Author Archives: Todd

June 23, Gung Haggis Fat JOY KOGAWA HOUSE fundraiser dinner

Historic Joy Kogawa House has now been purchased by

The Land Conservancy of BC. But the journey to create a national
historic landmark and writing centre for all Canadians is just
beginning.  We now need to raise funds for restoration of the house to
when Joy and her family left it in 1942 when they were interned during
WW2, and to create an endowment for its operation.

        


Please join us for a special fundraiser dinner
 for historic
Joy Kogawa House. 



Gung Haggis

Fat JOY

KOGAWA HOUSE







June 23rd.
Flamingo Chinese Restaurant
3489 Fraser St.
Vancouver, BC

6:00pm  Reception
7:00pm  Dinner starts.


“Fat Choy” means “prosperity” in Chinese language

We say “Fat JOY” means “Big Love”

Join us in “Fat Joy” as we celebrate:


Purchase of Kogawa House by The Land Conservancy (May 31)

Order of BC for Joy Kogawa
(June 22)



The inaugural Gung Haggis Fat Choy
Intercultural Arts Achievement Award presented
to Vancouver Opera for “Naomi's Road”

    


There will be special musical and literary presentations and readings of Joy Kogawa's works, with special guests, including:
Dr. Anton Wagner, filmaker and secretary of the
Save Kogawa House committee.

There will also be raffle prizes, silent auction
and a special
First Nations style blanket toss.

Fundraiser for Kogawa House and
Gung Haggis Fat Choy Kogawa House dragon boat team

Tickets:
$40 Advance  – $50 at the door upon
availability

Children 13 and under $30 Advance, $40 at the door.
Reserve a table for $400 for yourself and friends.
All tickets are reserved seating and assigned in order of purchase


Order your Tickets, or make a donation
604-733-2313

The Land Conservancy of BC,
Vancouver Office
5655 Sperling Ave., Burnaby BC

Media inquiries
call Todd Wong:  604-240-7090

Presented by: Gung Haggis Productions, The Land Conservancy of BC, Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team.

Please see:
Save Kogawa House committee
www.kogawahouse.com
TLC – The Land Conservancy of BC
www.conservancy.bc.ca
Gung Haggis Fat
Choy productions and dragon boat team.

www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com
 

Chinese Head-tax payer, Families to pray Government has courage: Call on Kuan Kung

From Sid Tan....




Media Advisory: For Immediate Release – June 8, 2006

Chinese Head-tax Payer, Families To Pray
Government Has Courage:

Call on Kuan Kung
(patron saint of Chinese Sojourners)
In Quest to Seek Justice

Vancouver BC – Charlie Song Now Quan and representatives of head-tax payer
families and ACCESS Association of Chinese Canadians of Chinese Canadians
for Equality and Solidarity Society will ask Kuan Kung to strengthen and give
courage to Prime Minister Stephen Harper and his government.

Currently, they are considering an apology and appropriate redress package to affected
victims of 62-years of Chinese head tax and exclusion laws. Mr. Quan is one of
less than two dozen surviving Chinese head tax payers. Also in attendance will be
Gim Foon Wong, the 82-year old World War Two airforce veteran who rode his
motorcycle across Canada in a Ride for Redress in 2005.

Where: Quon Lung Sai Tong
164 East Hastings Street, Vancouver
When: 2:00pm, June 9, 2006

Quon Lung Sai Tong an association consisting of members with the Chinese
surname spelt in English as Quon, Quan, Kwan, Kwon and Kuan and other
variations. Lung Sai is the birthplace of Kuan Kung, the legendary warrior
scholar respected for loyalty, trust, righteousness and cooperation. He along
with his two sworn brothers are celebrated heroes in the tale, "Romance of the
Three Kingdoms."

Quoted from http://www.civilization.ca/academ/articles/hoe1_2e.html

“Kuan Kung was well known as a righteous and loyal general. In a battle with
Ts'ao Ts'ao, the leader of an opposing kingdom, he was defeated and arrested by
Ts'ao. Ts'ao, impressed by his righteousness and courage, treated him well and
asked him to serve in his kingdom. But Kuan was loyal to his elder sworn
brother, Liu. He declined the offer and returned to Liu.

Many years later, Kuan was requested by his army adviser Chu Ko Liang to fight
against Ts'ao. Knowing that Ts'ao was once kind to Kuan, Chu asked that Ts'ao's
life should not be spared if Kuan won the battle; otherwise Kuan would be
beheaded instead.

Kuan went to war and defeated Ts'ao. In remembrance of the kindness and comfort
given to him by Ts'ao before, he let Ts'ao go and prepared to be beheaded upon
return. Impressed by his kindness and generosity, Chu spared "his head." It was said
that Chu, being a farsighted adviser, knew by fortune-telling that Ts'ao would not die
in that battle; he sent Kuan there so as to test his righteousness and loyalty
(K. Cheong, interview, 1977).”

ACCESS is a not-for-profit anti-racism, human rights and social justice society
as well as a community television corporation. It is an affiliate of the
Chinese Canadian National Council and a member of the National Anti-Racism
Council of Canada and STATUS Coalition. ACCESS works with other equality
seeking organizations to fight racism and discrimination, to advance the rights
of citizens and migrants living in Canada and to press the federal government
to redress the Chinese Head Tax and Exclusion Acts.

CCNC is a national human rights organization with 27 chapters across Canada.
Established in 1979, it has campaigned since 1984 with other redress-seeking
groups including the BC Coalition of Head Tax Payers, Spouses and
Descendants (BC Coalition), Association of Chinese Canadians for Equality and
Solidarity (ACCESS), Ontario Coalition of Chinese Head Tax Payers and Families
(Ontario Coalition), and Chinese Canadian Redress Alliance (CCRA) for Chinese
head-tax and exclusion redress.

- 30 -

Contact:

Vancouver: Sid Chow Tan - sidchowtan@gmail.com

Toronto: Victor Wong - national@ccnc.ca

Head Tax: What's happening? Open letter to Cabinet from BC Coalition of Head Tax Payers, Spouses & Descendants

Head Tax:  What's happening? 

Open letter to Cabinet from BC Coalition of Head Tax Payers, Spouses & Descendants

The
Conservative government is planning on making an apology on June 22 or
June 23.  We have been hearing that they are planning to make
different compensation amounts for surviving head tax payers, spouses
and sons and daughters – but not for surviving grandchildren if their
parents and grandparents are pre-deceased.  This issue has nothing
to do with who is still surviving… but is a tax refund, that should
go to the estate of whomever paid for it.  If the Conservative
government waits a few more years, not only will all the original head
tax payers and spouses be dead, buy maybe so will all their children
and grandchildren.


BC
Coalition of Head Tax Payers, Spouses & Descendants

 

June 6, 2006 


Dear Honourable
Member:

You will have
received a letter from Susan Eng, Co-Chair of the Ontario Coalition of Head Tax
Payers, Spouses and Descendants.  We
agree that the Government's promised apology for the Chinese Head Tax and the
Chinese Exclusion Act is being welcomed by many including our organization and
its members.  However, we believe,
and the various ministers and PM Harper himself have acknowledged, that the
people directly affected are entitled to appropriate redress.


As Ms Eng
mentioned, when the redress campaign was started in 1984, there were about some
4,000 living head tax payers or widows who registered with head tax redress
organizations across
Canada.
After 20 years of government refusal to act, most have passed away leaving about
20 head tax payers and about 300 widows – all in their 90s, many over 100 years
of age. In BC alone, we have 4 surviving couples, 5 widowed head tax payers and
88 widowed spouses, one of whom is 103 years old today.  One widow, Mrs. Wong died weeks ago and
another has also passed away recently.

 

The sons,
daughters, grand-daughters and grandsons of payers and widows who have passed
away are also asking for redress as a result of the separation and hardship
endured as a direct result of the Head Tax and the Exclusion Act.  In BC, we have collected information
from some 500 families in this category.  

 

We have heard
that cabinet has been asked to consider redress of $20,000 to each head tax
payer but the amount to the spouse and sons and daughters would be substantially
less – maybe even less than $5000.

Setting aside our concerns about the
amount of redress, here are some fundamental principles and concerns you should
be aware of.

1.        
Husbands and wives should not be treated differently – they suffered
together and often the women were left behind in
China to
look after the children in abject poverty. We would argue that the women
suffered even more than the men from the Head Tax and the Exclusion Acts.
Therefore both the payers and widows should receive the same amount.  To leave out or discriminate against the
widows by giving them a lesser amount- would seem to be politically unwise and
magnify the unfairness.


2.        
To leave out the sons, daughters, grandsons and grand-daughters where
their parents died before seeing justice would mean that the government benefits
from its own intransigence.  Indeed,
to leave out other family relations would be unfair given that the numbers are
not so large in total to justify this generational or familial
discrimination.  The government has
allotted much larger amounts to Japanese Redress, residential schools, even as
donations for earthquake relief overseas. 
 


Head tax and
Exclusion Act redress groups across the country have asked to meet with
government officials so that we can work on a resolution to this awful chapter
in our nation’s history to a mutually satisfactory conclusion.  The government has well deserved the
good press it has received for its promises. We strongly support Ms Eng’s
contention that “it would be a shame to ruin it all now by making the wrong
choices based on narrow legal interpretations or misdirected monetary
concerns”.

 

Sincerely,

 

Mary Woo Sims
& Karin Lee on behalf of the

BC Coalition of
Head Tax Payers, Spouses and Descendants

Night of the Sultans at the River Rock Casino

Night of the Sultans

 

Night of the Sultans
At the River Rock Casino until June 11
By Deb Martin – special for GungHaggisFatChoy.com

I must admit that half the reason I went to see this show was to see
the new theatre at the casino. I wanted to see how people with real
money build a performance facility. I was impressed with the design.
The house holds 1022 people, but felt much cozier, and I doubt there is
a bad seat in it. I am always happier when I am close enough to see the
expressions on the performers faces and the details in the costumes.
Part of the seating can also be dropped to create a larger floor area
for cabaret style dinner theatre.

It was apparent from the first number that this was not opening night
for this troupe of dancers. The performance was tight, polished and
very well rehearsed. It just got better after that. In a conversation
with some of the dancers after the show we were able to determine that
the group of about 60 performers had been on the road traveling the
world with the show for two years. All but 10 were Turkish, and a lack
of Turkish on my part put an end to further questions. The other 10
were Russian.

These dancers are eye-candy for both genders, and very skilled in all
genres of dance, from folk to modern to ballet. The level of fitness
required to perform this show is astounding. You can excuse the hokey
story of Pandora and Prometheus that ties the numbers together – it’s
merely marketing to draw an audience. I doubt a show called
“Turkish-Arabic Folk Dancing” would sell. The story also creates
opportunities for solo dancers to be showcased. The real spectacle is
the phenomenal group dances with colorful and creative costumes. The
show-stopper is a number with just the men in a line at the front of
the stage.

The running time was just over an hour, and I gather the show can be
expanded in time and the number of dancers adjusted to suit the stage.
I can compare it to the shows I saw while holidaying in Mexico at a
resort that has evening entertainment. My friend also says it compares
to cruise ship entertainment with a minimum of sets and projections
used as backdrops and scenery. We will overlook the canned music that
was just this side of acceptable for sound quality. This was the one
disappointment of the new theatre.

See
Night of the Sultans official website

Night of the Sultans – review by Alex Varty, Georgia Straight


Show brings a little Vegas to the Euphrates
interview by Alex Varty, Georgia Straight

www.greatcanadiancasinos.com/riverrock/

What can we say about Multiculturalism? That it's time has come? and we are now post-multicultural.

What can we say about Multiculturalism? 

That it's time has come?

and we are now post-multicultural.

Okay…. I was interviewed this morning at CBC Radio studios for a show
that will air this summer.  It will be called “The
Contrarians.”  I can't tell you anything more, other than it will
air on mid-week mornings, somewhere between “The Current” and “Sounds
Like Canada”on CBC Radio One (690 AM in Vancouver).  It's going to
be intellectually explosive and thought provoking and the producers
still want to keep the details secret for now.  They don't have
the official CBC website up for the show yet.

Wait… I just found out more on Tod Maffin's blog site.
http://todmaffin.com/blogs/radio/2006/05/09/cbc-radio-one-announces-new-summer-lineup/

THE CONTRARIANS

Tuesday: 9:30-10:00 am
Wednesday: 7:30-8:00 pm
Host: Jesse Brown
Originating from Toronto
The Contrarians is a radio show about unpopular ideas that just might
be right. Each week, host Jesse Brown invites listeners to step outside
of their intellectual comfort zones and try an unorthodox opinion on
for size. You may be surprised by what starts making sense.

I was invited last week to be interviewed by host Jesse Brown. 
Somehow the producers found my website, and liked my ideas about
interculturalism, since I say we are actually now living in a
post-multicultural world.

We talked a bit about my unique perspective being a 5th generation
Chinese Canadian head tax descendant, as well as the creator of Gung
Haggis Fat Choy – that Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner that I do
every year, and why on earth would a Chinese guy wear a kilt while
paddling on a dragon boat.

But you, dear faithful reader already know all that….  because
you and many others faithfully click on to www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com to
find out the latest in Toddish McWong's intercultural adventures in
Canada.

Just imagine…  Todd Wong, will be espousing his views of the
importance of inter-racial marriage on national radio, while
criticizing popular concepts of “multiculturalism” in Canada. 
Personally, I think it is terrible when government officials pay
lipservice to Canada's or Vancouver's cultural diversity, making
references to it, or trotting out multicultural dance troupes to
perform on display, on cue”

“Gee…
look at the wonderful multicultural world we live in.  But no…
we don't support redress for Chinese Canadian head tax issues, and
no… we won't give money to save Joy Kogawa's childhood home from
destruction.  Those are Asian ethnic issues… not Canadian
issues!”

As you can guess…  I personally don't like being stereotyped or gift wrapped as an example of multicuturalism.

What did I say?  Some surprising things… that you will have to
wait until the show airs.  And being a multi-generational
Canadian, I also had some things to say about new immigrants to Canada
too!

Tune in…. details released as soon as I recieve them.

World Peace Forum features June 24 concert with Buffy Sainte-Marie, K'naan and The Be Good Tanyas

World Peace Forum features June 24 concert 
with Buffy Sainte-Marie,
K'naan and The Be Good Tanyas

World Peace is definitely intercultural. We have to learn to live together
in order for us to have peace. Buffy Sainte-Marie is defintely an intercultural
pioneer. She embraces both her Cree and her Canadian heritage. She is a
song writer famous for her 1960's songs "Universal Soldier," and "Until It's
Time for You to Go." In the 1980's she wrote "Up Where We Belong" for the movie
An Officer and a Gentleman. In the 1990's, she released her most poignant album,
"Coincidences and Likely Stories" featuring contemporary North American Native
songs such as "Starwalker," "The Big Ones Get Away", "Fallen Angels", and
"Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee."

The following message is from World Peace Forum secretary Ellen Woodsworth:


Please go to the World Peace Forum web site www.worldpeaceforum.ca and
join the 40,000 plus people a day to check out all the events that are
coming up over the next few weeks as part of the World Peace Forum.

This Sunday there is the Women's Craft Faire at the Heritage Hall on
Main St.

The Canadian Landmines Foundation and the World Peace Forum present

Two generations of Canadian Voices
Singing for a Peaceful World

Buffy Sainte-Marie K'Naan The Be Good Tanyas


A fundraising concert for the Canadian Landmines Foundation

Saturday, June 24, 8pm
Orpheum Theatre

Tickets at Ticketmaster.ca 604-280-4444

Towards a world without landmines

www.worldpeaceforum.ca I www.canadianlandmines.org

When wars end, the surviving soldiers take their weapons and go home.
Not landmines. They stay in the ground. They don't know the difference
between war and peace. They don't know the difference between the
footsteps of a soldier and the footsteps of a child. They don't wear out.
Today, as a result of the Ottawa Treaty of 1997, three quarters of the
countries of the world have repudiated this weapon. Trade has stopped. 60
million landmines held in stockpile have been destroyed. The Canadian
Landmine Foundation, a partner in the global Adopt-A-Minefield Campaign,
is working against time to remove the existing landmines before they
damage another farmer, mother, child, or peacekeeper and to aid those who
have already been hurt.

Canadian Club “SOARS awards” luncheon: featuring guest speaker Lilo Ljubsic

Canadian Club “SOARS awards” luncheon: featuring guest speaker Lilo Ljubsic

I hope you can join me at this important Canadian Club luncheon. 
I have really enjoyed being a Canadian Club director, and am inspired
by all the good work that the Canadian Club does to promote Canada's
identity and to foster inspiration amongst Canadians and especially
young people.

See below for the invitation to the luncheon.  Cost is $60 for non-members, $48 for members, and $42 for seniors.

The SOARS award acknowledges high achieving students who have written
essays about Canada.  They will be seated at many of the tables
for our guests to talk with.  Our Canadian Club members and
directors will also be distributed throughout the many tables.

Cheers, Todd

We
are very pleased to send you an invitation to celebrate the exemplary
achievements of young people in our community.

Please join the Canadian Club of Vancouver for an event on June
13th which will recognize and reward secondary-school students who have
competed for the ‘Canada Soars’ awards, offered by the Club in
collaboration with forestry company Weyerhaeuser. On the same occasion,
students who have ranked first in the province-wide ‘Concours d’art
oratoire’ in French will also be acknowledged.

The
event will feature not only the presentation of awards but also a brief
inspirational talk by a remarkable woman who has turned physical challenge
into extraordinary athletic triumph. See www.liloinspires.com for more
information on our guest speaker, Lilo Ljubisic.

Please see the form below, and attached, for detailed event
information and registration procedures.

We
look forward to seeing you in mid-June!

 

The
Canadian Club of Vancouver

 

 

Head tax stories in Sing Tao and Ming Pao today… What is going to happen?



Head tax stories in Sing Tao and Ming Pao today...
What is going to happen with redress?


Both Sing Tao and Ming Pao have big stories on head tax today. Thank you to
Gabriel Yiu for translating.

The Ming Pao story is on the expected
apology event expected later this month with some details. Sing Tao's
front-page story is on BC & Ontario's request to meet with Kenney.
Ontario Coalition co-chair Yiu-Wah Lee and BC's Sid Tan were
interviewed in the article. The
story headline is “On how to redress, victim's descendants want to negotiate.”

“There is a worry about the issue becoming sidetracked. Kenney refused
and said it would divide the community”. In response to the requests,
Jason Kenney said he will not arrange the meeting with the redress
organization and he will not negotiate either. He said this matter has
been dragged too long, the Chinese community's view on this is too
diverse and there is no consensus to negotiate.

The Government's consistent position is to consult the Chinese
community comprehensively, finding consensus, and not negotiation.
Kenney said he respect Lee's opinion, but his government would not
repeat the mistake of the previous government, former government
negotiated with NCCC and it divided the Chinese community. Kenney
refused to say when he would inform related organization regarding
government redress package before announcing to the public, because the
government hasn't decide on details the redress arrangement.

Kenney said he doesn't worry their redress package couldn't satisfy
some demand and cause backlash from the Chinese community. He believes
their redress package would receive wide support from the community.

The story is consistent with what we have been hearing.   The government's position is to 
compensate head tax payers and their suriving spouses, if the payer is predeceased.
The BC Coalition, the Ontario Coalition and the Chinese Canadian National Council, plus
other groups across Canada, want to include descendants if the actual head tax payer is
predeceased (died before redress). This makes sense. It is like a tax refund to the person's
estate. If the head tax payer has already died, then compensation goes to their spouse, if
both are predeceased, it goes to their children, if they have died it goes to their grandchildren,.

BC Coalition has also been advancing One payment for One Certificate. This means an equal
payment for each certificate. This is fair. If head tax payers are pre-deceased, their spouses,
children or grandchildren should not have to suffer again. In many cases, the actual head tax
payers and their spouses and their children, worked long hours at low wages in order to pay
the monies initially loaned in order to pay the exhorbitant head tax.

I believe that many of the head tax payers lived shorter harder lives. I know that my
great-grandfather Ernest Lee, died while his youngest child was still a baby, leaving his wife
to care for fourteen children (all born in Canada). My mother's father, Sonny Mah, also
died early, leaving my grandmother (born in Canada), to care for 3 sons and 3 daughters,
the 3 youngest, still in their teens.

Chinese Head Tax information and stories. Where to go? What to find?

Chinese Head Tax information and stories.  Where to go?  What to find?


The Head Tax issue affects many Canadians – not just
Chinese-Canadians.  I am a 5th generation descendant of Rev. Chan
Yu Tan, who came to Canada in 1896.  My father's father, Wong Wah,
came to Canada in 1888 at age 16, and later managed his brother's store
as it became the largest Chinese merchant store in Victoria's Chinatown.

I am also a committee member for the BC Coalition of Head Tax Payers,
Spouses and Descendants.  I first became interested in the issue
back in the mid-1980's when I attended a meeting organized by community
leaders, where I saw Margaret Mitchell, Tommy Tao and Roy Miki
speak.  In April 25th, 2006, I met Parliamentary Secretary Jason
Kenney when he came to Vancouver for a Community meeting, held at the
Richmond Gateway Theatre.

Today, there are many questions about head tax registration and for information.

People can go to the websites listed below for head tax
registration with community groups.  This information will be presented
to the Government to help identify head tax certificate information. 
It is NOT official government registration.


BC Coaltion for Head Tax Payers, Spouses and Descendants.
www.headtaxpayers.ca



Chinese Canadian National Council

http://www.ccnc.ca/sectionEntry.php?entryID=72&type=Event

Ontario Coalition for Head Tax Payers and Families
www.headtaxredress.org

Vancouver Public Library is now inundated with patrons seeking head tax information.  Click on http://www.vpl.ca/ccg/
Head Tax Information – info sheets are available in CHINESE and ENGLISH


For stories on head tax issues collected and/or written by Todd Wong:
http://www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com/blog/ChineseHeadTaxissuesGimWongsRideforRedress


Chinese Canadian Historical Society of BC
www.cchsbc.ca



See the video of the historic November 26th, 2005 protest against
Liberal PM Paul Martin and the Agreement in Principle signing of the
ACE program.


Calling for a Just and Honourable Redress

Vancouver, British Columbia


picture:  PM Paul Martin arrives amidst protestors in Vancouver Chinatown


Film Synopsis

On November 26, 2005, government compliant groups met at the Chinese
Cultural Centre in Vancouver to put forward a “no apology, no compensation”
agreement-in-principle between the National Congress of Chinese Canadians
and the Liberal federal government represented by Multiculturalism Minister
Raymond Chan.

Individuals and community groups, representing head-tax payers, their
spouses, descendants and supporters organized a leafletting and information
line at the conference and subsequent photo opportunity attended by Prime
Minister Paul Martin at the SUCCESS complex in Chinatown.

  

North Shore News: Trevor Lautens writes “Harper blunders with head-tax apology” + response criticisms of Lautens

North Shore News: Trevor Lautens writes “Harper blunders with head-tax apology + response criticisms of Lautens

North Shore writer Trevor Lautens has waded into the head-tax apology
issue, and has decided to be the spokesperson for the “against”
side.  Unfortunately he has also decided to be the spokesperson
for people who also write without exploring all the facts behind the
issue.  Top it off,  Lautens brings his decidedly
pre-multicultural viewpoints argue it was safe to “relocate” the
Japanese Canadians away from the Coast – for their own safety. 
Then, Lauten tells 83 year old head tax descendant Gim Wong, the WW2
veteran who rode his motorcycle from
Victoria to Ottawa last year to ask then PM Paul Martin to make an
apology for head-tax, to “Get over it!”

Lautens admits the head tax was discriminatory racist, racially
motivated and cynical – but he also says it is unecessary, and
illogical, citing that it panders to every other apologist group
wanting an apology and compensation.

Hasn't Lautens read the book “Black like Me?”  I challenge Lautens
to walk in the shoes of Chinese Canadian head tax descendants. 
Prime Minister Stephen Harper and Parliamentary Secretary Jason Kenney
have met with head tax payers, spouse and descendants such as Gim Wong,
Charlie Quan, and many others.

Instead, Lautens drags up all the old arguements such as “They had a
choice.”  Did Irish immigrants, fleeing the potatoe famine, have a
choice to pay a head-tax or not, when they came to Canada?  Did
Eastern European immigrants invited to Canada have a choice to reject
free land in the prairies? 

Canada has been asked by the United Nations in 2004, to make reparations for the Chinese head-tax as New Zealand did in 2004.

Maybe instead of an apology and compensation for head-tax payers,
spouses and descendants, we could instead charge all non-Chinese
immigrants a retroactive $500 with interest.  Gee… a symbolic
apology and compensation now starts to sound less expensive than a head
tax refund with compound accumulated interest. 

Please read Lautens article, and the responses below by my friends Donna Lee, Sid Tan and Daniel Lee

Trevor Lautens  June 2nd

Harper blunders with Head Tax Apology
http://www.nsnews.com/issues06/w052806/061106/opinion/061106op2.html

Grace Wong's letter to NS NEWS  June 18th
Head Tax lessons not learned
http://www.nsnews.com/issues06/w061806/064106/opinion/064106le1.html

Todd Wong's opinion piece June 25

Canada's future includes head tax descendants
http://www.nsnews.com/issues06/w062506/065106/opinion/065106op3.html

e-mail  editor@nsnews.com for comments


Harper blunders with head-tax apology

by Trevor Lautens, North Shore News, June 2, 2006

Prime Minister Stephen Harper's abject apology to Chinese-Canadian
lobbyists for the head tax that ended 77 years ago is an outrage – a
triumph for Canada's ever-swelling victim industry.

It's been a sharply divisive issue among ethnic Chinese themselves, evidently for many an embarrassment, and no wonder.

The basis for it defies logic. The need for it approaches zero. The
politics of it are revolting. The Harper Conservatives are mimicking
the Liberals' long-standing wooing of this or that – every this or
that – ethnic “community,” a term and a concept that this writer finds
deeply offensive, and a practice that discourages street-level unity
and enshrines rubber-chicken-dinner speechifying of a most revolting
nature – “We cherish and applaud the contributions of the Volcanovian
community, its culture and its enterprise, toward the building of our
nation and expanding its prosperity. . . .”

I am a Canadian. I have worked all my life. I have not helped “build”
Canada for a split second. I have “built” my own prosperity, paid my
taxes, fed my family, stayed out of jail, and the hell with the phony,
self-congratulating, platitudinous Canada in whose flag I scorn to wrap
myself.

When it comes to professions of love of country, put me down as a
Cordelia man. And if you haven't read Shakespeare's Lear, give it a
try. (As for immigrants who commit major crimes and who trespass on
Canada's broad and vulnerable hospitality, no process of removing them
to their native soil would be too speedy for me – another flaw in my
character, you may believe. The other side of the bargain, though, is:
Warmly welcome the good immigrant and leave your prejudices in the
ashcan.)

I insert this testament to indicate, in another sickening current
phrase, where I'm coming from. And where I'm coming from has no space
for the Canadian state's abject apologies – even less, financial
compensation – for perceived past wrongdoings.

Canada's head tax was levied from 1885 to 1923. It grew to a huge $500,
reportedly two years' salary at the time. It was flatly imposed to keep
as many Chinese as practicable from moving to Canada.

Was it discriminatory? Unquestionably. Was it racist, certainly
racially motivated? Undeniably. Was it cynical, considering Canada's
admission of Chinese to help build the Canadian Pacific Railway, which
was completed in 1885? Unarguable. So?

The blunt fact is that nobody forced the head-tax payers to come to
Canada, nor the Chinese labourers before them who toiled mightily in
constructing the Canadian Pacific Railway in conditions beyond the evil
dreams of the most anti-union, anti-worker exploitative
capitalist. They didn't come here to help Canada, to build its economy,
and all that fine rhetorical cant. They came here out of self-interest.

Equally clearly, punishing though it was, they accepted the price of
admission – the going price at the time. Nobody twisted their
arms.  Nobody pushed them into boats and shoved them into the sea
Canada-ward. They had a choice.

The above is hardly revelatory logic. In fact, many of today's one
million ethnic Chinese Canadians have ignored or opposed the lobbying
for apology or compensation.

The lobbying was led by the Chinese Canadian National Council, which
claims to represent the 4,000 who paid the head tax and their
survivors. One well-publicized and determined member, Gim Foon Wong,
who is 82, never paid the tax, but his father did – 100 years
ago.  Reportedly, this still pains Wong.

My kind advice: Get over it. Wong hasn't. Most erroneously, he equates
the treatment of the Chinese head-tax payers with that of the ethnic
Japanese in Canada during the Second World War.

There's no comparison. The latter were forcibly removed from the West
Coast and kept in camps inland – which, the older I grow, and the
longer I live here, I think was warranted and perhaps even in the best
interests of those moved, considering the white-hot fury at Japan's
abominable treatment of Western civilians and Allied prisoners during
the war.

The arguable injustice was not the “relocation,” as a couple of fondly
remembered Nisei girlfriends of my youth called it, but the shameful
confiscation of their property. Decades later, Brian Mulroney's
Progressive Conservative government – insisting the matter was unique,
not a precedent – apologized and paid each survivor $19,000. Well
warranted, and little enough.

But that was very much a special case, warmly supported in print by
this citizen. Otherwise, I believe the general principle enunciated by
Pierre Elliott Trudeau holds true: That we, Canada, can only aim to be
just in our own time. Those are striking words. Trudeau steadfastly
wouldn't apologize for past claims of injustice. He rejected all
redress, as did his acolyte Jean Chretien.

How right they were, though I still think the Japanese-Canadian case
was the exception that proves the rule. Then along came something
injected into the redress debate called ACE: “acknowledgement,
commemoration and education” of Canadians, which sounds like political
correctness/brainwashing hatched at the highest level of bureaucracy.

But ACE apparently only made sympathetic noises. It fell short of apologies and compensation. The CCNC demanded both.

Of course Jack Layton of the New Democrats was an instant supporter of
such redress, and Liberal Paul Martin a not-eager-enough one. It
remained for the Conservative Harper to grovel in the 77-year-old dust
of this matter and offer an apology and compensation. Stupid, divisive
– and, emphatically, fresh discrimination, since it
“discriminates”against other groups that demand similar treatment.

Globe and Mail columnist Jeffrey Simpson, rare among journalists, has
counted 13 such groups, and rightly sees Ottawa's surrender to the CCNC
as flipping open Pandora's box. When ACE took shape, Simpson wrote, it
“quickly attracted lineups of groups claiming victimization and
demanding their share of the pot: Ukrainians” – already given some
compensation for their internment in the First World War – “Italians,
Germans, Croatians, Chinese, Sikhs, Jews, blacks. Others are sure to
follow.”

Prophetic. Even before Prime Minister Harper had issued his promise
formal apology to the Chinese-Canadians, about 50 Sikhs recently held
an initial meeting in Richmond to co-ordinate strategy to wring an
apology and possible compensation by Ottawa – the pseudonym for
Canadian taxpayers – for the Komagata Maru incident, 92 years ago.

That incident – the refusal by Canadian authorities to allow the ship
to land and disembark about 375 East Indians (South Asians), mostly
Sikhs from the Punjab – led to violence and death, including the murder
of a Canadian immigration official.

The nascent lobbying promised by the Sikh group could hardly be more
ill-timed. Last year, 20 years after the event and following scores of
millions of dollars in investigation and legal costs, two Sikhs were
acquitted of the terrorist bombing of Air India Flight 182 that killed
329 passengers and crew.

The astonishment, bitterness and widespread skepticism regarding the verdict are still almost tangible.

The head-tax payers, the Japanese-Canadians of the 1940s, and the
Komagata Maru passengers had vastly different experiences and grounds
for complaint. But they have something in common – Canada's
ever-expanding guilt tent for its supposed past injustices (surely gay
and feminist groups must some day aggressively crowd in).

Stephen Harper has made a huge and costly mistake – an ironic
background to those stilted after-dinner speeches apotheosizing “the
Canadian mosaic,” Canada's “community of communities” (copyright Joe
Clark), and all that high-flown stuff. Pierre Trudeau had it right.

lautens@axion.net

published on 06/02/2006


BC Coalition with head tax survivors, spouses and descendants, Gim Wong in Ottawa with his motorcycle and Jack Layton.

Donna Lee Response to:
“Harper blunders with Head-Tax Apology”

To the Editor,

Well it's unfortunate that Trevor Lautens has decided to fill the
void  left by Doug Collins for the North Shore News.  What
Mr. Lautens fails to understand, even with his veiled attempts to do
so, is that Canada's foundation is built on targeting communities of
colour in order to try to construct a “white Canada”.  Popular
parlour songs at this time included “White Canada Forever” and John A.
Macdonald's admission that he wanted to make Canada a “white man's
country”.  First Nations communities were also devastated by these
policies and attitudes.

The logical response to a crime committed is to have a
consequence.  The rightful consequence is to attend to what is
just.  As Martin Luther King Jr. once said, “Injustice anywhere is
a threat to justice everywhere.”

Mr. Lautens suggests that 82 year old Gim Foon Wong should just, “Get
over it.”  It is incomprehensible how someone who has not lived
the traumatic experience of familes separated, unabashed racism and
institutionalized discrimination such as that of the Chinese Head Tax
and Exclusion Act thinks he is even entitled to speak on this issue
never mind tell a survivor such nonsense.

I think Mr. Lautens should really get over his own guilt.  Canada
profited from this racist immigration policy.  As such, each head
tax certificate should be rightfully compensated.

I'll spell it out for you, Mr. Lautens.  While you believe that no
one was forced to come to Canada, you fail (again) to understand that
economics often force people to take huge and dangerous journeys across
an ocean in order to feed their families.  You may have heard of
the Irish Potato Famine as an example of economics which drive people
out of their homeland and invariably force them to find other means to
survive.  Such is the situation for people from India, Japan,
China and many other places who took a huge chance on Canada.

There are too many knee-jerk reaction-from-the-establishment-types
comments that he has made to even try to wrap my head around.  He
suggests Japanese-Canadian internment was “warranted” and possibly “in
the best interests” of the people who suffered.  I guess with his
logic it would be best to lock away all children so that pedophiles
won't get to them, right Mr. Lautens?  Incomprehensible.  The
criminals are the ones who need to be brought to justice, not the
innocent.

The Chinese Head Tax Redress movement has been an amazing experience to
be part of and I feel honoured to participate in history in the
making.  As a descendant of a head tax payer, and one who never
met my grandmother because she was separated from my grandfather due to
the Exclusion Act, I hope that the government follows through on its
desire to bring about justice.

Donna Lee
Vancouver, BC

Centrepoint PO 19639
Vancouver, BC
V5T 4E7



BC Coalition with head tax redress community – photo Gabriel Yiu, Elwin Xie with sign – photo Todd Wong


Daniel Lee response
Re: Harper blunders with head-tax apology



Mr. Lautens,
I grew up Canadian and work just like you do. I pay my taxes, am 
law-abiding and patriotic too. Yes, I love this country but recently I
came to understand more and more about my roots and this has lead to
shaking my whole take on moral rights and being a Canadian. I see that
were on the same page when it comes to the realization that the Chinese
Head Tax was ultimately racist and discriminatory, but unfortunately
your anger has taken you off on another tangent on some aspects. It
seems that your head is still hard-wired to the idyllic lifestyle you
currently lead.

As my wife reminds me, there are always two sides to a story. Since you
didn't take the time to think about putting yourself into a Head Tax
payers shoes I will do it for you.

First of all, yes, they had a choice of coming here or staying home but
I would seriously doubt that you, sir, would rather stay in a country
where the economy was practically non-existent, and face a good chance
of starving to death. Mr. Lautens, how many times have you changed jobs
in your lifetime? No doubt you've changed jobs because of better
opportunity. Isn’t it great to have that option and to enjoy that
hard-earned salary?

The head tax was charged only against the Chinese and no other race.
Certainly not fair at all. Its a fact that the tax was worth 2
Vancouver city lots in those days. Fast-forward to todays real estate
market and a typical city lot is roughly around half a million dollars.

So, Mr. Lautens, here is a scenario: you have a wife and child and your
youngest child is not yet in your teens. Your family is in dire straits
financially. You're too old to do anything about it and women even less
opportunity. As head of the family you've decided that you must send
your son overseas for better prospects in order for the family to
survive.  

You notice too that other families in your village are making the same
choices as well and a few of them took more drastic measures by selling
their sons.  At this point you have no choice and you go along
with your fathers wishes.

Oh yes, don't forget the half a million-dollar entry fee! Your finances
are already low and so you go around asking your relatives if you could
borrow money. Finally, after a long while you're able to come up with
the half a million dollar entry fee and you send your son off. Your son
starts to dutifully send back money to help the family and saves just
barely enough for his own survival. This scenario typical of what the
head taxpayers families had to go through.

Some head taxpayers were fortunate enough to travel back to their 
homeland, get married and have children. Unfortunately the Chinese
Immigration Act came into effect on July 1, 1923 and men were not
allowed to bring their wives and children over to Canada at all until
after 1947. I've met people who never met their father at all until 20
years later. No doubt this means that there are a lot of dysfunctional
Chinese families out there including mine. After living many years of
separation, wives were finally reunited to live with their husband but
a total stranger to the children.

Data collected in 1992 by the Chinese Canadian National Council has
shown that the men who entered Canada to work ranged in age from 10
years of age up to their early 20s.  By the way, if you look at
the Fort Steele museum website you'll see the head tax certificate of a
2 year old baby girl who was charged the $500 head tax.

As for the head tax money, the BC Coalition of Head Tax Payers, Spouses
and Descendants ask that the Canadian government give back the tax. The
BC Coalition also asks the government pay additional compensation for
loss of dignity, pain and suffering imposed by the law at that time.
Lets not forget that the rest of the Canadian population knew that the
Chinese weren't welcomed in Canada because of the Immigration Act. .
This gave all citizens the right to discriminate against them and many
did.

So Mr. Lautens, there you have it. It is not a money grab as you think
it to be but a reimbursement. The opportunity to finally remove the
black cloud of head tax history hanging over the Chinese Canadian
community is not only at hand also the opportunity for the Chinese
Canadian community to finally feel welcomed in Canada. Are you going to
welcome us, Mr.
Lautens?

Daniel Lee


BC Coaltion with head tax payers, spouses and descendants, Sid Tan speaking at community meeting – photo Gabriel Yiu, Todd Wong

Sid Tan Response:
Re: Harper blunders with head-tax apology
by Trevor Lautens, North Shore News, June 2, 2006

Dear Editor.

I am a grandson of head-tax payer Chow Gim (Norman) Tan and wife Wong
Nooy, whowere impoverished and later separated for a quarter of a
century by Canadian laws. Prime Minister Stephen Harper is simply
trying to work towards a majority government. Chinese Canadians can
vote now, you see. Informed political participation and the exercise of
rights in this big beautiful land we call Canada is a worthy pursuit.
Oh, did I tell you these rights were denied to our community heroes and
heroines for 62-years by a colonialist white supremacist government?

It's good Trevor Lautens raised Chinese head-tax/exclusion for debate,
However, at the issue is justice and honour for surviving head-tax
payers and their spouses in their time. Mr. Lautens is ill-informed on
the details and self-serving to frame the issue as choice. The issue is
racism and injustice. It's about an unjust tax and family separation
brought on by a government unable to
fathom the Chinese would get votes and rights in Canada some day. As
for the details, I'd be prepared to debate Mr. Lautens at a time and
place convenient to both of us. We are, afterall, a species of ideas
and language.

What Does Redress Mean To ACCESS?

Redress is organic grassroots self-governed movement. Justice and
honour with respect and dignity for our Chinese adventurers and
pioneers. Redress takes to the streets when compliant groups do
backroom deals with the government, organises to protest a prime
ministerial visit and lets our seniors know we will never forget their
stories and struggles. Solidarity across the nation, one voice loud and
clear, one heart pounding never quit, never quit, never quit.

Redress is the privilege of meeting Quon Chang Shee Der, Charlie Quan,
Joe Chow, Gim Wong and Sui Chun Suen and be inspired by our Gold
Mountain heroes and heroines. Our story our way. No government,
organisation and person in Canada can profit from racism and keep the
proceeds.

ACCESS Association of Chinese Canadians for Equality and Solidarity
Society, a member of the Chinese Canadian National Council, initiated
the current B. C. Coalition of Head Tax Payers, Spouses and Descendants
in November, 2005. Our members, some involved in the movement for over
twenty years, have been active with both the head-tax files and
database project. The past year, ACCESS through the Saltwater City
Television Collective produced and broadcast four half hour community
television programs on our movement to 660,000 cable subscribers in
Greater Vancouver and Fraser Valley.

ACCESS is the successor group to the Vancouver Association of Chinese
Canadians which help organise the original B. C. Coalition of Head Tax
Payers, Spouses and Descendants. We continue to be the constituted
group with responsibility for over 2,000 head-tax claimant files
collected in Saltwater City (Vancouver, BC).

Yours sincerely,

Sid Chow Tan, president
ACCESS Association of Chinese
Canadians for Equality and Solidarity Society

4040 Inverness Street
Vancouver, BC   V5V 4W5