Tuesday it would apologize in
Parliament June 22 for Canada's imposition of the head tax 121 years
ago. The tax required thousands of Chinese immigrants to pay millions of
dollars to enter Canada.
It was introduced in 1885 after Chinese immigrants helped build the
Canadian Pacific Railway. It was eliminated in 1923 and replaced by the
Chinese Exclusion Act, which barred Chinese immigration to Canada until
1947.

Following the Conservative government's announcement of the
apology, the Ontario Coalition of Chinese Head Tax Payers and Families
announced that head tax payers, widows and their descendants would begin
a train ride Friday from Vancouver to Ottawa to hear the apology in the
Commons.

“It's almost closing the loop,” said Susan Eng, co-chair of the
Ontario coalition. “People, generations ago, who actually gave their
lives to building the railroad that brought B.C. into Confederation are
now going to ride those rails, all the way to Ottawa to witness the
ceremony.”

“It's a novel idea, but I don't think it works for the old people
here [in B.C.],” said Karin Lee, a spokeswoman for the BC Coalition of
Head Tax Payers, Spouses and Descendants.
She said there are fewer than 20 survivors locally who paid the tax
and she did not know of any who would be taking the train.

“I would prefer to see them go on a first-class airplane ride. It's
ridiculous to bump around for five days when you're 101 years old.

“They're talking about June 22, and we're just over a week away,”
she said. “How many people have enough time to gather up their life and
go there and take a five-day trip?”

Sid Tan, president of the Association of Chinese Canadians for
Equality and Solidarity Society (ACCESS) in Vancouver, and a national
director of the Chinese Canadian National Council, was also unimpressed
by the train idea, and lack of detail about the form of the
apology.

“This is an issue of justice and honour, and I'm not sure the
Conservative government understands that,” he said. “They just see it as
a political thing.”

Keith Wong, a volunteer with the Ontario coalition, said he expects
about 10 people and their caregivers to make the trip from Vancouver to
Ottawa. Wong agreed health and old age has played a part in discouraging
many people from participating in an event he said carries “very intense
symbolic meaning.”
He said even some living in Toronto have declined to make the trip
to Ottawa because of their age, although he believes as many as 100 are
expected to attend the ceremony. He said many would fly.
The apology was a Conservative election campaign promise.

“We have kept our word by holding an unprecedented series of
grassroots national consultations on redress,” Heritage Minister Bev Oda
said Tuesday in the House of Commons.

“I am pleased to announce that the prime minister will keep his
word by righting this historical wrong when he makes the formal apology
in this House.”

Eng estimates about 300 families should each get compensation of
about $20,000 for the head tax and the Exclusion Act.

“It was blatant, unmitigated racism that drove the government of
the day to pass the head tax and later the Exclusion Act.”

She said the apology is a breakthrough, given the reluctance of the
federal Liberals to offer a similar response when they were in
power.

“It's really an important message that the government will send
that this is not just some type of throwaway gesture,” she said. “It's
going to have a great deal of meaning and resonate across the country in
the Chinese Canadian community, and [with] other Canadians who care
about human rights and social justice issues.”
The coalition has also asked the government to set aside between $5
million and $8 million on programs to promote awareness about
racism.

Details about the train and its departure were not available.

Beyond the Book: a research study on “One Book” programs

Beyond the Book: a research study on “One Book” programs

Beyond the Book website lists information about the trans-national phenomenon of
“mass reading events,” our name for book events that are meant to bring
readers of one city, region or nation together by reading and sharing
the same book.

I was invited to meet with two of the researchers, North American director DeNel Rehberg Sedo (Mount Saint Vincent University, Canada), and Anouk Lang post-doctoral fellow.  I quickly contacted Larry Wong, as we were the community representatives/experts on the inaugural One_Book_One_Vancouver program in 2002 which featured The Jade Peony by Wayson Choy. We were great additions to the OBOV committee as Larry was a childhood friend of Wayson, and I was a vice-president of Asian Canadian Writers' Workshop, and also volunteering with Asian Heritage Month in Vancouver.


Here's a picture of (l-r): Larry Wong, Wayson Choy, Anouk Lang, Todd Wong (me) and DeNel Rehberg Sedo – photo courtesy of Larry Wong.

The Beyond the Book project seems to be a fascinating study of the mass book clubs for an entire city, such as One_Book_One_Vancouver, CBC Radio's Canada Reads, Seattle Reads, and One Book One Chicago.

It was a great privilege to be part of the inaugural One Book One Vancouver project.  I was invited by Community Programming Director Janice Douglas.  Also on the committee was Corrine Durston, then the Division Head Librarian for VPL Popular Reading, and Lisl Jauk, manager for The Word on the Street Book and Magazine Festival. It was an excellent exercise in community networking, as early meetings also included the VPL communications staff, as well as a representative from Douglas and McIntyre Pulishing, which published The Jade Peony.

Our discussions acknowledge the incredible creative energy of our inaugural commitee, which recognized that we were on an adventure and creating something brand new, never before done in Canada.  We created programming to help make The Jade Peony come alive. DeNel really liked my phrase “to turn the book inside out.”  Larry highlighted “The Jade Peony Walking Tour” that was created by Vancouver historia John Atkins, and was organized through the Dr. Sun Yat Sen Gardens.

Wayson Choy spoke about the One Book program from an author's experience.  During the program, Wayson was simply amazed as The Jade Peony, was pushed back up on the BC Book Publishers'  “Best Seller” lists.  Wayson stated that OBOV (Jade Peony) committe was an important and unique program, devoid of egos, but especially strong because of the presence of community activists, and strong connections throughout the community.

I emphasized how incredible the event “Dim Sum with Ways Choy & Friends” was.  I had scouted the Floata Chinese restaurant as the best possible site.  Larry invited friends of Wayson's who had been the basis for some of the composite characters in the story.  As well, Larry showed a video greeting from author Carol Shields, who had been one of Wayson's teachers at the UBC School of Creative Writing.  I also recounted setting up reading events titled “Stories from Chinatown” featuring authors Paul Yee, SKY Lee, and Jim Wong-Chu, as well as “More Stories from Chinatown” featuring poet Sean Gunn, historian enthusiast Dr. Wallance Chung, and Roy Mah – founder of Chinatown News.

I also commented about the programming for the 2005 One Book One Vancouver selection, which was Joy Kogawa's novel, Obasan.  Early in January, 2005, I wrote a letter on the Kogawa Homestead website stating 20 reasons why Obasan should be the 2005 OBOV choice.  By September 2005, I was an active member and coordinator for the Save Kogawa House campaign to rescue Joy Kogawa's childhood home from demolition, and to turn it into a national historic landmark for all Canadians to share.

check out my articles on the OBOV program featuring Joy Kogawa's novel Obasan.
http://www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com/blog?cmd=search&keywords=
%22one+book%22%2C+obasan%2C+2004%2C+joy+kogawa

Chinese Head tax apology coming June 22nd – no details yet on redress compensation package.

Chinese Head tax apology coming June 22nd – no details yet on redress compensation package.

I was just interviewed by Sing Tao.

I stressed points that support the BC Coalition position:.

BC position is one certificate – one payment.
Equal payment for surviving head tax payer, spouse or descendant.

I
pointed out that Japanese Canadian redress was arrived at by meetings
and agreement with the Japanese Canadian redresss committee.  Initial
offer was rejected.

It would be terrible if the package
announced by the govt was rejected by the Coalitions of head tax
redress descendants across Canada.

Sing Tao wanted somebody to say that “head tax descendants should be informed of the package before the June 22nd announcement.

I
also pointed out that this is a Canadian issue with many of the head
tax familes becoming multi-racial.  Many of my cousins children, like
film maker Karen Cho – are all Multi-racial now.

Cheers, Todd

CCNC National <national@ccnc.ca> wrote:

Harper to apologize June 22 for Chinese head tax, compensation still unclear
By Sue Bailey Canadian Press 
 
OTTAWA
— Prime Minister Stephen Harper will apologize next week for a racist
head tax from the last century that still scars the Chinese community.
 But there’s no word on whether he’ll offer compensation during his June 22 statement in the House of Commons.
 “Cash
payments, community projects, some kind of memorial — that’s the sort
of thing that’s being considered,” said a government source who spoke
on condition of anonymity.
 “There is no clear consensus within the (Chinese) community.”
 Fewer than 20 people who paid the immigration tax are still believed to be living.
 About 81,000 Chinese immigrants paid fees ranging from $50 to $500 to enter Canada between 1885 and 1923.
 About
$23 million in head taxes were collected, placing a burden on
immigrants that often meant they could not afford to bring their loved
ones to join them.
 “Just an apology is not good enough,” said New Democrat MP Olivia Chow, who is Chinese.
 “That is not justice, that is not reconciliation. There has to be compensation.
 “Some
of the descendants were directly affected because they’re sons and
daughters who never knew their fathers. They have mothers who committed
suicide because of loneliness, because of despair . . . (after) 30
years of being separated from their husband.”
 The Chinese Canadian National Council, with chapters across the country, has urged Ottawa to:
 
Apologize and send a letter of regret to anyone holding a head tax
certificate, including surviving spouses or descendants of those who’ve
passed on.
 
Pay a minimum $21,000 to surviving head tax payers or their spouses,
and a minimum of $10,000 to be divided among the first generation
children of deceased payers if both they and their spouse are dead.
 “We
are serving notice to the government that redress in amounts lower than
our proposal would be very difficult for a number of redress-seeking
groups and families to accept,” said Victor Wong, executive director of
the council, in a letter to the Conservative cabinet dated Monday.
 Some
survivors have said they would prefer funding for a memorial or
community projects, said the government source. Related consultations
drew hundreds of responses.
 “We’re
not going to be held to an artificial timetable,” the government
official said when asked when a compensation deal might be reached.
 “It’s extremely important for us to arrive at a just conclusion.”
 Chinese immigration to Canada surged after 1858, especially when labour was needed for hazardous work building the Canadian Pacific Railway.
 The
federal government later tried to stem the influx with head taxes and,
later, the Chinese Exclusion Act that barred Chinese immigrants
outright. It was repealed in 1947.
–30–
 
Subject: (Redress) “Half measure not enough for reconciliation with Chinese Head tax payers and their families.”

 
From Olivia Chow’s office:
 
Subject: Press Release: Chow says “Half measure not enough for reconciliation with Chinese Head tax payers and their families.”

Chow says “Half measure not enough for reconciliation with

Chinese Head tax payers and their families.”

Ottawa
– After two promises from Prime Minister Stephen Harper, consultations
across the country involving thousands of Canadians, and a fund raising
dinner hosted by the Chinese Committee of the Conservative Party
attended by 500 people featuring Minister Bev Oda and Prime Minister's
Parliamentary Secretary Jason Kenney, today's announcement of an
official apology was met with little enthusiasm.

“Today the
Conservatives began looking a lot like Liberals. After years of broken
Liberal promises, we thought that this government would finally restore
trust and do what it promised,” said Chow. “Chinese head tax payers and
their families have been clear about the significance of compensation
to the reconciliation process.”

Early in his mandate, Prime
Minister Harper had publicly promised an official apology and redress
to the Chinese community for the Head Tax. However, during the Throne
Speech and in subsequent comments, the Conservatives have made no
mention of the issue of redress. Today in Question Period the
government again failed to offer proper redress.

“After
waiting so long for the Liberal's to act, I welcome the official
apology, but Canadians seeking proper redress may be disappointed again
with the Stephen Harper government. I am disappointed that no
commitment to redress has been made today,” said Chow. “Since 1984 New
Democrat MPs Margaret Mitchell and Dan Heap were champions of seeking
justice and reconciliation. I thank my colleagues in the NDP caucus for
their long standing support and sustained effort.”

In the last
session of Parliament, both the Liberal and Conservative parties
rejected NDP amendments to proposed legislation that called for an
apology and redress for Chinese Head Tax payers and their families.
These positions changed during the 2006 federal election.

“How
much longer will surviving families have to wait for justice and
reconciliation?” asked Chow last week in Question Period. Chow and the
NDP team will continue to pressure Stephen Harper to provide adequate
compensation at the upcoming June 22 announcement in the House of
Commons.

The Canadian government collected $23 million from Chinese immigrants to Canada between 1885 and 1923. 

-30-

For more information, please call:
Sarah Dopp, 416-543-8332

 
End

Subject: (Redress) Globe and Mail: Harper to apologize for head tax

 

Harper to apologize for head tax

Globe and Mail Update
Ottawa will offer a formal apology next week to Chinese Canadians for the head tax.
The
Conservatives had promised during last winter's election that the
government would formally express its regret for the tax once in office.
“We
have kept our word by holding an unprecedented series of grass roots
national consultations on redress,” Heritage Minister Bev Oda said in
during question period in the House of Commons on Tuesday.
“I
want to thank all of those who participated and I am pleased to
announce that the prime minister will keep his word by righting this
historical wrong.”
She said Mr. Harper will offer a formal apology on June 22.
About 81,000 Chinese immigrants paid $23-million to enter Canada
under the head-tax scheme between 1885 and 1923. The Chinese Exclusion
Act followed, barring Chinese immigrants from altogether. That act was
repealed in 1947.
Chinese Canadians have been calling on Ottawa for years to apologize for the tax and to provide some form of redress.
 
end

Subject: (Redress) CCNC Responds To Government Announcement

 
For Immediate Release
June 13, 2006
 
CCNC Responds To Government Announcement
 
TORONTO.
Chinese Canadians today welcomed the announcement that Prime Minister
Stephen Harper will issue a formal apology in the House of Commons on
June 22nd.
 
The
Chinese Canadian National Council (CCNC) urges the Government to
provide more information on the details of redress as soon as possible.
 
“We welcome the announcement by Minister Oda that the Prime Minister will formally apologize in Parliament on June 22nd,”
Colleen Hua, CCNC National President said today. “We urge all of the
Opposition Parties to join with the Government in righting this
historic injustice.”
 
CCNC
reiterated its 4 point proposal in a letter to the federal Cabinet this
past Sunday. “We are anxious to learn about the details of redress,”
Dr. Joseph Wong, Founding President of CCNC said today. “We hope that
the Government will convene a meeting with CCNC and redress-seeking
groups as soon as possible.”
 
Chinese Canadian National Council (CCNC) and other redress-seeking groups across Canada
have pressed successive Federal Governments since 1984 to provide
redress for the Chinese Head Tax legislation 1885 -1923 and the Chinese
Exclusion Act 1923 – 1947.
 
-30-
 
For more information, please contact:
Colleen Hua, National President, (647) 299-1775 (Toronto)
Dr. Joseph Wong, CCNC Founding President, (416) 806-0082 (Toronto)
Victor Wong, Executive Director, (416) 977-9871 (Toronto)
 
 
End
 
 
 
For Immediate Release
June 13, 2006
 
Chinese Canadians Ride the Redress Train
 
TORONTO/VANCOUVER/EDMONTON/CALGARY/REGINA/MONTREAL/
HALIFAX/ST. JOHNS
 
Today,
the Minister of Canadian Heritage announced that Prime Minister Stephen
Harper will introduce a motion for a Parliamentary apology for the
injustice of the Head Tax and Exclusion Acts on Thursday, June 22nd,
2006.
 
This Friday, Chinese Canadian head tax payers, widows and their descendents will begin a historic train ride across Canada to mark the day the government of Canada finally apologizes for the 62 years of legislated racism they endured under the Head Tax and Exclusion Acts. Beginning in Vancouver on Friday June 16th and joining a major group in Toronto
leaving Wednesday June 21st, hundreds of families will witness the
Parliamentary session at which the resolution to acknowledge the
injustice and apologize to them will be passed.
 
The Redress Train has been made possible with the kind sponsorship of VIA Rail Canada.
 
“We
are grateful for VIA Rail’s support in this historic event both to
commemorate the role of early Chinese Canadian pioneers in the building
of this country and to carry their descendants on this journey of
justice and reconciliation at this time in our country’s history.” said
Susan Eng, Co-Chair, Ontario Coalition of Chinese Head Tax Payers and
Families.
 
Specific dates, events and details will be released at a news conference to be held:
 
Date:                Wednesday June 14, 2006
Time:                10:00 am
Place:               302 Spadina Ave Suite 507
 
 
 
For updates and a current list of events, please see www.headtaxredress.org after Wednesday June 14th.
 
– 30-
 
For more information, please contact:
 
Keith Wong       [416] 971-8022; cell [416] 835-7623        
 
Ontario Coalition of Head Tax Payers and Families
Susan Eng, Co-Chair, (416) 960-0312 (Toronto)
George Lau, Co-Chair (416) 588-1751 (Toronto)
Yew Lee, Co-Chair, (819) 827-3357 (Ottawa)
Avvy Go, Counsel, (416) 971-9674 (Toronto)
 
 

Sunday visit to Dr. Sun Yat Sen Gardens, dim sum and dragon boats


Sunday visit to Dr. Sun Yat Sen Gardens, dim sum and dragon boats

The Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team has a tradition of visiting the Dr. Sun Yat Sen Gardens, learning some Tai Chi exercises, then incorporating Chinese concepts of harmony and balance, yin and yang into our dragon boat practice.

The Chinese Classical garden in Vancouver is named after Dr. Sun Yat Sen, known as the “father of modern China.”  My great-great grandfather Rev. Chan Yu Tan, met Dr. Sun Yat Sen on at least 1 of his 3 visits to Vancouver to help develop support for the revolution that overthrew the last imperial dynasty of China to create democratic reform in China.

My cousin Joe Wai was the architect for the Dr. Sun Yat Sen Garden, which is modeled after gardens in Suchow, China.

Check out events at the Dr. Sun Yat Sen Gardens such as the Enchanted Evenings music series, founded by my friend Qiu Xia He, leader of Silk Road Music.

Highlights of Sunday's dragon boat practice were:

Tour and Qi Gong exercise at Dr. Sun Yat Sen Garden.

We experienced harmony and balance in the garden, along with Chinese history in Canada and China.
Steven Wong and myself explained Chinese yin yang  concepts and put them into dragon boat context.
Steven taught our group Qi Gong energy and breathing exercises to help enhance health and body performance.

Todd
demonstrated exercises to help improve physical performance using
“muscle testing” and demonstrated “use of force” exercises, to help use
body position to enhance performance.

Dim Sum at Floata Restaurant.
We
had “dragonboat sticky rice dumplings” – known as “Jung” in Cantonese,
and Zhong in Mandarin.  We also had ha-gau (shrimp dumpling), sue-mei
(pork dumplings), BBQ pork + spicy jelly fish, + lots more!  Floata is
where I have hosted the Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese New
Year dinner in 2005 and 2006.  Paddlers were surprised to see so many
restaurant managers and assistant managers coming to say “Hello Mr.
Wong.”

Dragon Boat practice

Unfortunately
Joy Kogawa wasn't able to attend today's practice – but two Chinese
language reporters showed up.  And one took pictures of the team in the
boat, for the World Journal.

17 paddlers + 2 visitors from Quebec (Juliet's friends)

We
worked on race scenarios.  And did 2 full race pieces and 1 mini race
piece.  We lowered the stroke rate, and everything felt real good and
real strong.  Our drummer Deb was really happy.  She said it was the best she had
ever seen.

Alcan Dragon Boat races: Gung Haggis Fat Choy Kogawa House first race in #18 heat, 11:07am

Alcan Dragon Boat races:  Gung Haggis Fat Choy Kogawa House first race in #18 heat, 11:07am

For Race information:
got to:  http://www.adbf.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=downloads.listbycat&catid=5

Please go by the race number – if the races are running late or early, we will still be in the same race number.

Race #18   – Gemini Boat – 11:07 am

lane 2  –  Dragon Hearts CCPC
lane 3  – Kryptic Storm
lane 4  – Lotus Sports Club Mixed
lane 5  – Dragon Hearts Team Ultimate
lane 6 –  Wasabi Warriors
lane 7  –  Dragon's Breath
lane 8 – Gung Haggis Fat Choy Kogawa House

5th place to race #42 – 3:45pm
6th place to race #44 – 4:07pm
7th place to race #40 – 3:23pm

Okay…. how does this work?
This is a seeding race, with top seed placed in lane #5, then lane #4, #6, # 3, # 7, #2, #8, #1, #9. 
Teams have been pre-ranked according to abilitiy and race finishes from
this year and last year.  So… we are expected to finish in 7th place,
whilte the top seed is expected to win the race. 

The 2nd race in the afternoon further is supposed to confirm we are in
the lower half,  or percentile of the 150 teams entered in the Adult
Mixed division.

Then on Sunday morning we will be in semi-finals for either
Competitive A, Comp B, Comp C, or Recreation A, B, C, D, E, F… etc. 
Sunday afternoon race is for a medal, or bragging rights in the
consolation final.

The idea of these seeding races is to presort all the teams according
to some sort of “magical formula” so that every team will be in a race
with teams their own performance ability for the final races on
Sunday.  With 140 adult teams + 31 Junior teams 46 adult teams in Pool
A, 46 in Pool B, and 45 in Pool C for 137 adult teams + 31 Junior teams
+ 5 Grandmaster teams – logistics can be a nightmare…  or at least
keep you awake at night.  I was on the ADBF race committeee for 2001,
2002 and 2003.

Trust that the top 18 teams will be sorted out for Comp A Division, 
the next 18 for Comp B, then Comp C.  then Rec A to F.  Hmmm…. 8 X 18
= 144.  not too far off from 137.

Expect to come 6th, 7th or 8th in Saturday races, then on Sunday
morning semi-finals… 1st to 4th gets us into into the medal round. 
5th to 9th goes to the consolation.