Author Archives: Todd

Happy Canada Day! Joceylyn Petit… Scottish-Chinese-Canadian fiddle player!

Happy Canada Day!

I
am listening to the cd music of 15 year old
half-Chinese/half-Scottish 100% Canadian fiddle player Jocelyn
Pettit. 
Perfect for the recognition of Pioneer Chinese
and Scots who helped to build British Columbia.

photo

I had the pleasure of meeting Jocelyn and her mother Siew, at the BC Highland Games last Saturday. 

I had written:

Hello Jocelyn
and Siew. I am really enjoying listening to Jocelyn's cd. I can
remembering
hearing some good fiddle music at the games, looked over at the stage,
but
didn't see my Blackthorn friends… but a small trio or so. I love
the
sound on the cd. I cranked it up in the car.

Great that you have been on CBC Early Edition with Rick Cluff.
But I
think Sheryl McKay's North By Northwest – would be perfect for you.
I have
played my accordion with Blackthorn, and the Chinese-fusion group Silk
Road
Music Ensemble. Hopefully one day, we can have you perform at my Gung
Haggis
Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner.

We have spun off a CBC
Television performance special back in 2004, and I hope that it can be
expanded for the future. I can be seen playing my accordion in the CBC
TV
documentary Generations: The Chan Legacy – about my
great-great-grandfather
and the contributions that his subsequent descendants have made to
society. I
would like to purchase additional cd's to give out as gifts. I
will write
up a review of the cd within the week. Please let me know when you are
playing
in the Vancouver area, and I will blog the events.

Cheers, Todd Wong

Her father replied:

Hello Todd,
 
Thank you very much for your very nice
message.  We really appreciate your kind words!  I wish I had the
chance to meet you at the recent BC Highland Games and Scottish
Festival, as my
daughter, Jocelyn, and wife, Siew, were delighted to talk with you.  You
have accomplished great achievements with your music performances, work
with
CBC, and special events production!  Bravo for such fascinating and
remarkable work!  We are keen to know more and participate!
 
Thank you for enjoying our music at the
BC Highland
Games & Scottish Festival, as well as on our recent debut CD.  At
the
Games, we performed a short set and came ready for much more, in case
time
allowed.  We were excited to perform with our newly-joined pipes player
(small/bellow pipes), and we had our guitar player as well (but no cello
player
for this show).  The CD shows the diversity and versatility of Jocelyn's
music.  Her original compositions are complex and beautifully layered in
sound texture, her arrangements of contemporary and traditional tunes
are fresh
and delightful, and her choice of tunes and melodies is interesting and
engaging.  Of course, I am a very proud dad, but far beyond my word, she
is
widely receiving praise for her ideas, innovation, and skills
(especially for
her young age).
 
Thank you for the ideas you have
mentioned –
preceding our (sold-out) North Vancouver CD Release Concert (Shaw
Theatre),
Sheryl McKay was kind enough to play Jocelyn's “Morning Glory” on her
show.  It was very much appreciated – Jocelyn is committed to making
music
her career, and along the way we learn of the many career-path
challenges (such as gaining recognition and opportunities, with
predominantly instrumental world/folk music).  Definitely, thank you for
your ideas!
 
Thank you for writing up a review of
our
CD!  That is really excellent!  We are very appreciative of the word
getting out there, of Jocelyn's music and her music gift of exceptional
talent.
 
Thank you also for wanting to purchase
more
CDs.  This can be done at
 http://www.cdbaby.com/Artist/JocelynPettit

 

We hope to see you soon!
 
Cheers,

Globe & Mail: Head tax redress was not enough say Chinese descendants

Surviving sons and daughters need to be included for Chinese Head Tax settlement.

No other ethnic group was charged a head tax.
The govt repealed the racist “Chinese Exclusion Act” in 1947 and also
finally gave Canadians born with Chinese heritage the vote.

The Mulroney
govt apologized for Japanese Canadians interned during WW2 in 1988.  Four
years earlier, Chinese Head Tax Redress had been  brought to Parliament in 1984 by MP Margaret Mitchell,
but rejected by the Trudeau govt.

An apology for Chinese Head Tax
finally came 22 years later in 2006, but it was 86 years after the last
head tax was paid in 1923, and 121 years after the first head tax was
paid in 1885. Giving ex-gratia payments only to the few surviving head
tax payers and widows while ignoring the other 99% of head tax
certificates passed onto surviving sons and daughters is wrong.

It is
impossible to expect my great-grandfather to live to be 130 years old to
receive his “tax refund”. The payment should go to his remaining 7
children who are 99 to 85 years old, all born in Canada and had to live
through the years of The Exclusion Act until 1947.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/british-columbia/head-tax-redress-was-not-enough-say-chinese-descendents/article1624868/

 

Head tax redress was not enough say
Chinese descendants

97 year old Thomas Soon  (L) and 99 year old Charlie Quon hold government cheques, the first  redress payments to Chinese Head Tax payers in Vancouver, BC, October  20, 2006.

97 year old Thomas Soon (L) and 99 year
old Charlie Quon hold government cheques, the first redress payments to
Chinese Head Tax payers in Vancouver, BC, October 20, 2006. Lyle Stafford for The Globe and
Mail

Canada Day rally planned for Vancouver’s
Chinatown

Robert Matas

Vancouver Globe and Mail Update Published on Wednesday, Jun. 30, 2010 5:05PM EDT Last updated on Wednesday, Jun. 30, 2010
5:35PM EDT

Canada’s apology to
the Chinese community for the head tax from 1885 to 1923 was not enough,
say descendants of those who paid the tax.

Ottawa said sorry to
the Chinese community four years ago and gave $20,000 to those who had
paid the head tax or to their surviving spouse.

But members of the Head Tax
Families Society of Canada say the federal
governmentimage
excluded thousands
of Chinese families who were affected by the historic injustices and
Ottawa should rethink its approach to redress.

The children of those who paid the
tax but did not live long enough to hear the apology received nothing
and still feel left out, Sid Tan, head of the Head Tax Families Society
of Canada, said Wednesday in an interview on the day before a “redress
rally” planned for Vancouver’s Chinatown.

“The apology was not as meaningful
to us as it was to other [Chinese families],” said Mr. Tan, the
grandson of a head tax payer. “The federal government left out a large
chunk of people and you have to find some way you can meaningfully
provide redress for them.”

The federal government
acknowledged less than one per cent of families who had paid the head
tax, he said. Payments were made to about 800 people although more than
82,000 Chinese immigrants paid the tax from 1885 to 1923.

The rally on Canada Day is
intended as a celebration of being Canadian while reminding the federal
government that the issue is not closed, Mr. Tan said.

Victor Wong, executive director of
the Chinese Canadian National Council, an umbrella group with 27
chapters across the country, said 3,000 families across Canada are still
seeking to be included in the apology and payment that was made in
2006.

His grandfather, who immigrated to
Canada in 1912, could not bring his wife and four children until 1947,
he said. Mr. Wong said he is the family’s first Canadian-born grandson,
born 47 years after his grandfather arrived on the West Coast. “Family
formation was discouraged,” he said.

Redress that included the children
of those who felt the impact of the discriminatory policies would set
the tone for governments, prodding them to ensure that policies and
programs are sensitive to the needs of minorities.

“For an apology to be meaningful,
it needs to include [the children of head tax payers],” said Mr. Wong

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/british-columbia/head-tax-redress-was-not-enough-say-chinese-descendents/article1624868/

 

Open House Canada Day at sites for The Land Conservancy of BC

The Land Conservancy of BC is hosting Canada Day events at some of his historic and important sites throughout BC.

Here is a list of events created by TLC Director of Operations Kathleen Shepherd.  I am on the board of TLC and have been involved with TLC, since they stepped in to partner with the Save Kogawa House campaign in 2005.

The Gorge Canada Day Picnic will include
Craigflower along with
other great things to do (and I’m sure, things to eat). http://www.gorgetillicum.ca/picnic.php

BC Binning House will be hosting their 2nd
annual
Canada Day Open House: http://blog.conservancy.bc.ca/2010/06/canada-day-at-the-b-c-binning-residence/

For those in the Kootenays, TLC’s Associated Site,
the
SS Moyie will host Canada Day celebrations: http://www.klhs.bc.ca/events.htm

While not quite on Canada Day, Keating will open
for summer
teas on Sunday: http://blog.conservancy.bc.ca/2010/06/keating-farm-estate-summer-open-hours/

Abkhazi, Wildwood and Potholes are also open for
their
regular hours, check the TLC website for more information.

Happy Canada Day!

www.conservancy.bc.ca

Nancy Lee at Joy Kogawa House, final event of the writing for Social Change reading series and Kogawa House writer-in-residence program

Nancy Lee reading and interview at Joy Kogawa House on Monday, June 28

Please RSVP at kogawahouse@yahoo.ca

The time with Nancy and her husband John has been a great experience, as she has brought her insightful thought, probing questions, and wonderful wit to Joy Kogawa House.  Additionally, she hosted a memoir writing workshop on Saturday June 26th.

Please join us for the in the intimate living room at Historic Joy Kogawa
House for the final event of a successful series of small salon gatherings with five writers who use
literature to call for social change and justice and as a tool for
social transformation.

Five Mondays (and a Sunday) This Spring

  1. Joan Macleod, Monday, April 19
  2. Anosh Irani, Sunday, May 2
  3. Steven Galloway, Monday, May 17
  4. Karen Connelly, Monday, June 14
  5. Nancy Lee, Monday, June 28
  • All conversations begin at 7:30 p.m. on a Monday, except the one
    with Anosh Irani, which begins at 3:30 p.m. on a Sunday.
  • Historic Joy Kogawa House is located in the Marpole
    neighbourhood of Vancouver at 1450 West 64th Avenue (two blocks east of
    Granville)
  • Admission by donation
  • Books will be available for sale and signing by the authors
  • Please RSVP at kogawahouse@yahoo.ca
  • Thanks to the Canada Council Author Reading and Author Residencies
    programs for funds to host these writers at Joy House

    My family elder is turning 100 years old

    My family elder was born in 1910, in Victoria BC.  

    They have lived through two world wars, and seen China change from an imperial dynasty, to a republic, to a communist state.

    They have witnessed the Chinese Head Tax era, and the 1923 Chinese Exclusion Act. They welcomed 3 brothers home who served in WW2, after they were first denied the chance to fight for the country they were born in because they were Chinese.

    They were granted the right to finally vote at 37 years old, when the Chinese Exclusion Act was finally appealed in 1947 and franchise was granted to Canadians of Chinese ancestry – because up until then, they had been considered a “resident alien.” 

    They have watched the grand-children become a Miss Canada 2nd runner-up, a TV news reporter, a Calgary city councilor, and a recipient of the BC Community Achievement Award.

    They have appeared in an NFB documentary, a CBC television performance special, and CBC TV documentary about their grandfather and family descendant history.

    In 2007, they received an ex-gratia payment for Chinese Head Tax settlement, because their deceased husband had paid the head tax, prior to 1923.

    We must honour our family elders, who sacrificed and overcame so much.

    BC Highland Games this Saturday June 26 in Coquitlam

    BC Highland Games this Saturday June 26 in Coquitlam

    Here is the Scottish Express message, that has taken the
    torch from Ron MacLeod, to send out news emails about events in the Scottish-Canadian diaspora in the Vancouver area.  

    —————
    This
    Saturday, June 26, 2010 marks the gathering of everyone that loves
    anything
    Scottish at the BC Highland Games.   It’s a day to come and listen to
    the
    best piping and drumming, marvel at the dancing, stroll through the
    exhibits,
    have a bite to eat and immerse yourself in Scottish charm, goodwill and
    fun!!  more details below

    The BC Highland Games

    Saturday June 26, 2010,  Percy Perry Stadium, Coquitlam

    http://www.bchighlandgames.com

    15 Piping
    bands including the World Champion Simon Fraser University Band

    220
    Highland Dancing Competitors

    30 Heavy
    Event Competitors (these are the caber tossers)

    30 Venders
    (with all sorts of food and items galore with a Scottish twist)

    21 Scottish
    Clans and Societies

    Plenty of
    rides and activities for the children

    And 16
    Haggis

    Yes, again
    this year those mythical Haggis will be hiding throughout the stadium
    grounds
    for the wildest hunt you have ever seen. 
    Spot enough and you become an Official Haggis Hunter!  They are elusive,
    fast, and can usually
    be found lurking around Tartan.

    Highland
    Games are about competition and we are happy to report some of the best
    dancers, drummers, pipers and throwers are back to defend their titles. 
    The caliber of sport is exhilarating!

    Our
    entertainment this year includes the Jocelyn Petit Band and Blackthorn. 
    Both will be playing on the main
    stage.  They are the best of our
    local talent and showcase our deep talent pool here in BC.

    The Beer
    Tent, British Car Show, Whisky Tasting, Sword Dancing, Cultural Tent and
    even a
    second Beer Tent are back!!

    Gung Haggis races in B Division and receives Silver Medals for Senior B Race

    Gung Haggis dragon boat team had their BEST placing at the Rio Tinto Alcan Dragon Boat Festival ever.
    DSC_9604_156548 - Sarah Blyth & Todd Wong by 
FlungingPictures.



    Parks Commissioner Sarah Blyth was named Honorary Drummer for the 2010
    Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team – photo Patrick Tam

    We raced for medals in the Rec B Finals – making 6th place.

    Our path was paved with friendly rivalries, beating our friends Metro Vancouver 44 Cheeks in the morning semi-finals, and just one second ahead of our friends Flight Centre Dirty Oars in the Rec B Final.

    Gung Haggis paddlers were seen sporting silver medals from the Senior B 49+ years age category race.  We put together Gung Haggis Friends including other paddlers from 44 Cheeks, Crusaders, Pirates, Ft. Langley and Swordfish + drummer from Killarney.  We were second to Masters of D'Zone who were 12 seconds ahead of us and a Comp A ranked team.

    Other news:  The Killarney Cougar Dragons won Bronze medals in Junior C Division, coached by Gung Haggis paddlers Todd and Steven Wong.  Killarney's teacher sponsor is Gung Haggis alumni Stuart Mackinnon.

    Congratulations to all racers!

    Gung Haggis dragon boat team paddles well for Saturday at Rio Tinto Alcan Festival: Gung Haggis Friends paddles to 2nd place in Senior B category

    GREAT DRAGON BOAT RACING
    BY GUNG HAGGIS FAT CHOY TEAM ON SATURDAY

    our rookies performed well… thanks to Jennifer, Gena, Adam, Evan and Carson.
    Nobody
    can tell they are rookies anymore, as they are now experienced at North
    America's biggest and best dragon boat Festival.  Great kudos to
    Captains Jim, Keng, Steven and drummer Debbie.

    We welcome Parks Commissioner Sara Blyth as our honourary drummer for 2010.  Sara came out to cheer our 2nd race, and hopefully will be there for our race final tomorrow afternoon.

    Congratulations to our senior B racers in the 49+ years category.
    Todd,
    Keng, Joy, Georgia, Steven, Joe, Gayle, Dave Samis + friends from
    Pirates, Chilliwack Crusaders, Metro Vancouver 44 Cheeks, Ft. Langley
    all raced to 2nd place.  Yay paddlers! 

    Our first race is 10:10   REC B/C Final

    2nd race will be determined by our placment in the semi-final.
    We would love to be in the Rec B Medal hunt,
    We are seeded high in lane 4 – so we are a favored team.

    1st and 2nd go to B Medal Final     2:03pm
    3rd and 4th go to B Consolation   1:52pm
    5th and 6th go to C Final                 1:41pm

    Join us afterwards, and we can watch
    the Comp team finals, and the Guts & Glory Race, 18 boats on the
    course, doing 2 laps with 3 turns.

    Gung Haggis dragon boat team racing Saturday 10am then betwen 1:50 and 4pm

    Dragon Boat Festival Race times for Gung Haggis dragon boat team on Saturday

    Hello friends and official members of the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team cheering squad.

    New team shirts available for cheering squad!

    Here are confirmed race times for June 19th, Rio Tinto Alcan Dragon Boat Festival

    #12 10am Gung Haggis in Mixed Adult Division
    #23 @ 12:22 Senior B 49+ Race as Gung Haggis Friends

    then… sometime in the in afternoon…
    On Saturday – we will introduce our Honourary Drummer for 2010 to the team, and race our 2nd race of the day!

    #31 @ 1:50 – if we place 5th in our 1st race #12
    #33 @ 2:12 – if we place 6th
    #41 @ 3:40 – if we place 3rd
    #43 @ 4:01 – if we place 4th

    Sunday
    races will be determined by overall times. Expect us to be in Rec
    B/C/D/E semi-final, then hopefully into the Rec B or Rec C medal final.

    Todd Wong and Steven Wong are also coaching the Killarney Junior dragon boat team.

    Race #6 – 8:55am

    Race 26 @ 12:55 if they finish 3rd, in Race #6
    #27 @ 1:06 if they finish 4th

    Gung Haggis dragon boat team is ready for upcoming Rio Tinto Alcan Dragon Boat Festival

    Gung Haggis dragon boat team practiced hard on the last Sunday before the Rio Tinto Alcan Dragon Boat Festival

    Here is video from out last Sunday's practice.
    http://www.flickr.com/photos/53803790@N00/4701299995/

    Picture

    Everybody who came out is paddling hard. 

    Our final practice before Festival is this Tuesday – tomorrow.

    The June 19/20 Rio Tinto Alcan Dragon Boat Festival is the largest dragon boat festival in North America.

    Last
    Tuesday we had a great race winning against GVRD 44 Cheeks – who
    usually beats us, and the previous Sunday, we placed in A Division for
    the first time at Dragon Zone regatta, and on May 1st, we placed in the
    top division at Lotus Regatta… which leads me to think this could be
    our best Gung Haggis dragon boat team ever.

    We've worked hard to develop this year's team. 
    We have amazing rookies.  We have wonderful veterans.  We are looking
    to improve on last year's results.  We have been working hard to
    prepare the team for technique, endurance,
    strength and working together. These are all things paddlers said they
    wanted to improve on.

    We are also applied to enter
    extra races in Dragon Zone race, and age category race, so our paddlers
    get more races and opportunities to have extra medals.