Greetings a reminder and a note re GlobalScot. Regards, the other Ron
1. The Gaelic Society presents:
WHAT: Youth Ceilidh featuring the Fraser River Fiddlers, the Stave
Falls Dancers, the 78th Highlanders Pipe Band and singers Kevin Louden,
Leah Fields and Ainsley MacCallum-Reid.
WHERE: Hebridean Room, Scottish Cultural Centre, 8886 Hudson St,
Vancouver, B.C.
WHEN: doors open 7 PM and Concert starts 8 PM, Saturday, February 4th
COST: $12.00; 12 years and under free
OTHER: Tea, coffee and snacks included; bar service; door prizes
CONTACT: Maureen Lyon at 604-536-1367
For those who enjoy fiddle music, you are in for a treat with these
youngsters
ALL WELCOME!
2. Courtesy Bob Fair:
GlobalScot reports the appointment of Michael Corish as Scottish
Development International’s Manager for Canada. Michael has a B.A.
(Honours) in Marketing from Strathclyde University and extensive work
experience in the field of marketing in Britain.
Michael will be headquartered in Toronto. He expects to move there with
his family sometime in April or early May.
Contact: Isobel Bell at isobel.bell@scotent.co.uk or,
globalscot@scotent.co.uk
Author Archives: Todd
Sylvi McJang attends Gung Haggis Fat Choy: sends pictures
Sylvi McJang attends Gung Haggis Fat Choy: sends pictures
Gung Haggis Fat Choy: Toddish McWong's Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner is as much about the people attending the dinner as the people on stage. Many people come dressed in a combination of tartans and Chinese silks. Many people come celebrating their bi-cultural ethnic ancestry, or their inter-racial marriage.
Gung Haggis Fat Choy is about inclusion. The Scottish-Chinese thing is just the starting point. It's also everything in-between, and everything beyond. Cultural diversity starts in our families. Our families teach us about our cultural traditions, and hopefully about racial tolerance and respect for all peoples and their traditions. With Gung Haggis Fat Choy, we integrate from both, and are creating our own.
Below is a letter and photos from “Sylvi McJang” – a great example of Gung Haggis Fat Choy – living and breathing, and well in our nation called Canada.
great event!! It was a lot of fun sharing a table with
such friendly people, with beautifully
colourful costumes. And thank you Todd for organizing this
wonderful evening! Hope to see you all there next year.

MacKay (Grand Forks, BC) pose with the Lion Head mask that I wore for my “Gung Haggis Fat Choy” photo used on the posters, website and business cards. Jim Wong-Chu (executive director of Asian Canadian Writers' Workshop), organizes the prizes in the background, the only person who has attended every Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner in a restaurant. – photo courtesy of Sylvi McJang

Tony Breen (West Van) with Toddish McWong. Red and black always seem to be the prevailing colours at Chinese and Scottish cultural events. – photo courtesy of Sylvi McJang


Eve and the Fire Horse: child's view of the world pokes questions at multicultural dichotomies

Eve and the Fire Horse:
child's view of the world pokes questions at multicultural dichotomies
There is deservedly lots of buzz happening for Eve and the Fire Horse. Writer/Director Julia Kwan and her crew have just won the Sundance Special Jury Prize. Film critic Roger Ebert called the movie “the most beloved film at Sundance.” Pretty darn good for Julia Kwan's first full length movie, shopping itself for a US distributor at the most influential independent film festival.
Many people have said they relate to the film's stories and characters, regardless of ethnicity. The two sisters speak English to each other and the younger 9 year old Eve also narrates. Phoebe Kut stars as the central figure Eve, and Hollie Lo plays her older sister Karina. Their parents speak Cantonese Chinese to them, the kids answer in English. This is not a theatrical device – Julia Kwan says this is typical of many immigrant families. This could be any first and second generation immigrant group as they adapt to wherever they are now settled.
The Year of the Fire Horse is a special type of person born in the year of the Horse. Each of the 5 elements Earth, Metal, Water, Air and Fire give a special additional quality to the Chinese zodiac animal. Fire Horse year was 1966, and the children are supposed to be especially spirited and stubborn, and even troublesome. This personality trait for Eve helps to move the film forward as well as help create a wonderful title, movie logo, and release date for Chinese New Year.
The kids also struggle with making friends, settling in with their peer group, and finding a way to reconcile their family's buddhist beliefs with the Christian elements in Canadian North American society. The film opens with a Chinese New Year dinner where clashes between superstitions and common sense can be questioned through the children's comments and explanations of traditions. Along the way we meet a small caucasian girl who is picked on by the school bullies and called “PWT”, explained by the 11 year old older sister Karina to Eve, as “poor white trash.”
“Are we poor white trash?” asks Eve.
“No… we're not white.” Karina answers.
There is something special about how 9 year old children struggle to make sense of the world and it's seeming dichotomies. Julia Kwan allows viewers into the world of Eve, as she is allowed flights of imagination in her conversations with the Chinese goddess of the kitchen, the statue of Buddha, and their new room mate Jesus, as the girls now start going to Catholic Sunday School.
“Two gods in the house must bring better luck than one,” thinks the logic of their mother May Lin Eng, played wonderfully by Vivienne Wu.
The film follows a series of incidents such as an uncle going to the hospital after choking because he refused to spit out his “long-life noodles,” the unexpected death of a grandparent, and a hospital procedure for their father. This allows Phoebe to wonder about how the world works, through reincarnation, funerals, hospitals and Sunday School.
There are so many episodes that I could relate to from my own life: such as being asked in Grade 5 by a school friend to attend a social event, that turns into a education session about Jesus Christ; recalling the funerals and times of passing of my paternal grandparents who always spoke exclusively in Chinese to me – even though I could only speak English. And then there is the delight of Eve recieving her very first pet – a gold fish! Eve and her fish – this is one of the most delightful scenes in the movie, as Eve's imagination takes flight.
After the Vancouver Chinatown New Year's parade I hang with my new friends, producer Yve Ma with his daughter on my left, and actor Phoebe Kut and her friends on my right – photo Deb Martin.


