Author Archives: Todd

Seattle Gung Haggis Fat Choy: Just confirmed musicians Harry Aoki & Max Ngai


Seattle Gung Haggis Fat Choy: 


Just confirmed musicians Harry Aoki & Max Ngai


On Sunday February 18th, Lunar New Year…  the first Seattle Gung Haggis Fat Choy event will happen.

Vancouver musicians Harry Aoki and Max Ngai will be joining me as we
introduce Chinese-Scottish fusion music and poetry to the good people
of Seattle, Washington.

Harry Aoki

Harry Aoki and double bass – photo Deb Martin

Harry
plays harmonica and double bass.  He is an octogenarian who
survived the Japanese Canadian internment, and had left Vancouver in
1942 with his harmonica because it was easier to carry with luggage,
than his violin.  Harry plays classical, jazz and gypsy
swing.  He is an incredible musician and I have had the pleasure
to play with him for a few Gung Haggis Fat Choy events since
2003.  We also played together for the Kogawa House open house
event last September.

The rain can't hold us back

Todd
Wong (accordion), Jessica Cheung (vocals) Mas (guitar) and Harry Aoki
(double bass) performing at the Kogawa House open house event,
September 17, 2007 – photo Deb Martin

Max is an accomplished violinist who specializes in Celtic songs, and
stylings.  He has been a member of the Celtic/South Asian fusion
music trio Vishwa, with Sunny and Mehtu – the brother/sister
combination of tabla drums and sitar.  Vishwa performed for CBC
Radio's Sounds Like Canada radio program in 2003, and many other CBC
and explorASIAN events in Vancouver.  I first wrote about them in
September 2004 for the
CBC Radio's Musical Fusion cabaret
I have always wanted to include Max in a Gung Haggis Fat Choy show, and
it is finally going to happen!  I am excited!

What will we play together?  A little Scottish tune,  a little Irish tune, maybe a Chinese themed jazzy swing tune!



Feb 18th, 2007



Ocean City Restaurant



609 S. Weller St.



International District,



Seattle, Washington





5pm reception.



until 9pm.





Expect a 3 hour feast of Chinese food with Scottish music + Robbie
Burns poetry, singalongs, + some Asian Canadian poetry and…. special
music performances.





featuring:


Northwest Junior Pipeband

Don Scobie – bagpiper
+ Toddish McWong – accordion
Harry Aoki – harmonica + double bass
Max Ngai – violin




Tix: $35





Contact Bill McFadden



206-364-6025





produced by Bill McFadden for Caledonian & St. Andrew's Society of Seattle

Douglas Jung film biography “I AM the Canadian Delegate” airs this Sunday, Feb 18th

Douglas Jung film biography “I AM the Canadian Delegate” airs this Sunday, Feb 18th

 Watch
“I Am the Canadian Delegate” this coming Sunday, February 18th, on
Chinese New Year Day, Film maker Wesley Lowe recently completed the
documentary
biography on Douglas Jung, WWII Veteran and Canada's first Chinese
Member of Parliament.

 
There was a private screening on Sunday, February 5th, for a hundred politicians, funders,
community leaders and veterans group.  Lowe wrote to me and said “In addition to applause, there
was a most unexpected response – tears, not only for the man but for a
community.”

In BC, it will air on Channel M at 9:00 pm.
Nationally, it will air on the Biography Channel at  8pm and 11pm
Eastern Standard time.

I
first met Douglas Jung at an mid 1980's Head Tax meeting at Strathcona
Community Centre.  Then, he seemed tall, and elegant with his
white hair, wearing a turtle neck.  He spoke very well and told
the story about how Chinese-Canadians were pecieved both in Ottawa and
the world.  When he led the Canadian delegation to the United
Nations.  When he approached the desk marked “Canada” – he was
motioned away, and was told that the Chinese desk was over there – this
is for the Canadian delegate.  Jung's reply was “I am the Canadian
delegate.”

Jung led an amazing life.  He signed up as a
soldier when Canada didn't want Chinese-Canadian soldiers.  He was
part of Operation Oblivion – Chinese-Canadians who were trained as
commando troops to go behind enemy lines in Burma and Southeast Asia.

Returning
to Canada, the Chinese Canadian veterans led the fight to gain the
francise for Canadians born of Chinese ancestry, so we could have full
citizenship rights and voting privileges.

Douglas Jung became
the first Chinese-Canadian Member of Parliament in 1957 for Vancouver
Centre. He ran as a Progressive Conservative because the Mackenzie King
Liberals had passed the Exclusion Act and wrote the secret memorandum
discriminating against Chinese, and keeping them out of the Candian
Armed Forces during WW2, until Great Britain and Churchill asked Canada
for soldiers who spoke Chinese.

Jung recieved many honours during his lifetime, including both the Order of BC, and the Order of Canada.

Here are links for Douglas Jung O.C.

Order of BC Biography – Douglas Jung

Douglas Jung – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Burma Star biography: Jung

SFU Gung Haggis Fat Choy Festival – the university student version of mixing Scottish and Chinese traditions in untraditional ways

SFU Gung Haggis Fat Choy Festival

– the university student version of mixing Scottish and Chinese traditions in untraditional ways

Back on Robbie Burns Day, January 25th, Simon Fraser University
Recreation Department celebrated the 2nd annual SFU Gung Haggis Fat
Choy Festival.

It was a crazy day filled with dragon cart racing, human curling, a humourous reading of Burns' immortal
“Address to a Haggis,”bagpipes, lion dances, celtic dances, and an
attempt to set a record for the most people eating haggis at the same
time.

My role was to be the play by play commentator for the dragon boat race finals.


Lion Dance aat SFU Gung Haggis Fat Choy Festival in Convecation Mall.

Here is the official SFU News version from the Media department
SFU News – Gung haggis fat choy! – January 25, 2007

Gung Haggis Fat Choy is the brainchild of Todd Wong, a former SFU student As Wong told BBC Radio Scotland recently, Gung Haggis Fat Choy (Gung Hay Fat



Here is an SFU Co-op student's version of the event that feature's dragon cart racing
Having a Great Gung Haggis Fat Choy Time! :: SFU Co-op's Online
Our Co-op team competed in the Gung Haggis Fat Choy Festival Games, one of SFU's Traditions, celebrating both Robbie Burns Day and Chinese New Years! ..

Here is the SFU student newspaper version from The Peak.
e.Peak (29/1/2007) news: Campus: A marriage of cultureGung Haggis Fat Choy is the brainchild of Todd Wong, a former SFU student. As for the phrase “Gung Haggis Fat Choy,” it is a combination of the Chinese

Gee… it's funny but while I was at SFU as a studenty from 1989 to 1996, I contributed articles to The Peak, I was in the Co-op program, and I was a tourguide for the Media department.

Kyoto Journal: Multicultural Webfinds – a story about Gung Haggis Fat Choy!

Kyoto Journal: Multicultural Webfinds
– a story about Gung Haggis Fat Choy!



Kyoto Journal
is a non-profit quarterly magazine based in Kyoto, it's objective is to
present throught-provoking perspectives from Asia.

Author/moderator Jean Miyake Downey has written: 


GUNG
HAGGIS FAT CHOY: Asian-Celtic Robbie Burns New Year with Toddish McWong
in Vancouver – Turning the “East-West Dichotomy” Inside
Out

http://www.kyotojournal.org/10,000things/098.html

Jean moderates the feature called 10,000 Things which is a Buddhist expression representing the dynamic
interconnection and simultaneous unity and diversity of everything in
the universe.


Somehow she thinks Gung Haggis Fat Choy fits into this
perspective.  Jean and I have exchanged e-mails, and she wrote the
following piece based on our conversations and what she found on www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com

GUNG
HAGGIS FAT CHOY: Asian-Celtic Robbie Burns New Year with Toddish McWong
in Vancouver – Turning the “East-West Dichotomy” Inside
Out


When Asian Eyes are Smiling
Sure, 'tis like the morn in Spring.
In the lilt of Asian laughter
You can hear the angels sing.
When Asian hearts are happy,
All the world seems bright and gay.
And when Asian eyes are smiling,
Sure, they steal your heart away…

This
song, especially when sung by a Chinese- or an Irish- or a Japanese-
or a Scottish- or a Korean- or a First Nations- or a Filipino- or African-
or Arab or Mexican- or Ukrainian-Canadian tenor, or all of the before-mentioned
hyphenalities in one person, always brings tears to my eyes. A twist
on the musical tribute to Ireland, “When Asian Eyes are Smiling”
has become one of Vancouver's anthems hailing the intercultural fusion.

A groundbreaking leader in this global movement, Canadian activist and
bon vivant Todd Wong does more than mix food, song, and fun from Scottish,
Chinese, and many more cultures in his annual celebration of Vancouver's
intercultural fusion — the annual Gung
Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese New Year
, now in its
tenth anniversary. With acute wit and humanity, he challenges essentialist
descriptions of culture, subverts the usual ways of thinking about differences,
and consciously creates a space that embraces everyone:

“Gung Haggis Fat Choy does more than mix East and West. It blends
them together and turns them upside down and shakes them out sideways.
It highlights Canada's Scottish and Chinese heritage and pioneers. It
breaks down barriers and is an impressive forum for the emerging intercultural
Canada where everybody can claim and celebrate Chinese and Scottish
culture and everything in-between.

Expect great cultural fusion music between East and West, as Scots musicians
play Chinese music and Chinese musicians play Scottish music… and
everything in between and beyond!”

Scheduled between the Gregorian calendar New Year's and the Chinese
lunar New Year, and incorporating the birthday of Scottish poet Robert
Burns, this hybrid New Year's celebration is a valentine to Vancouver's
intercultural community, and proudly serves the “world's first
haggis shrimp dumplings, haggis spring rolls, haggis-stuffed tofu???
in addition to the now famous haggis won ton! For all the non-haggis
lovers there will be: lots of vegetarian food…tofu appetizers, deep-fried
tofu, tofu with vegetables, tofu hot pot, tofu with taro, tofu-stuffed
haggis, and tofu pudding…”

The Gung Haggis Fat Choy has morphed into an ever-increasing series
of creative events — a GHFC festival at Simon Fraser University, a
GHFC World Poetry Night, featuring Robbie Burns' fierce poetic manifesto
on human equality, “A Man's a Man For All That,” and a Dream
Dragon Dance.

A fifth-generation descendant of the Reverent Chan Yu Tan, a Christian
minister who emigrated from China to Canada in 1896, Wong celebrates
his extended family's mix of Scottish, French and other European cultures,
and First Nations, as well as Chinese.

A documentary,
A TRIBE OF ONE
chronicled his cousin Chief Rhonda Larabee's
discovery of her previously obscured
First Nation heritage
and subsequent resurrection of the
Qayqayt band, long considered a vanquished tribe, until she insisted
the Canadian government recognize her status as a surviving member.

Ann-Marie Metten describes Wong's road
to intercultural awakening and activism
:

It all started in 1993, when Todd attended Simon
Fraser University, home to a World Champion pipe band. When organizers
asked him to help out with the University’s annual Robbie Burns
celebrations, Todd says: “I was befuddled with the idea of a Chinese
guy (me) wearing a Scottish kilt and having to show my bare knees out
in the snow. But I quickly realized that this was my epiphany—a
true multicultural moment.”

Todd's sharp humor and energetic humanity resounds on his blog,
one of the most insightful sites for diversity commentary on the web,
and a smart, lively mix of news and activism.

A friend of fellow Vancouver resident, Japanese-Canadian novelist and
activist Joy Kogawa, he has kept an up-to-date account of the activist
movement to memorialize the Joy
Kogawa House
, which the Kogawa family lost when they were
incarcerated during the Japanese-Canadian internment. In another entry,
he reports efforts to name a park in Vancouver after globally renowned
environmentalist David Suzuki, who was also forcibly removed from Vancouver,
with his family, to a camp in the central Canadian wilderness. A story
on poet-activist Roy Miki notes that the author was awarded three prestigious
university awards (Gandhi Peace Award, Thakore Visiting Scholar, Sterling
Prize) for his 2004 book REDRESS: INSIDE THE JAPANESE CANADIANS CALL
FOR JUSTICE, and his work in the movement and commitment to the ideals
of truth, justice, human rights, and non-violence.

Paying tribute to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., who saw the connections
between the African-American movement for equal rights with worldwide
anti-colonial resistance, and continuing post-colonial movements, Todd
adds commentary about the continuing struggle by Chinese Canadians and
their supporters to rectify the damage that the Canadian government's
Chinese
Head Tax
perpetrated. The government imposed this intentional
economic barrier on Chinese immigrants to Canada, during the “White
Canada” historical period, that lasted from the mid-nineteenth
to the mid-twentieth century. During the exclusion era, early Chinese
pioneers were not allowed to bring their families, including their wives,
to Canada. As a result, the Chinese Canadian community became a “bachelor
society”. The Head Tax and Exclusion Act resulted in long periods
of separation and many Chinese families did not reunite until years
after their initial marriage, and in some cases they were never reunited.
While their husbands were struggling abroad, many wives in China were
left to raise their children by themselves, experiencing severe economic
hardship and deprivation.

Besides bringing the power of humor, food, music, poetry, storytelling
and dragon boat racing to his part in co-creating an all-embracing intercultural
society, confronting the hard issues of historical racism and contemporary
injustice, and persistent essentialist stereotyping head on, Todd blows
apart all the boring and predictable takes on multiculturalism, hybridity,
and assimilation. He asks fresh questions, reflecting wide inclusionary
views of all cultures, and deep angles into both the past and the future:

“Canada's multiculturalism has become like a display of pretty
little ethnic boxes for display. That was fine for the 1970's and 1980's.
We had to grow into it, out of our colonial past, into post-colonialism.
But what is next? Hapa-ism?

“Canada is a nation of immigrants. Some old – who think they
own the place. Some new – who think they own the place. Some brand
spanking new – who think they own the place. Where are the common threads?

“I went to see the movie “My Big Fat Greek Wedding” with
a friend who was born in Hong Kong, and came to Canada as a teen. She
sees something in the movie that is a typically Greek-Canadian immigrant
thing, such as the Greek father wanting his daughter to NOT date a non-Greek,
or spoil his son, or the Greek aunties trying to set up their un-married
niece… and my friend exclaims 'Ai-yah! Just like Chinese people.'

“The truth is that there is universality amongst all immigrants.
They want to retain their traditional practices and behaviors, as well
as a sense of identity. This is the comfort zone. If they lose it –
what do they become? Non-Greek? Non-Chinese? Non-Scottish? Do they become
American? or Canadian? What is that?

“How do we address an “evolving culture” that adjusts
with each new boat load, plane load, refugee wave?

“What is a traditional Canadian culture? What happens when the
families become culturally blended? What happens when a Chinese-Italian
marries a Persian-Quebecois or a Scottish-English-Welsh-German-Finnish-Japanese?

“And in the end… we eat… we laugh… we sing… we make love…
we make babies… and another generation begins.”

Happy National Flag Day of Canada Feb 15, 2007 + Canadian Club Vancouver's Flag Day / Order of Canada luncheon

Happy National Flag Day of Canada Feb 15, 2007
+ Canadian Club Vancouver's Flag Day / Order of Canada luncheon

Canadian Flag

It is the 42nd birthday of the Candian Maple Leaf flag.  Did you know it was
National Flag Day
?

Yesterday I celebrated by co-chairing the Canadian Club Vancouver's
annual Flag Day / Order of Canada luncheon.  It was the club's
10th annual luncheon which also celebrated Vancouver area's newest
members of the Order of Canada.

New Officers of the Order of Canada that attended the luncheon included Janet Davidson and David Dolphin.  First Nations blessing and drum song was given by elder Bob Baker.  Margaret Gallagher of CBC TV's Living Vancouver show emceeded the event.  Marie Bourgeois introduced keynote speaker Roslyn Kunin.


Conductor
Marisa Gaetanne takes a bow finishing the performance of the Vancouver
Bach Children's Chorus' performance of “This Is My Home.” – photo Todd
Wong


Marie Bourgeois OC, First Nations elder Bob Baker and event co-chair Todd Wong.

· February 14, 2007On Canada and Excellence: The 10th
annual ‘Order of Canada & Flag Day’ luncheon, in which recent Order
of Canada honorees who live in the lower mainland are recognized and a
Canadian-flag decorated cake is served. This signature event, with its
colourful pomp and circumstance, always sells out.

upcoming Canadian Club events are:
· April 2007On Canada and its Linguistic Duality: The 5th annual ‘Déjeuner entièrement en français
in which Canada’s other official language is front and center, for the
enjoyment of our francophone and francophile members and supporters.

· May 2007 Celebrating Youth Achievement:
The presentation ceremony for student-winners of the ‘Canada Soars’
competition, initiated by the Club with support from Weyerhaeuser, and
of the Prix Trudeau, sponsored by the Club, for an outstanding achiever
in the ‘Concours d’art oratoire.’

National Flag of Canada Day February 15

Canadian Flag

Declaration

At the stroke of noon on February 15, 1965, Canada's red and white maple leaf flag was raised for the very first time.

The flag belongs to all Canadians; it is an emblem we all share.

Although
simple in design, Canada's flag well reflects the common values we hold
so dear: freedom, peace, respect, justice and tolerance. Canada's flag
is a symbol that unites Canadians and expresses throughout the world
and always our pride in being Canadian.

The maple leaf flag pays homage to our geography, reflects the grandeur of our history and represents our national identity.

Our
flag thus honours Canadians of all origins who through their courage
and determination, have helped to build and are continuing to build our
great country: a dynamic country that is open to the future.

Therefore,
I, Jean Chrétien, Prime Minister of Canada, declare that February 15
will be celebrated henceforth as National Flag of Canada Day.

Let
us be proud of our flag! Let us recognize how privileged we are to live
in Canada, this magnificent country that encompasses our history, our
hopes, our future.

Jean Chrétien

Prime Minister of Canada February 15, 1996


Flag Day Declaration

Vancouver Asian Film actors Chinese New Year Dinner

Vancouver Asian Film actors Chinese New Year Dinner

Asian actors are everywhere now on
television and in movies.  Vancouver has long since become
“Hollywood North” for television shows such as X-Files, Battlestar
Gallactica, Smallville and many movies of the week.

But there once was a time when Asian actors were very few.  My
grandmother's uncle Luke Chan was one of Hollywood's early Asian
actors.  He was the son of Rev. Chan Yu Tan, who arrived in Canada
in 1896.  Uncle Luke played many characters such as “assistant
manager”in the Shirley Temple Movie Now and Forever (1934), 
“radio operator” in the Clark Gable / Rosalind Russell movie They Met
in Bombay (1941), “Chinese runner” in the Robert Mitchum/ Van Johnson
movie 30 Seconds Over Tokyo (1944), and “Chinese coolie Boatman” in the
Gary Cooper movie, The Story of Dr. Wassell (1944).  But he also
had character roles such as Professor Chan Fu in the Bela Lugosi movie
The Mysterious Wu Sin (1934).

I met some of Vancouver's current Asian actors at a recent Chinese New
Year dinner for Vancouver's Asian film community organized by Greg
Chan.  I was the guest of Ricepaper Magazine publisher Don
Montgomery. I was also very happy to see my friends Larry Wong, Jeff Chiba Stearns and Jen Kato at the table too!


Colin Foo has acted in many local Vancouver commercials and is currently seen on Robson Arms.


Kathy Leung and Grace Chin are the hosts/coordinators of Scripting
Aloud.  Kathy is also a film maker and was the director of the
play Twisting Fortunes. Grace was the play's co-author and lead actor.


Russel Jung plays the “hockey father” in the Tim Horton's commercial. 
I wrote an article last year when the ad first appeared, Tim Horton's, Asian Canadians and hockey
and Russell wrote to me, explaining about his role in the
commercial.  We followed it up with a phone call, so it was great
to finally meet in person.


CBC's television drama Dragon Boys
featured local actor Darryl Quon in the role of Sorrows.  Quon has
appeared in major feature movies as The Chronicles of Riddick, Romeo
Must Die, I Robot, X Men 2 as well as television
shows such as Smallville, Andromeda, and Dark Angel




Charlie Cho and Tetsuro Shigematsu are alumni of the sketch comedy
troupe Hot Sauce Posse (on hiatus), as well as CBC radio
producer/writer/reporter/hosts… well sort of… Tetsuro briefly
hosted “The Roundup” before moving to Los Angeles in 2005. 
Charlie is co-author of the recent play Twisting Fortunes, and was our
wonderful stage manager for Gung Haggis Fat Choy 2007 dinner.