Kalamalka Lake Provincial Park on the right… Martin's Nest point on the left – photo Todd Wong
Author Archives: Todd
Edmonton Journal (Apr 18): “Chinese urged not to gouge gov't on head tax
This
is an interesting article. The Edmonton Journal interviews an academic
originally born in China, and who only came to Canada in 1987.
Wenran Jiang is an expert in Chinese issues – not Canadian
issues. Chinese head tax is a CANADIAN issue. The people
who paid the head tax and their descendants are CANADIANS of Chinese
ancestry. The Coalitions of head tax payers, spouses and
descendants recognize the importance of not appearing “Greedy” to the
general Canadian population. We have already acknowledged we are
asking for a symbolic redress – one that matches and recognizes the $23
Million that was paid in racist head tax.
Chinese urged
not to gouge gov't on head tax
Compensation
should be symbolic, head of U of A China Institute says
Wenran Jiang, director of the University of Alberta's China Institute, says it's
right that the federal government offer an apology and compensation for the
Chinese Head Tax.
Photograph by : Ed Kaiser, The
Journal
Duncan
Thorne, The Edmonton
Journal
Published: Tuesday, April 18, 2006
EDMONTON – Families who paid the infamous
Chinese Head Tax should avoid making excessive compensation demands, says the
director of the University
of Alberta's China
Institute.
“It
could look very bad,” Wenran Jiang says.
The
compensation issue is gaining attention since the federal government's
throne-speech commitment “to offer an apology” for the hefty tax on
Chinese immigrants between 1885 and 1923.
Jason
Kenney, Prime Minister Stephen Harper's parliamentary secretary for
multiculturalism, will be in Edmonton
April 22 to discuss redress with members of the local Chinese community.
As
part of the apology, there's broad agreement in the community that the
government should pay back part of the tax.
Jiang,
an international affairs adviser at the U of A who came to Canada from China in 1987, agrees there should
be compensation. He simply urges people not to get greedy.
“I
could understand a lot of people would want to take advantage of this to get a
lot of money from the federal government,” he says in an interview.
“That
would be a wrong approach. They look at the trees without looking at the
forest.”
He
says they should see compensation as a symbolic recognition of the injustice
their families suffered, not as a way to make a quick buck.
Jiang
says it's right that the government accompany the promised apology with
compensation, as material recognition of the wrong. He just cautions against
going for sizable amounts, and particularly against trying to recover all they
paid, adjusted for inflation.
“That
would get very messy,” he says.
The
government imposed the head tax after Chinese workers in Canada finished
building the Canadian Pacific Railway. The tax started at $50 a head and rose
to $500 by 1903, making it onerous for the men already in Canada to bring
their wives and children here.
When
it hit $500 a head, the tax is said to have equalled
two years' wages for a Chinese labourer. There was no
similar tax on people from other countries.
The
government replaced the head tax in 1923 with an almost total ban on further
Chinese migrants. It wasn't until 1947 that it ended the discrimination.
For
years the Chinese community has fought for redress.
Jiang
says Harper's commitment to an apology is a signal that Chinese are becoming
politically important. He says they account for one in 30 Canadians and, after
decades of not being politically involved, are increasingly seeking public
office.
The
Chinese Canadian National Council is one of the main groups lobbying for
redress, including compensation. Its founding president, Dr. Joseph Wong,
figures the cost of payments to the surviving couples who paid the head tax can
be reasonable.
“We
are talking less than 300 old folks, in their 90s and 100s, who suffered so
much,” Wong says.
His
council has proposed payments in the range of $15,000 to $30,000. If he's right
about the number of survivors, the total compensation for them tops out at
about $9 million.
Contrary
to a report last week from Toronto,
the government has offered him no assurance that it will pay compensation, Wong
says. But he says it has talked of “apology and appropriate redress,”
which he takes to include compensation.
His council estimates more than 15,000 Chinese came to Canada during
construction of the Canadian Pacific. Wong says 4,000 died on construction
through the Rockies.
Wong
wants the government to apologize and compensate those who paid the tax by July
1.
“Many
of these old folks are dying very fast, in front of our eyes,” Wong said.
Four
Edmonton-area people who paid the tax have died since registering with the
local Chinese Head Tax and Redress Committee, says committee spokesman Kenda
Gee. He says the four, the only ones to register with the committee, all died
within the last two years.
Wong
proposes a second stage of redress, to establish an education and commemoration
fund and to compensate the children of people who paid the head tax. He says
the children are also victims because many lived in poverty during the years
their parents paid off loans that covered the tax.
He
accepts that negotiating compensation for the children will take a long time.
Wong
acknowledges that other groups, such as Ukrainians who were rounded up and
imprisoned by the thousands in the First World War, may also have a case for
compensation.
“But
different cases really deserve consideration on their own merits,” he
says. “Case by case.”
Dennis
McKerlie, a University of Calgary
expert on fairness, says there's a risk of overdoing redress for past wrongs.
As someone of Scottish descent, he knows there were “questionable
things” done to Scottish immigrants.
“I
wouldn't myself think any compensation was either desirable or required in that
case,” McKerlie says.
There
should only be redress when the government does something that causes
significant hurt as a result of “in-your-face discrimination.”
Chinese Canadians have good grounds for compensation because the government
imposed blatantly discriminatory laws on them, with no apparent justification,
he says.
McKerlie rejects the view that government
should avoid apologizing for wrongs done by previous generations.
“In
that era (of the head tax) people didn't necessarily think that it was wrong to
engage in explicit racial discrimination, but if you think about both Canada and the United States now, our governments
and our courts are very cautious about race-based policy.”
Canadians
today are entitled to think their views are more reasonable than our ancestors'
views were, he says. “We're the ones who have to make the decision about
the compensation.”
Today's
society should also be willing to accept that it may make moral choices that one
day will be seen as mistakes, McKerlie says.
“You
might well hope that if we do things in good faith that are actually horribly
wrong, maybe some time in the future someone will do what they can do to repair
the damage that we did.”
dthorne@thejournal.canwest.com
PUBLIC
MEETINGS
Federal
consultations over redress for the Chinese Head Tax take place across Canada between
Wednesday and April 30. The public meeting in Edmonton
is April 22 at the Royal
Alberta Museum,
from 1:30 to 4 p.m.
© The Edmonton Journal 2006
Today's Singtao article is on page A4
Heading: Old and new needs to reach a common ground
(reporter: not stated)
Subheading: Heritage minister will be in Richmond on Friday for
community consultations. Within the Chinese community, everybody should
reach an agreement and shouldn't fight each other in order to maximize the win
for the community. David Choi reported
said: Li Bao On is in the process of contacting
CCNC hoping that they (unspecified) can meet within a couple days (before
Friday) in order to express opinion to the government.
NCCC plans to bus participants to the Richmond meeting. They expect some 10s
of people (from different backgrounds, including head tax descendants, regular
citizens and also retired Chinese-Canadian veterans) to speak. They will
be seeking an apology, using lawsuit as a “shield” to obtain ACE
funding (??!!!!!) . Lum
Chong Qiang (pacific region
chair of NCCC) said: a second apology is directed for Exclusion Act
(1923-1947). This is discrimination is deeper than the head tax because
all Chinese were blocked from entry. He noted that apology and
compensation, these two terms/demands, are common to both NCCC and CCNC.
As for the ACE funding, because Canada needs to commemorate a number of (national building) contributions by the Chinese
Canadian (pioneers) who were miners and railroad workers. Mention of
representation by Italians and Ukrainian communities.
They claim to have a legal opinion indicating that the AIP
has validity and is legally binding and NCCC will not be afraid to seek legal
recourse in the courts.
David Choi (NCCC board member –
also Liberal supporter) suggested two major head tax redress organizations to
reach a consensus and not give the government an excuse to stall on
action. It is a test for the Chinese community to use democratic process
to solve problems with wisdom, without the help of government. He felt
everybody can reach a consensus and support each other and also fight for what
they need. If anyone insists on their own opinion and suppress
others, this is not a democratic action. (does
he mean debate?)
CCNC's Sid Tan said an apology and compensation is what CCNC has been
fighting for the past twenty years. It appears to be a common goal by all
groups now. But, he questioned NCCC grounds as being unclear. For
the past three months, NCCC has not been supporting these two points. Quoted “I don't agree with the consenus,
but I won't block”. For many years, NCCC has not been
supportive of CCNC. CCNC will be having a meeting at Success on Wednesday
and NCCC can send reps there.
Th
Halifax Daily News (Apr 19): Sorry's Not enough – Compensation only way to truly right Chinese head-tax wrong, descendant says
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Wednesday, |
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Sorry's not enough
Compensation only way to truly right Chinese head-tax wrong,
descendant says
By Lindsay Jones
The Daily News
HALIFAX – Mary Mohammed wants more than just an apology for a historic
wrong. Her parents were forced to pay an expensive and racist head tax when
they immigrated to Canada.
The 75-year-old will share her feelings with a federal government official
tonight at the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia.
“Apology is a start, but I feel it goes hand in hand (with
compensation),” said the grandmother of two. “When we finally hear
and see a cheque in hand, I will say we are equal
race with any other race. Not until then.”
Jason Kenney, parliamentary secretary for Multiculturalism, will be in Halifax today to listen
to Canadian Chinese people's views on how the government should apologize for
the head tax.
Earlier this month, Prime Minister Stephen Harper said the government would
offer an apology for the head tax, which was imposed on Chinese immigrants to Canada between
1885 and 1923.
The head tax was $50, but later increased to $100 and then $500 – equivalent to
two years' wages.
Immigrants continued to come despite the tax, with the government collecting
$23 million.
Mohammed's parents each paid $100 to start a life in Nova Scotia 106 years ago. They had seven
children, three of whom remain in the Atlantic
provinces.
Mohammed's parents passed away about 40 years ago.
She's written letters to the government on behalf of her family for more than
two decades. She says an apology – “for all the discrimination we went
through” – is long overdue.
Mohammed isn't suggesting a set amount of financial compensation.
“There are not that many head-tax payers (and their widows) left,”
she says. “You can count them on your fingers. So really, that's not real
compensation.
“If they're going to do it, it has to be (for) the descendants.”
While the self-described Bluenoser was born here, she
says she never felt equal.
“We were always targeted with prejudice. Because the government didn't
want us, the general public view of us was we were outsiders.”
While there's less prejudice now, Mohammed said it's time to set the record
straight.
“It's never too late. It's never too late to right the wrong.”
Other meetings are scheduled throughout the country this month. They follow
earlier discussions with Chinese-Canadian organizations last month.
Robert Paterson, communications director for Canadian Heritage and Status of
Women, said what's said at the meetings will impact how the government awards
compensation.
Paterson said,
“this is a real chance to open it up and hear
what people think.”
http://www.hfxnews.ca/index.cfm?sid=5280&sc=2
The Chronicle Herald (Apr 20): Hallifax Chinese say Head Tax a Major Hardship
From http://thechronicleherald.ca/Metro/498024.html
Head tax a major hardship
Ottawa told about injustices imposed on Chinese immigrants
By KRISTEN LIPSCOMBE Staff Reporter
David
Cheung says because of the head tax and Exclusion Act once imposed on
Chinese immigrants, many families have suffered both financially from
the expensive fee for moving to Canada and emotionally from being
separated from their loved ones.
Not to mention the blatant racial discrimination.
“At
that time it cost so much, eh? More than a year’s salary,” Mr. Cheung,
a Bedford resident, said Wednesday of the $500 head tax his sister’s
father-in-law had to dole out when he came here in 1918. “When you have
to work to pay the money back, you are heavily in debt. And then you
try to send some money back home and it’s really hard.”
Mr. Cheung was one of many Nova Scotian
Chinese who shared their stories and voiced their opinions Wednesday
night at a meeting hosted by Jason Kenney, parliamentary secretary to
the prime minister, at the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia in Halifax. More
than 50 people attended the meeting, which was closed to media, while more phoned in from St. John’s, Charlottetown and Fredericton.
Federal officials are travelling
across the country to consult with Chinese Canadians on what sort of
compensation should be made to those affected by the racist laws. In
the throne speech this month, Prime Minister Stephen Harper promised an
official apology for the head tax, which was forced upon immigrants
from 1885 to 1923. The Exclusion Act was in effect from 1923 to 1947.
Mr.
Cheung said his relatives wanted to sponsor family members still in
China, but the Exclusion Act prevented them from moving to Canada until
the 1950s. His sister’s father-in-law has since died, without having
received an apology or any sort of compensation, he said.
“You always feel so much injustice over the years,” Mr. Cheung said.
He
said financial compensation should go directly to the families
affected. “Hopefully the government will be able to do something soon.”
Mr.
Kenney said Wednesday night’s meeting was “the first part of a national
grassroots consultation with Chinese Canadians to figure out the best
way to right the historical wrong of the racist head tax and Chinese
Exclusion Act.”
He
said the session was about 2½ hours of many “heart-wrenching stories,”
including some from children of people who paid the taxes, which
started at $50 but eventually grew to $500. “Their families were split
up, a lot of them couldn’t come here from China (or) their parents were
separated.
“There
were a lot of very tragic, personal stories we heard about and some
constructive ideas about how we can create educational programs to
recognize this period in our history and make sure it never happens
again.”
“The big message was, move quickly, let’s not waste any more time,” he said.
The
apology likely will be made this spring while compensation will come as
soon as possible, Mr. Kenney said. He said the federal government also
plans a national reconciliation event in Ottawa on July 1, which is the
day the Exclusion Act came into effect and is known within the Chinese community as “humiliation day.”
“We want to put an end to that,” he said.
May Lui, chairwoman of the Halifax Chinese Redress Committee, said the government’s response to the concerns of Chinese Canadians has been “really positive.”
She
said the meeting allowed people to speak their minds. “What happened to
you as a child, what happened to your parents, you have a chance to air
it. That’s a good thing.”
Canadian Press (Apr 18):Federal ministers cross the country, consult head-tax victims about redress
Canadian Press (Apr 18):Federal ministers cross the country, consult head-tax victims about redress
Canadian Press' Amy Carmichael writes a story about the coming community conusutations between the Conservative government and the Chinese Canadian communities. Heritage Minister Bev Oda, and parliamentary Secretary for multiculturalism Jason Kenney are travelling to Halifax, Montreal, Toronto and Vancouver. Sid Tan, Victor Wong and Yew Lee are interviewed.
Amy Carmichael once wrote a pretty good story about me and Gung Haggis Fat Choy Cultures collide: Chinese don kilts, Scots try haggis wonton
April 18, 2006
Federal ministers
cross the country, consult head-tax victims about redress
By AMY CARMICHAEL
VANCOUVER (CP) – How does a
government apologize for the racism of charging one ethnic group a
discriminatory tariff to come to Canada?
How does a government compensate
men who had to leave school early to pay off debts incurred by paying the
tariff, or apologize to families thrown into years of debt because of it? The
heritage minister will be asking Chinese Canadians these questions in a series
of meetings across the country this week aimed at devising a fair redress
package.
The exercise is stirring up
painful memories for many head-tax victims.
Yew Lee, a descendant of two generations
of head-tax payers, says it brings him back to a time when some white Canadians
thought it was OK to walk into a Chinese restaurant, order a steak dinner, savour it and then butt their cigarette out in the scraps.
“They'd say, there's a
cigarette in my food, I'm not paying,” says Lee who lives in Chelsea, Que.
“It was OK because this was
a society where the government sanctioned discrimination against Chinese
people. It allows people to treat parts of our society like sub human.”
Yew's 94-year-old mother lives in
Ottawa. She's
immobile and won't be able to get to any consultation with government ministers
she's too cynical to have faith in anyway.
She sits with memories of being
kept out of Canada
by a law that barred Chinese people from immigrating at all.
Her husband paid the head tax and
wasn't allowed to bring Yew, his mother and three brothers over and the family
was separated for 14 years.
“How that affected me, I'm
still trying to figure that out,” says Yew.
The tax has been acknowledged as
a dark period in Canadian history for its blatant racism.
Chinese immigration to Canada began around 1858 in response to the Gold
Rush in British Columbia.
Immigrants also were brought in from China to help build the Canadian
Pacific Railway.
But the federal government
subsequently tried to restrict Chinese immigration, passing legislation that
initially imposed a $50 tax on immigrants. That later rose to
$500.
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 altogether until it was repealed in 1947.
Victor Wong, another descendent
who lives in Toronto,
said you just can't compensate people for what happened.
He wants the government to act by
July 1 and provide a redress package, money and an apology to victims and their
spouses while they are still alive.
Wong said descendants can be
addressed later.
Victims have suggested the
government could apologize to the wider Chinese Canadian community by creating
a day to remember that would be marked each year.
Others are still just amazed that
the government wants to talk about it at all.
“It's pretty unprecedented.
No government has really done that before,” says Sid Tan, a Vancouver resident and
volunteer with Association of Chinese Canadians for Equality and Solidarity.
“I wish my grandma was alive
to see this. Wow.”
A senior government official in
the heritage minister's office said Tuesday the government wants to listen.
Heritage Minister Bev Oda and Jason Kenney, parliamentary secretary for
multiculturalism, will be attending meetings this week in Halifax,
Montreal, Toronto
and Vancouver
to consult with Chinese Canadians touched by the head tax.
The official, speaking on
background, said the government sees the tour as one for consultation, not
negotiation.
The government wants to know what
Chinese Canadians think is fair redress, so it first must hear how they were
affected, said the official.
Tan's story is similar to Yew's.
His grandfather paid the head
tax. His grandmother was kept out by the Exclusion Act created in 1923. The two
were apart for 25 years.
Tan remembers his grandmother was
fearful when her grandson took up the cause of getting redress for head-tax
payers 20 years ago.
“She told me not to. She
said 'What if the police come, what if the green coats (immigration officials
wore green then) in the middle of the night, what if they tie you up, throw you
in the river. No, no, where would we be, these things,
never mind.'
“I knew she was so
intimidated by the forces of government. She would be gratified to hear the
government talking about these things now.”
Tan said he's feeling really good
about how the stories are coming out. Communities are talking and the
government is listening.
“Our Chinese forbearers not
only had to overcome the geography and environment and the climate, we had to
overcome the people. And I think we have. Now, I think Chinese people are
accepted as part of the Canadian mosaic,” Tan says.
Few people who actually paid the
head tax in the early 1900s are still alive. Four elderly men live in Vancouver.
Tan is helping to organize
carpools for head-tax payers, their families and widows to get them out to the
meeting with the federal ministers in suburban Richmond, B.C.
He says some of them don't want
anything from the government other than acknowledgment of their story.
Tan will ask the government to
return the $23 million it collected in head-tax.
http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/Canada/2006/04/18/pf-1539339.html
Hamilton Spectator (Apr 17): We enticed the Chinese to build our CPR, then scorned them
Hamilton Spectator (Apr 17): We enticed the Chinese to build our CPR, then scorned them
The Hamilton Spectator has published an interesting story that includes references to the Chinese Canadians attempts for redress through the Canadian legal system and the United Nations. I have included references below to demonstrate that in 2004, the United Nations did ask Canada to make reparations for the Head Tax, as well New Zealand made reparations in 2002.
We
enticed the Chinese to build our CPR, then scorned them
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By Evelyn Myrie
The Hamilton
Spectator (Apr 17, 2006)
In its first Speech
from the Throne, the new Conservative government repeated Stephen Harper's
election promise to issue an apology for the notorious 19th-century head tax
imposed on Chinese immigrants.
The promise of an
apology is welcome news to the many Chinese-Canadians and their supporters who
have lobbied hard for many years to reach this goal. They have successfully
pushed this important historical wrong onto the front burner of the political
agenda.
Canada is doing the right thing by issuing an
apology.
In the 1870s and
'80s, about 15,000 Chinese were enticed to Canada to help build the Canadian
Pacific railway. Hundreds, if not thousands, died carving out the path for the
railroad through the Rocky Mountains.
Once their job was
done, Canada
wanted them to go home. Failing that, they did not want friends or family
joining them in Canada.
The Chinese
Immigration Act of 1885 required all Chinese entering Canada to pay a
$50 fee. When that did not prove sufficient discouragement, the government
passed the Chinese Immigrant Acts of 1900 and 1903 which raised the levies to
$100 and $500 respectively. Later, the Chinese Immigrant Act of 1923 excluded
Chinese immigration altogether.
By imposing this
racist levy on Chinese (and only Chinese) immigrants, Canada denied the railway workers the right to have their families join them in Canada. This
head tax was equivalent to two years' salary for a Chinese worker.
The costly and
discriminatory head tax made it financially difficult, most often impossible,
for families to reunite in Canada,
and destroyed many families in the process.
Chinese-Canadians
pointed to Ottawa's
1988 apology and compensation to Japanese-Canadians for interning them and
confiscating their property during the Second World War.
Since those actions
had been based on the basis of race, Canada's Chinese community felt the
cases were similar and deserved similar treatment.
In 1994,
Chinese-Canadians sought redress from Ottawa,
but were rebuffed by then multicultural Minister Sheila Finestone
who reportedly told the group that Canada “cannot rewrite
history.”
Despite their
disappointment, activists journeyed on. In 2001, they took their case to the
United Nations World Conference on Racism, Xenophobia and Other Related
Intolerances in South Africa.
Again they asked Canada
for an apology and got none.
Another blow to
their case came in 2002 when a Ontario Superior Court
judge struck down a class-action lawsuit on behalf of surviving immigrants,
ruling that modern remedies can't be applied to historical laws.
The group, made up
of nearly 4,400 survivors and descendants, sought $1.2 billion in compensation
and a formal apology. (The lawsuit claimed that between 1885
and 1923 Canada collected $23 million in head taxes, which equals about $1.2
billion today.)
State-sanctioned
discrimination against Chinese immigrants was not limited to the head tax. They
were unable to own property and had limited occupational choices.
The
Chinese-Canadian community has persevered and continues to make significant
contributions to Canada.
An apology for past wrongs is welcomed.
Freelance columnist
Evelyn Myrie lives in Hamilton. She is co-chair of the Hamilton
Black History Committee.
http://www.hamiltonspectator.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=hamilton/
Layout/Article_PrintFriendly&c=Article&cid=1145225412210
http://www.hamiltonspectator.com/pdfs/20060417/A15.pdf
CANADA'S GOVERNMENT MAINTAINS STANCE
But UN Report Recommends It Pay Reparations
April 2-15, 2004 — Doudou Diene, the UN special rapporteur on racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, recently spent 10 days in Canada and submitted a UN draft report recommending Canada consider paying reparations for the head tax once levied against Chinese immigrants. The government's response to the UN recommendations was the same as it has been for the last ten years: No. Click
for More.
CANADIANS CALL UPON OTTAWA TO REDRESS CHINESE FOLLOWING NEW ZEALAND APOLOGY
February 8, 2002 Edmonton & Montreal
— In anticipation of a formal apology by New Zealand's Government to its own Chinese on February 12th, members of Canada's Chinese Head Tax & Redress (HTEA) Committee in Edmonton and organizers in Montreal called upon Ottawa to negotiate directly with families who paid extortionate Chinese “head taxes” from 1885-1923 and faced exclusionary laws until the late 1960s. The New Zealand Government is expected to apologize for imposing “poll taxes” and other discriminatory laws against its Chinese on the Lunar New Year. Click
for More.
For reference – please check
http://www.asian.ca/redress/index.html
Silver Star IS multicultural behind the scenes…. + Dummy Gelunde jumping
Silver Star IS multicultural behind the scenes…. + Dummy Galunga-sprunging
Trevor is the first Caribbean-Canadian professional ski-patroller I have ever met. Born in Canada, like myself – we had a bonding moment – photo Deb Martin.
There are Chinese-Australians speaking with Aussie accents in the Ski Dazzle retail store. There is a Scottish-Canadian Ski Tour partner. There is a Caribbean-Canadian ski patroller. There is a bavarian style Beiregarten selling Mexican Corona beer. And I have just discovered there is a Scottish Highland piping and dancing summer program called Piping Hot Summer Drummer.
I can't believe that I have skiied 3 days in a row. My body is sore and aching, I am exhausted. But I couldn't pass up the Easter Weekend Ski Pass special for $50. I arrived in Vernon BC, late on Friday afternoon. I skiied Saturday, Sunday and now Monday.
The last time I skiied Silver Star had been in 1977, when I was still 16 years old. The resort has changed, and grown HUGE. My body has changed and I can't do the same ski ballet or freestyle tricks that I used to. My body is exhausted.
The sun was shining over Kalamalka Lake when I woke up this morning, and I knew I wanted to get one more day of skiing in. The two previous days had snowed a lot, with only brief periods of sunshine. I knew that I really wanted to go home with “skiier tan.”
I skiied on my own, disappointed that there were no complimentary tour guides available. I had taken a tour on Saturday afternoon, and had met a wonderful man named David Todd, who not only had been born in Glasgow, but was a friend of my girlfriend's parents.
I skiied green and blue runs, avoiding the black diamond expert runs. My thighs, arms and ab muscles all were sore, with each big bounce on the snow.
Throughout the day, I met many people vacationing at Silver Star, or who now lived in Greater Vernon. I met a couple originally from Czechoslovakia, moving to Canada in 1980. I met a woman who is originally Swiss, and who married a Canadian. She told me that they have lived all around the world, but always came back to Vernon for holidays, and now live near Kalamalka Lake. Their 12 year old daughter speaks four languages.

Deb and I stand in front of the Silver Star ski trail map. I am wearing my Easter Egg colours – photo Pat Martin
My girlfriend and her mother came up to Silver Star to meet me for lunch, as I called it a day and put my skis away. After lunch specials from the Town Hall restaurant, we walked around the Victoria styled village, and poked around in the shops. I bought about 10 wool and fleece hats for $2 each, marked down from $21 to $45. Many of them were junior sized. Boy… my nephew is going to like the hats that Uncle Todd will be giving to him.
The three sales women at the counter were all from Australia, even the Chinese girl all spoke with Aussie accents.
I also met a Ski patroller named Trevor. Trevor described his heritage as West Indian from the Caribbean, even though he was born in Canada. “Just like the Jamaican boblsed team!” he exclaimed.
I called him the first Caribbean ski patroller I have ever met!

David Todd is a Glasgow born Scot, who came to Canada 30 years ago. We met on the Saturday, when I took a Ski partners tour with him. We hit it off immediately and had a great time. He and his wife, even saw me on television being interviewed about Gung Haggis Fat Choy, my Robbie Burns Chinese New Year dinner event. Next year, we should have one in Vernon – photo Deb Martin
We took a drive to see all the individual homes that have been built in the area, then walked by the skating pond, and the Tube riding centre. Here we saw the Tube Town staff putting the final touches to their entry for the Dummy Gelunde jumping contest. It was a wooden replica of a John Deere bulldozer, set on skis. The driver's body was stuffed with hay, and was named after the “boss” of Tube Town.

This is Tube Town -home to ice-skating and inner tubing at Silver Star. The staff made a John Deere wooden tractor and named it “Deere Jon” because their boss is named Jon – photo Todd Wong
On the last day of each ski season, Silver Start invites all its different departments, and businesses in the community to create a entry for this special race. Many other ski resorts have contests where people have to ski over/ or jump over a pond. In this case, they create a contraption on skis that includes a “dummy.” There are 3 categories that are judged: 1) Best Dressed; 2) Biggest Air; 3) Best crash.
It was a great event to watch. All the businesses and departments had shut down early, so everybody could participate and watch. It was a really good community atmosphere.
The MC announcer was Heather McLellan, who does the Events at Silver Star, and who also happens to be former Canadian ski champion Rob Boyd's sister. Heather did a great job explaining the event, and describing each entry and the department/ business that entered.
There was one entry with a snowman sitting on a toilet, mounted on skis.
There was an entry with “Queen Kong” sitting in a tri-plane.
There was an entry with “Aung Gladys”, a dummy in a racer's tuck position.
Tomorrow I will post pictures, and describe more of the event.




