Monthly Archives: May 2007

Wind on False Creek makes white capped waves for dragon boat practice

Wind on False Creek makes white capped waves for dragon boat practice

 

We had a wonderful practice tonight….
Paddlers said it was one of the best.
The sun was out… the wind was up, whitecaps in False Creek – YIKES!

All
our paddlers rose to the challenge.  Waves hit the sides of the boat,
and sometimes came in.  People got wet… some the wettest ever at a
practice.  But it was a great practice.  20 paddlers in a Gemini boat.  We started with a warm-up paddle to Cambie St. Bridge.  We did a 500m race piece to prepare for the May 19th Bill Alley memorial dragon boat regatta organized by the Lotus Sports Club.

We raced practice starts with a team that was
Rec B last year… And we stayed right with them for a start.  After the start we were about 6 to 10 feet behind. This was the closest we had been to them all Spring… up to now, they usually left us way behind. And we had 3 newbie paddlers + 3 rookies on the boat!  Last
year we were Rec E.  We want to be Rec B this year… and we are well on
our way.

After the race pieces we looked at correcting things that needed improving such as our timing, and technique.  We did some speed drills, some small group work, then worked on our starts. 

We have a good dedicated core crew who come every practice on Tuesday 6pm, and Sunday 1pm.
Some of the paddlers have been with us 3 years.  Our drummer/steers will have her 5th year with us.  Ex-paddlers still come to race with us.  It's good to have friends.

Last
year we raced 9 dragon boat race + 2 voyageur canoe races.  We love to
race… and we travelled to Seattle, Victoria, Vernon, Cultus Lake, and
Burnaby.  We raced in teak, 6-16, and Gemini boats, Dynasty boats in
Vernon, Millenium boats in Victoria, and Taiwanese Cedar boats in
Vancouver.

And we love to eat… We
have a Tuesday Night Food Club after practice.  Each week we try to go to a different restaurant.  Usually we go out for Chinese food… we like Foo's Ho Ho and Hon's Won Ton House in Chinatown… Sometimes we go to Congee House on Broadway and Main St.  But tonight we went the The Clubhouse Japanese restaurant, and were promptly greeted by the manager Karen.  She remembered us from last year and welcomed us back. 

 

Join the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat food and social club.

Todd Wong
coach and clan chieftain
gunghaggis @ yahoo dot ca
778-846-7090

Bone Marrow Registry for Mixed-Race Donors and transplants

Bone Marrow Registry for
Mixed-Race Donors and transplants

Apparently there is a bone marrow registry for Mixed Race Donors and transplants!

My friend Jeff Chiba Stearns has just sent me this
message.  Jeff describes himself as half-Japanese, half-Euro mutt
– or “Hapa” – according to the Hawaiian term meaning “Half-White” or
“Half-Asian”… depending on your Hapa perspective

Check this out:

Mavin is an organization that has thousands of potential mixed-race donars for bone marrow transplants.  They set
this network up to help mixed-race people diagnosed with Leukemia.   This
will be the quickest route to helping out your friend since MAVIN has many donors already tested and able to help.
-Jeff


MatchMaker is the only national program dedicated to recruitment of mixed race
bone marrow donors. The need for mixed race bone marrow donors is great because
each year approximately 130,000 people are diagnosed with life-threatening diseases
like leukemia and other blood cancers and it is estimated that at least 12,000
of these patients will not be cured without a bone marrow transplant (BMT).

James Erlandsen and Todd Wong meet for City TV interview

James Erlandsen and Todd Wong meet for City TV interview

James and I met today at St. Paul's Hospital.  James' family has
been very appreciative of my efforts to help spread the word about
James' need for a Eurasian bone marrow donor.

City TV wanted to interview both of us as we met for the first
time.  Up to now, James and I had only communicated through his
aunt and cousin, and an e-mail message.

James looked to be in good spirits.  The presence of television
camera with lights made the atmosphere a bit surreal, and very
self-aware.

But… I had a nice short chat with James and his family.  I
showed him a picture of me without hair, after it had all fallen out
due to chemotherapy.  I shared a story about how when I was
sitting on the edge of my bed, I accidently stood up on my catheter
line to my IV – and almost ripped the line out of my chest….
OUCH!  We laughed.

I also showed James the plaque I received for the SFU Terry Fox Award,
and I read to him the inscription that said “given to a person who has
triumphed in adversity.”  I told him that I want him to triumph
through this challenge that he is going through… so that I can
nominate him for the award. 

And… I gave James an Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team
shirt.  I told James that our dragon boat team really likes to
emphasize not only Chinese and Scottish cultures – but also Hapa or
Eurasian-Canadian issues.  We have a lot of fun going out on
Tuesdays after practice for eating and socializing… which is what I
knew James likes to do.  “We want you to get better, so you can
come join our dragon boat team,” I told him.

City TV also interviewed James on his own, his parents and his doctor.

Watch City TV tonight for the story.

James Erlandsen on CTV news, as plea for Eurasian bone marrow donor goes to the media

James Erlandsen on CTV news, as plea for Eurasian bone marrow donor goes to the media




Good news for leukemia patient James Erlandsen, as the media is picking
up the plea for a Eurasian donor.  Last week I was contacted by
James' cousin Aynsley who felt that www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com, a website that promoted intercultural issues, is a good place for a
story about the search for a Eurasian-Canadian bone marrow
donor.   I have sent James' story to media contacts, and the
story was broadcast
by Channel M yesterday, and CTV tonight.  The North Shore News,
Ming Pao and City TV are also following up on the story.

James was interviewed earlier on Saturday for a story which ran on CTV
6pm and 11:30pm local news.  It's a good story which highlights
his life-threatening situation, and the fact that only 15% of bone
marrow matches are for non-whites.  Recent cancer surviovr and MLA
Sindy Hawkins is also interviewed talking about these issues. 
James' case is more desperate because while Sindy's sister was able to
donate bone marrow, James has no siblings.  James' father is
caucasian and his mother is chinese, it is more rare to find a
compatible bone marrow match.

While I have communicated with James' cousin and aunt, I have not
met
him yet…. but Saturday evening we exchanged e-mails.  The
television newscast was the first time I have seen
him during his treatment.  He seems to be in good spirits and
emphasized the importance of being positive.  He has lost much of
his hair due to the
side effects of  chemotherapy treatment, and his face looks puffy
– probably due to prednasone steroid treatments used to help stimulate
metabolism during chemotherapy treatment.  I went through the same
process 18 years ago.  I went through 5 months of chemo treatment
before my blood tests were clean of cancer markers.


I know I am drawn to James' story because of the similarity to my own
health crisis
when I was diagnosed 17 years ago with a life-threatening cancer tumor when I was age 29 – while attending SFU.  Do I see myself in James?  A young man full of potentialities, waiting to blossom?

James and I will meet for a City TV interview on Monday.  I hope
to share with him some of the things that I learned during my
experience of cancer, and what I learned in my subsequent studies in
health psychology, medical anthropology, and sport psychology that I
took at SFU, following my illness. 

I would like James to recover from Leukemia and achieve his many
unrealized dreams.  23 is much too short a life to have. 
Maybe eventually as I did, he may also become a recipient for the SFU
Terry Fox Gold Medal.  It is
given annually for a person who has “triumphed over adversity” and is
“dedicated to society.”

I also know that Hapa-Canadian culture is important.  The search
for a bone marrow match is challenging because James is Eurasian… but
the future of Canada is becoming more Eurasian with each inter-racial
marriage and each Eurasian baby being born.

My brother's young children are
Eurasian.  Many of my cousin's children are all Eurasian.  My friend's Baby Tasha was the 1st baby born in BC for 2007 – all are Eurasian.  Maybe this is why James' story has resonated for me… he seems like family.

His Aunt sent me this message yesterday morning


Hello Todd:
   
Thank you  for posting the information on James on your website and for notifying your contacts.
 
Your
excellent and speedy work have  provided a noticeable lift in the
spirits of James and his parents.  We shall continue to have faith and
hope.  Again, thank you for all that you have done.
 
Sincerely,
Bev Wong


Faith
and hope are sometimes all we can have, and all we can give in times
like these.  Hopefully a donor can be found for James. 

Evening of Poetry with Evelyn Lau and Indran Amirthanayagam – Monday!

Evening of Poetry with Evelyn Lau
and Indran
Amirthanayagam
– Monday!
 
Check out this
exciting evening of poetry for Asian Heritage Month.  I have met
Evelyn a number of times, and even booked her for Asian Heritage Month
events when I helped to program events for explorASIAN. Evelyn is an
exciting reader with thoughtful penetrating words and images.

I also first met Senator Vivienne Poy in Ottawa, when I was working for
explorASIAN in 2002.  We discovered that we were related through
the marriage of her husband's aunt to my grandmother's eldest
brother.  What a small world it is!  She has been the patron
senator of spreading Asian Heritage month throughoutthe country, and was the first Chinese-Canadian appointed to the senate.


An
Evening of Poetry with Evelyn Lau
and
introducing
Indran Amirthanayagam (poet)

http://www.explorasian.org/Program%20Guide%202007/May%207/lau_amirthanayagam.html

May
7

7pm to 8:30pm

Free admission – Open to the Public – Age 19+
recommended

Wild Ginger Asian
Fusion & Lounge

Tinseltown –
International Village (2nd Floor) – 88 West Pender Street,
Vancouver

With Special Guest
Senator Vivienne Poy (the first Canadian Senator of Asian
descent)

The Globe and Mail
named Evelyn Lau one of the most influential people in the arts. 

The author of nine books, including
Runaway: Diary of a Street Kid, Fresh Girls and Other Stories, 
Choose Me and the novel Other Women, Evelyn considers
herself more the poet than the prose writer.

Her poetry and short fiction have appeared in over a hundred
publications in Canada and the US,

including Best American Poetry 1992, Kenyon Review, Michigan
Quarterly Review, The Southern Review,
Malahat Review and Descant. Several of her books have been
translated into a dozen languages.

Evelyn Lau's first poetry collection, You Are Not Who You Claim,
won the Milton Acorn People's Poetry Prize;
her second, Oedipal Dreams, was shortlisted for the Governor
General's Award, making Lau, then 20,
the youngest person ever nominated. She was named Air Canada's
“Most promising Writer Under 30”,
and
has won the Vantage Woman of Originality Award.. Her new collection of poems is
Treble.

Evelyn has read and
discussed her work at festivals, colleges and universities around the world,

and has been writer in residence at
UBC's Creative Writing Program, the Varuna Writers' Centre in Australia,
and Vancouver Community College. She
has also taught at Simon Fraser University.

Evelyn's bestseller “Runaway: Diary of a Street Kid” was broadcast
as a CBC-TV “Movie of the Week”,
starring Sandra Oh in her first movie
role.

Indran
Amirthanayagam
writes poetry in
English, Spanish and French.  He also translates from Spanish. 
His books include The Elephants of
Reckoning (1994 Paterson Poetry Prize), El Infierno de los Pajaros,
Ceylon R.I.P., and El Hombre que
Recoge Nidos.  Amirthanayagam’s translations of Mexican poet
Manuel Ulaca were included in
Reversible Monuments: Contemporary Mexican Poetry.

Recent translations of Mexican poet Julian Herbert were published
in the Americas issue of BOMB.
His
next book The Splintered Face: tsunami poems will be published in the US in late
2007.

Amirthanayagam has received
fellowships from the US Mexico Fund for Culture for translations and
the New York Foundation for the Arts
and the MacDowell Colony for poems.  Amirthanayagam’s essays
have been published in the Hindu
(India), Reforma and El Norte (Mexico), The Daily News (Sri Lanka)

and the New York Times (United
States
).  His poems have been anthologized in The United States of Poetry,
ALOUD: Voices from the Nuyorican
Poets Café, The Open Boat: Poems from Asian America, Only the Sea Keeps:
Tsunami Poems, among others. 
Amirthanayagam performs his poems with the group Non-Jazz. 
He also directed Palabras en Vuelo:
Poesia en Conversacion, a program about poetry for public television
in Mexico. His next book in Spanish
Sol Camuflado is being revised for publication. Amirthanayagam won
the Poetry Prize of the Juegos
Florales in Guaymas, Sonora in 2006.

Amirthanayagam was born in Colombo, Ceylon in 1960. He came to the
United States in 1975.

He has been a
member of the United States Foreign Service since 1993. He has served his
adoptive country
in Argentina,
Belgium, Cote d’Ivoire, Mexico, India and now as Public Affairs Officer at the
United States Consulate General,
Vancouver

Senator
Vivienne Poy
is an author,
entrepreneur, fashion designer, and historian, and is the first Canadian

of Asian descent to be appointed to
the Senate of Canada. She was appointed to the Senate in 1998.

She served as Chancellor of the University of Toronto
from 2003 until 2006. She founded Vivienne Poy Mode
in 1981 and over the following fourteen years enjoyed great
success in fashion design, manufacturing and retail.
She is currently Chairwoman of Lee Tak Wai Holdings
Ltd., and a member of the Board of the Bank of East Asia (Canada).

A Motion to designate the month
of May as Asian Heritage Month was introduced in the Canadian Senate

by Senator Vivienne Poy on May 29,
2001, and seconded by Senator Pat Carney. Senators Sheila Finestone,
Noel A. Kinsella, Nicholas W. Taylor
and Laurier LaPierre spoke in favour of it.

In December, 2001, the Senate of Canada passed a motion officially
designating May as Asian Heritage Month.

Presented by explorASIAN and Ricepaper
Magazine

Beyond Multiculturalism: check out film screenings of “In the Shadow of Gold Mountain” at Rhizome Cafe

Beyond Multiculturalism:
check out film screenings of “In the Shadow of Gold Mountain” at Rhizome Café

The following notice was sent to me from No One Is Illegal -Vancouver, as they celebrate Asian Heritage Month with the screenings of two incredible films.  I reviewed and wrote about “In the Shadow of Gold Mountain.”   Check out these previous stories and interviews.


BEYOND MULTICULTURALISM

Celebrate Asian Heritage Month with a critical perspective on labour,
migration, and race in a special film screening and discussion…

<><><><><><><><><><><><><>
Thursday May 3 @ 6pm
Rhizome Café, Vancouver
317 E. Broadway (corner Kingsway)
Films by donation $0-5
<><><><><><><><><><><><><>

Organized by No One is Illegal-Vancouver and supported by Association
Of Chinese Canadians for Equality and Solidarity Society and South Asian
Network for Secularism and Democracy.

DOUBLE-BILL OF AWARD-WINNING FILMS!

*** 6:00 PM:

“In the Shadow of Gold Mountain”. In the Shadow of Gold
Mountain travels from Montreal to Vancouver to uncover stories from the
last living survivors of The Chinese Head Tax and Exclusion Act, in
force from 1885 until 1947. This unfair legislation plunged the Chinese
community in Canada into more than 62 years of debt and family
separation.

At the centre of the film are personal accounts of people like James
Wing, who, at the age of 10, was forced to pay $500 – the cost of two houses
at the time – to live with his father in Canada, and Gim Wong, a WWII
Veteran who witnessed his parents’ struggle to pay off their Head Tax debt.
This compelling documentary sheds light on an era that shaped the identity
Of generations of Chinese in Canada and reveals the profound ways that
history still casts its shadow.

* DISCUSSION in between films, including with community organizers for
Chinese-Head Tax redress and Kamagata Maru redress and memorial.

*** 7:30 PM:  “Continuous Journey”. The Kamagata Maru entered the port
of Vancouver in 1914. On board were 376 immigrants, who for two months,
lived like prisoners, threatened by famine and disease as the ship was
refused permission to land. At the time, Canadian society was characterized by
strong racist tendencies among people determined to preserve a
predominantly white, Anglo-Saxon heritage and who called openly for a
“White Canada Forever.” The incident of the Kamagata Maru marks a dark
chapter in Canada’s immigration history and contributed to the growing
anti-colonial sentiment in India. The film, which required eight years
of research, is solidly documented, packed with archival material, and
presented in an original way that resonates powerfully with
contemporary events.

For more information contact us at noii-van@resist.ca or call 778 885
0040