Author Archives: Todd

Dr. Sun Yat Sen Gardens celebrates Yearof the Ox on February 1st.

In Vancouver Chinatown, the Chinese New Year Festivities always take place on the first Sunday following Chinese New Year Day.

This year, Chinese New Year Day is on Monday, January 26th…. so on Sunday February 1st, come to Vancouver Chinatown.

One of my new favorite activities starting last year…. is to visit the Dr. Sun Yat Sen courtyard at the Chinese Cultural Centre because my friend Qiu Xia He of Silk Road Music is organizing a special Cultural Olympiad show for Chinese New Year.

Last year, I was fascinated by the show, which brought together many musicians and performers from different ethnic and cultural backgrounds: African, Japanese, Chinese, Latin, French-Canadian, and Celtic.  Oh my goodness… but her programming was a like fantastic dream team that I wish I could bring together for Gung Haggis Fat Choy.

But this year, we will be adding something new… a dragon dance by the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team!

Feb 1. 09 Sunday. Free public performances.
10:30-11:30 first show
12-1:30pm Chinese New Year Parade
1:30-3:30pm second show


Performers:
Qiu Xia He 何秋霞 – Silk Road Music Artistic Director and Chinese Pipa 
Andre Thibault –  Program assistant and Guitar, Oud and flute 
Jun Rong 戎峻 – Chinese Erhu
Jian Min Pan 潘建明 – Chinese Dizi
Pepe Danza – World instruments and percussion
Bonnie Soon and Uzume Taiko – Japanese drum and percussion
Feng Jun Wang 王君 – vocal
Willy Miles – vocal and bass guitar
Jan Walls 王健– Bilingual MC and Chinese Kuai Ban storyteller
Gung Haggis Fat Choy Dragon Boat Team
Still Moon Arts Stilt Dancers
Mt. Pleasant Neiboughood Happy Dancing Group
Jacky Essombe & The Makalas- African Dance
Jessica Jone 钟捷茜, Chengxin Wei 魏成新 and The Lorita Leung Chinese Dance Academy.
More details on the show in Chinese and English:
Check out the following from the Dr. Sun Yat Sen Classical Chinese Gardens website:

http://www.vancouverchinesegarden.com/calendar/2007/2007_feb.htm

Chinese New Year
Celebration at the Garden
Sunday, February 1
10am-4pm, by donation

Join us as we celebrate the Year of the Ox!
On January 26, 2009 Chinese people around the world will celebrate a
new year, according to the Lunar calendar. Join us at the Garden for a
day of family fun and activities. We will have fortune telling, live
music, face painting, storytelling, red envelopes, pin wheel making,
stilt walkers, and more!
Enjoy a fabulous day of live entertainment and welcome the Year of the Ox!

A Celebration in the Courtyard
February 1st, 10:30-11:30am and 1:30-3:30pm

The
Garden is pleased to co-present the Chinese New Year Celebration in the
Courtyard as part of the 2009 Cultural Olympiad. The event is quickly
becoming a part of the Chinese New Year parade day celebration. Join
Silk Road and Friends as they sing, dance and play music under a big
tent and take part in the fun art and crafts projects available in the
small tents scattered around the Courtyard.

The
courtyard-fair atmosphere, coupled with the cross-cultural
performances, provide an opportunity for artists from Vancouver’s
different cultural backgrounds to display their creativity and
collaborate to create new sounds for a traditional festival. We invite
Vancouver to celebrate Chinese New Year with a world vision!

Tickets for Gung Haggis Fat Choy are still available.

Tickets for Gung Haggis Fat Choy are only available now from organizers. 

Ticket sales from Firehall Arts Centre and Tickets Tonight are now closed, as we are very close to a sell out.  Firehall Box Office is always closed on Saturday.

Gung Haggis Fat Choy:
Toddish McWong's
Robbie Burns
Chinese New Year's Eve Dinner

SUNDAY
January 25th
5pm – reception

If you still want to come to the 2009 Gung Haggis Fat Choy Dinner.
You will have to phone Todd Wong at 778-846-7090 – and make arrangements.

IF we are sold out there will be NO tickets available at the door on January 25th.
So call and confirm on Saturday.

It's going to be an INCREDIBLE evening of fun.
It is unlike any other Robbie Burns dinner you have ever attended or will attend.
There will be lots of food, music, poetry and scotch – all the things that were close to the heart of Robert Burns, including the issues of social justice, equality, political change, speaking up for others, and love of life.

It's the 250th Anniversary of Robert Burns…. what else would you expect?

And did we mention that The Famous Grouse scotch whisky is now a sponsor for the dinner?

And… I am HOT and IN THE ZONE…. after giving the “Address to the Haggis” at the 16th Annual Robbie Burns Dinner for the Vancouver & District Labour Council.  Many people came up to me after my performance and said it was the BEST reading they had ever witnessed.  Wow… what a compliment.  But nobody said it was Obama-esque… I guess Pieta Woolley wasn't attending. 

SFU's Leith Davis is creating a world wide Burns Statue recognition both in the real and the virtual world

2008_Dec 044 by you.

Todd Wong at the Robert Burns Statue in Stanley Park – photo Judy Maxwell

It's the 250th Birthday of Robert Burns and he's looking a little bit worn for wear in Vancouver's Stanley Park. Robbie's been standing in Stanley Park since 1928.  I wrote a story about it in December 9th: Robert Burns Statue in Vancouver's Stanley Park,

The rededication plaque reads:

“This
statue of Robert Burns, Scotland's National Bard, was unveiled by J.
Ramsay MacDonald , a Prime Minister of Britain, on 25th August, 1928.
Robert
Burns's sincere desire for friendship and brotherhood among all peoples
is clearly shown in his many poems and songs.  His poetry and letters,
both serious and humorous are worthy of study by those who value
liberty and freedom. 
This memorial was rededicated on the 200th Anniversary of the Bard's death by the Burns Club of Vancouver.
21 July 1996
“Then let us pray that come it may
(as come it will for a' that)…
that man to man, the world o'er
shall birthers be for a' that

I also wrote a story about all the other statues Vancouver's Robert Burns statue is a copy of the George Lawson original from Ayr Scotland with pictures of the same statue in Ayr Scotland, Halifax, Winnipeg, Montreal, Melbourne, Australia, Belfast and Paris. 

So this Sunday, at 12 noon. Leith Davis and I will meet to lay a wreath and flowers at the Robert Burns statue in Stanley Park.  We'll read some poems and verses… and maybe sing Auld Lang Syne.

Leith wants us to meet at 11:45am and take a group picture, so we can send it to her contacts in the other cities with Burns Statues – all at precisely the same time.  And maybe while we are laying a wreath in real time, Leith will set it up to lay a wreath in virtual time, in Second Life. 

I'm really excited about this.  I haven't met Leith in person yet.  Leith will be a special guest at the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner on Sunday January 25th.  We will have one of the largest Burns Suppers in Metro Vancouver with over 550 attendees. 

Check out the SFU press release below:

World to wish Burns virtual ‘Happy 250th’

January 15, 2009
The world will come together to celebrate Robbie Burns Day on Jan. 25 – the 250th anniversary of his birth – in a way Scotland’s national bard would never have conceived.

At precisely 12 noon p.m. (PST) – with a crowd assembled in Vancouver at the
Burns statue in Stanley Park – gatherings around the world will send
greetings and photos to each other via the internet, creating one
massive Burns celebration in cyberspace.

The virtual party has attracted participants from cities across Canada,
U.S., Britain and Australia. “It has been interesting developing this
network, as it suggests just how prevalent Burns’ influence is even
today,” says organizer Leith Davis, director of SFU’s Centre for
Scottish Studies.

There are also plans to create a memorial to Burns on SFU’s Second Life
website. The centre is holding a contest to find an appropriate 21st century image of the famous poet and song-writer (details are at www.sfu.ca/scottish)

The deadline is April 1 and the winner will be announced during the Robert Burns in Transatlantic Culture workshop
at SFU’s Harbour Centre campus April 7-9. The workshop is the first
event of its kind to focus on Burns in the Americas.

“We’re hoping to bring Burns into focus, not just as a nostalgic relic of the 19th
century but as a poet who has much to say in our time,” says Davis.
“Burns’ message was all about universal brotherhood, and sisterhood, by
extension, and that is still a vital message today.”

Davis is currently in Scotland to deliver a lecture, The Performance of Burns in Popular Culture, to the Royal Society of Edinburgh’s 2009 conference, Robert Burns and Global Culture.

Conference participants will share the latest research on Burns while
leading Burns scholars will reflect on such issues as the global
reputation of Burns, his influence on the image of Scotland abroad and
the continuing celebration of Burns in global culture through statues,
music and Burns Supper events.

Davis will return Jan. 24 for the Burns virtual event and the Gung
Haggis Fat Choy event Jan. 25 at 6 p.m. at the Floata Chinese
Restaurant (see http://www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com/)

No

BBC Radio Scotland celebrates Robert Burns – and somewhere Toddish McWong will be heard…

Robert Burns

Last year, in early December BBC Radio producer Louise Yeoman contacted me about my involvement with Burns celebrations in Vancouver.

And Dr. Leith Davis from the SFU Centre for Scottish Studies, was also interviewed too! 

So sometime on January 25th, if you are listening to BBC Radio – you just might hear the immortal Burns poem “Address to a Haggis” performed as a rap song, by Vancouver's own Toddish McWong and Burnaby's Joe McDonald.  Gung Haggis RAP Choy was produced by Trevor Chan, of No Luck Club.

We released on this website back on January 24th, 2007.  It played on CBC Radio's “On the Coast” and I was interviewed by then host Priya Ramu, who also co-hosted Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner with me that year.

Last year, Joe and I performed our “Gung HAGGIS RAP Choy” on CBC Newsworld television.
Check out the MP3 attahchment here:
http://www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com/blog/RobbieBurnsDay/_archives/2007/1/24/2679414.html

In the meantime, check out Robbie Burns on BC Radio Scotland.

The Complete Burns

Janice Forsyth goes behind the scenes of a major BBC Radio Scotland project, to record every single Burns poem.

The Linguistic Legacy of Robert Burns

Billy Kay investigates Robert Burns, and discovers what remains of the native Scots tongue.

Listen Live

There is an 8 hour difference between Vancouver and Glasgow.

  1. 10:30–11:00

    Janice Forsyth talks to participants of a project to record every single Burns poem.

  2. 13:05–15:00

    Join Robbie Shepherd in celebrating Robert Burns' 250th Anniversary.

  3. 15:05–15:30

    Billy Kay talks to Scottish people and finds out what's left of the poet's native tongue.

  4. 17:05–19:00

    4 days left to listen
    Richard Michael and the Euan Burton Trio perform jazz versions of songs by Robert Burns.

  5. 19:05–20:00

    Gary West with music and news from the piping world.

  6. 20:00–22:00

    A concert recorded at Celtic Connections celebrating the 250th anniversary of Robert Burns

Here is the latest Google News on “Gung Haggis Fat Choy”

Here is the latest Google News on “Gung Haggis Fat Choy”

Missing are television appearances or mentions.

City TV – Lunch Television
On Thursday I cooked haggis on City TV's Lunch Television with host
Michelle McDermott.  Kyle Donaldson came in to help taste the haggis
(from Peter Black & Sons – of course)

Shaw Multicultural television
I received a telephone call from one of the producers telling me that
they had been plugging our Gung Haggis Fat Choy event – especially
since Chinese New Year's Eve fell on Robbie Burns Day this year.   And
BCIT Magazine filmed a segment with me on Tuesday for broadcast this
week.  And… I also received a phone call from Global TV's Sophie Lui.

There are 4 related Gung Haggis Fat Choy events happening in Vancouver this week, that I will be at.

January 25th – 12 noon
– Wreath laying ceremony at the Robert Burns statue in Stanley Park

January 25th – 5pm
– Gung Haggis Fat Choy: Toddish McWong's Robbie Burns Chinese New Year's Eve Dinner – Floata Restaurant, Vancouver Chinatown $65

January 26th – 7:00pm
– World Poetry Gung Haggis Fat Choy Gala – FREE event of poetry and music

January 29th – 11:30 to 1:30pm
– SFU Gung Haggis Fat Choy Festival, Simon Fraser University.  Free
event featuring bagpipes, lion dance, dragon cart racing and human
curling.

Gung Haggis Fat Choy to all
News1130, Canada – 18 hours ago
Gung Haggis
Fat Choy, a combination of both cultures happening at SFU next week.
Organizer Sue Armitage says a former student came up with the idea came
Gung Haggis Fat Choy
Simon Fraser University News, Canada – 22 Jan 2009
29 with a wacky blend of Chinese and Scottish food and fun at Gung Haggis Fat Choy. The frivolous foolishness runs from 11:30 am to 1:30 pm with events
FIVE THINGS: THIS WEEKEND
Globe and Mail, Canada – 10 hours ago
by Jim Byrnes at Barbara Jo's (bookstocooks.com), and the favourite Chinese/Scottish hybrid dinner, Gung Haggis Fat Choy (http://www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com).
Why Canada will never have an Obama, except maybe Todd Wong
Georgia Straight, Canada – 21 Jan 2009
Here’s my nominee for an Obama in Canada: Todd Wong, the founder of Gung Haggis Fat Choy. The wildly charismatic Vancouverite is a leader in bridging
Call to the Bard
Scotsman, United Kingdom – 21 Jan 2009
VANCOUVER: Gung Haggis Fat Choy is an annual cultural event in British Columbia city that blends Canada's rich Scottish and Chinese traditions.
Soaking up the Lunar New Year
Vancouver Sun,  Canada – 22 Jan 2009
The sixth annual Gung Haggis Fat Choy World Poetry Night on Monday celebrates both “Chinese and Scottish traditions with a distinctly Canadian twist.
Reference Points
Baltimore Sun, United States – 18 Jan 2009
To cite one example, Heller profiles an annual dinner and performance event in Vancouver – dubbed Gung Haggis Fat Choy – that celebrates the city's Chinese
Spice is nice at Ashiana
Vancouver Courier,  Canada – 16 Jan 2009
25
is Robbie Burns' 250th birthday, yet one more good reason to head down
to Floata Restaurant for the utterly unique, “only in Vancouver,” Gung Haggis Fat
Five food and dining events
Georgia Straight, Canada – 22 Jan 2009
To celebrate, Todd Wong’s annual Gung Haggis Fat Choy banquet combines Chinese and Scottish food and entertainment. The 10-course dinner takes place at
Obama’s inauguration proves that poetry isn’t completely dead, yet
Georgia Straight, Canada – 20 Jan 2009
He has, however, written works for Gung Haggis Fat Choy, the Vancouver International Writers Festival, and other culturati events.

“Governor James Douglas is coming to Gung Haggis Fat Choy Dinner”, along with “Nellie McClung”, “Emery Barnes”, and “Joy Kogawa” from the Royal BC Museum

150 years ago, the first Governor of BC, had a vision that BC should welcome people from all corners of the world. 

CIMG0087 by you.

Todd Wong stands in front of “The Party” exhibit which features (bottom row) Tong Louie, Shusma Datt, Joe Sakic, Gov. James Douglas, Expo Ernie, Kinnie Starr (second row): Ben Ginter, Diana Krall, Gov. James Douglas, Joy Kogawa, Betty Krawzyk, Karen Magnusson, Herb Doman, Don Munday (3rd row): Dorothy Livesay, Vikram Vij, Jane Rule, Premier Gordon Campbell. – photo Deb Martin

James Douglas was featured at the Royal BC Museum's display “The Party“, for the Free Spirit Exhibition, in which 150 of BC's most interesting people were invited to a hypothetical party.  Actually 132 were initially invited, then 18 were voted in by the visiting public.

P4230222

Some of BC's most famous historical figures were invited, such as Terry Fox, Chief Dan George and Judge Matthew Begbie.  Some of BC's most famous contemporary figures were invited such as Sara MacLachlan, Joe Sakic, David Suzuki, Betty Krawzyk and Svend Robinson.  And some lesser known but very interesting people such as Cougar Annie, The Raging Grannies, and Mr. Peanut.

So… for this year's Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner, I have invited some of these fellow figures from the exhibit.  It makes sense to invite some of the Scottish pioneers that helped build this province, such as James Douglas – BC's first Governor, and John Foster McCreight – BC's first premier, as well as the First Nations pioneers, such as King Freezy and Mungo Martin.  But the Chinese pioneers are few and far between.

The idea started when the Royal BC Museum's program curator Kim Gough, let me know that the exhibit was being dismantled, and I could have the life-sized figure of myself.  Of course, I also asked for the picture of Joy Kogawa – since I was the photographer as well as president of Historic Joy Kogawa House.  Then the idea hit me… we could display these life-size photos at the 2009 Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner.

Hmmm… who else could we invite?  James Douglas and Chief Dan George?  Hon. David Lam – the first Chinese-Canadian Lt. Governor?  Trevor Linden?

The choices were simplifed because of room, space and time.  It would take time to call up all the people represented in “The Party” and invite them to Gung Haggis Fat Choy.  But I knew some of them. Sen. Larry Campbell and Joy Kogawa had attended past Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinners.

P4230240
It would be great to invite some of my personal heroes, such as Terry Fox.  Especially since, as a cancer survivor, I have spoken at Terry Fox Runs and elementary schools, throughout Metro Vancouver.

P4230239

I bumped into Emery Barnes' daughter Constance, who was recently elected as City of Vancouver Parks Commissioner, and told her about inviting her dad to Gung Haggis Fat Choy.  She was thrilled with the idea.  Other limitations were that the Museum could give me permission to invite photos that were taken from the BC archives.

So who is coming to the Gung Haggis Fat Choy party, from the Royal BC Museum “Party”?  Well… you are going to have to attend on Sunday, to find out!

Photo Library - 2905 by you.

Todd Wong aka “Toddish McWong” takes his place in “The Party” behind King Freezy, with Hon. Kim Campbell looking over his shoulder.  Front Row: Roderick Haig-Brown, Hannah Maynard, Todd Wong, King Freezy, Raging Grannies, Judge Matthew Begbie. Second row: Art Thompson, Century Sam, W.A.C. Bennett, Hon. Kim Campbell, more Raging Grannies.  Top row: Rosemary Brown, The Beachcombers, Sen. Mobina Jaffer, Chief James Sqwameyuqs. – photo Todd Wong

Westender: Gung Haggis celebrates Canadian interculturalism – article by Jackie Wong

West Ender newspaper celebrates Chinese New Year and Robbie Burns Day with a profile on Todd Wong aka “Toddish McWong”

Jackie Wong interviewed me last
week, and asked me about my early years growing up in East Vancouver
and North Vancouver. This is a very nice interview that addresses some
of the cultural identity issues I faced growing up, that has led me to
creating Gung Haggis Fat Choy as an expression of BC's Scottish and
Chinese pioneer history.

Todd Wong established the annual Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner — a merging of Chinese New Year and Robbie Burns Day celebrations — in 1998. It now draws over 500 people. “People leave [the dinner] saying, ‘That is so Canadian,’” he says.

Todd
Wong established the annual Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner — a merging of
Chinese New Year and Robbie Burns Day celebrations — in 1998. It now
draws over 500 people. “People leave [the dinner] saying, ‘That is so
Canadian,’” he says.

Credit: Doug Shanks

NEWS: Gung Haggis celebrates Canadian interculturalism

Growing
up in East Vancouver in the 1960s, Todd Wong was one of many children
who had a surname in common with his classmates at Laura Secord
Elementary School. But when his family moved to North Vancouver when he
was 14, Wong’s Chinese ancestry distinguished him from his classmates
for the first time. “Suddenly, the only other Wong in the entire school
was my brother,” the 48-year-old librarian recalls over tea at a
Chinatown diner. “The other kids would ask if I was Chinese or
Japanese, because they didn’t know the difference at the time. I kept
being asked about Chinese culture because nobody else knew about it.”

Wong’s family has lived in Vancouver for five generations, and he
was raised in what he describes as a “Canadian” household. But it was
his immediate family’s move to North Vancouver that spurred him to
further explore his ancestry. His great-great-grandfather, Reverend
Chan Yu Tan, immigrated to Canada in 1896, and was part of Canada’s
vast pioneer history in which Chinese-Canadians are frequently
overlooked. “I’m one of the invisible-visible minorities,” he says.
“The Chinese culture I grew up learning from my families really doesn’t
exist anymore. [My ancestors] came over when China was still an
Imperial Qing dynasty.”

Wong’s curiosity about his family history led him to start
introducing Chinese New Year celebrations to uninitiated friends as
early as Grade 12. Years later, in 1998, he hosted a private dinner
that combined celebrations for Chinese New Year and for Robbie Burns
Day, the annual Scottish celebration marking the birthday of that
country’s national poet. The event gained momentum over subsequent
years as a restaurant-hosted fundraiser for Wong’s dragon boat team.

Word of the innovative celebration travelled fast, and within a few
years an annual inter-cultural celebration known as Gung Haggis Fat
Choy became a highlight on Vancouver’s cultural calendar, and has grown
to host as many as 590 attendees.

In 2008, Wong received a B.C. Community Achievement Award from
Lieutenant-Governor Stephen Point and Premier Gordon Campbell, and, as
part of B.C.’s 150th anniversary celebration, a life-sized photographic
rendering of Wong, also known as “Toddish McWong,” was installed at the
“Free Spirit” exhibition at the Royal BC Museum. Previous to earning
provincial recognition, Gung Haggis Fat Choy was the inspiration for an
annual cultural festival on SFU’s Burnaby campus, and was the subject
of a 2004 CBC television special.

“The Gung Haggis dinner is inclusive and it recognizes every part of
every person, and I think that’s important,” says Wong. “We don’t have
to be one or the other. We can be everything, all at the same time. I
don’t think we have a lot of events that speak to that.”

This year’s event, on January 25, rings in the Year of the Ox at
Floata Seafood Restaurant in Chinatown. Inter-cultural dinnertime
performers include the Scottish/Chinese Silk Road Ensemble,
multilingual opera soprano Heather Pawsey, DJ Timothy Wisdom, and
rapping bagpiper Joe McDonald. The Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner is a
10-course traditional Chinese banquet that also features haggis, the
traditional Scottish dish that is a Robbie Burns Day favourite.
Proceeds from ticket sales go to the Historic Joy Kogawa House Society,
the Asian Canadian Writers’ Workshop/Ricepaper magazine, and the Gung
Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team.

“It’s about hybridization — Haggis wonton, haggis lettuce wrap —
where we purposefully put haggis in Chinese cooking,” says Wong.
“People leave saying, ‘That is so Canadian.’”

While Wong often finds himself “running to catch up” with the
momentum Gung Haggis has created over the years, the event shows no
signs of slowing down. It’s even spread to Seattle’s Chinatown, where
150 attended the first event there in 2007. “People are continuing to
discover the spirit of Gung Haggis Fat Choy,” he says. “It’s something
everyone can participate in. I would like to see Gung Haggis dinners
across the country. I think that’s how you contribute to Canada being
better. It’s the good-heartedness of how you describe Canadians, and
that openness to other cultures.”

The “good-heartedness” Wong describes as a trademark of his event
also translates to political points on the municipal scene. At the 2008
Gung Haggis dinner, Wong notes that the 10 Vancouver city councillors
who were later voted into office in the November municipal election
were at the event, including Gregor Robertson and a kilt-wearing
Raymond Louie. This year’s special guests include Musqueam elder Larry
Grant; Leith Davis of the SFU Centre for Scottish Studies; Jan Walls,
formerly of SFU’s International Communications program; and
poet-translator Tommy Tao. This year’s Gung Haggis dinner is also the
only dinner in the province to feature one of 250 limited-edition
bottles of 37-year-old Famous Grouse scotch, made in a limited batch
for Robbie Burns celebrations around the world.

“We’ve always attracted people who are good-hearted and open to
interculturalism,” Wong says proudly. “That’s the Vancouver I see. We
want to create the Vancouver we believe in.”

For more information on Gung Haggis Fat Choy and to buy tickets, visit www.GungHaggisFatChoy.com

“The Famous Grouse” blended whisky is now a proud sponsor of Gung Haggis Fat CHoy

We have a Scotch sponsor!

Modern day Bard pens toast for 2009 Burns' celebrations.

The Famous Grouse” has climbed on board the Gung Haggis Fat Choy Express.

January 25th, 2009 – Sunday
Floata Restaurant
Vancouver Chinatown

This means that we really can use the specially created winning Toast to Robbie Burns.

By Mary MacIntyre:

Tae Rabbie Burns Scotland's Son
Wha' words a million hearts hae won
We fill oor glass o' golden grain
The Famous Grouse we proudly drain
So here's a toast in celebration
Tae Rabbie, tae whisky, tae Scotland Our Nation

It all started with the Gung Haggis Fat Choy Dinner joining Homecoming Scotland's World Famous Burns Supper network.  We became one of 250 Burns dinners in the world to receive the Special limited edition of 37 year old blended “The Famouse Grouse” whisky – made exclusively for the 250th Anniversary of Robbie Burns.

The Chief Executive Phillip Riddell, of Visit Scotland Tourism agency came to Vancouver BC, on Tuesday January 20th, to meet with Todd Wong and present the exclusive bottle.  At the dinner meeting, Todd also presented Phillip Riddell with some of the sample dishes that will be served at the “world famous” Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner.  Deep-fried haggis & shrimp won ton, and haggis pork sumpling sim sum, were served.

And now….  There will be tastings of “The Famous Grouse” blended whisky + single malt scotches “The Macallan” and “Highland Park”

These will start at 5:00pm Reception time.

“The Famous Grouse” is the official sponsor of Homecoming Scotland.

They even created a special limited edition (250 bottles) to celebrate the 250th birthday of Robbie Burns.

And we have a bottle – the only bottle in BC.

Raise Money for your Favourite Charity with Limited edition bottles of The Famous Grouse up for Auction

We will auction it off for charity.  It is valued upwards of $720 to $800 CDN.

OR we just might open it and sell tastings for once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.

You can be part of the World Wide Toast to Robert Burns' 250th Birthday!

If you don't have your ticket to Gung Haggis Fat Choy, it's okay to be embarrassed.  This can be corrected.

Call Todd Wong  – and book a seat for “Gung Haggis Fat Choy” latecomers' table
778-846-7090

No guarantees – as we are now expecting a sell-out.
And well we should!

http://www.burnssupper2009.com/

Gung Haggis Fat Choy – news alerts from around the world

Every Year, there are news stories about Gung Haggis Fat Choy, that go around the world.

Here are the latest stories from the UK, Baltimore USA, and Vancouver's Courier and Georgia Straight papers:

Why Canada will never have an Obama, except maybe Todd Wong
Georgia Straight, Canada – 20 Jan 2009
Here’s my nominee for an Obama in Canada: Todd Wong, the founder of Gung Haggis Fat Choy. The wildly charismatic Vancouverite is a leader in bridging

Call to the Bard
Scotsman, United Kingdom –20 Jan 2009
VANCOUVER: Gung Haggis Fat Choy is an annual cultural event in British Columbia city that blends Canada's rich Scottish and Chinese traditions.
Reference Points
Baltimore Sun, United States – 18 Jan 2009
To cite one example, Heller profiles an annual dinner and performance event in Vancouver – dubbed Gung Haggis Fat Choy – that celebrates the city's Chinese
Spice is nice at Ashiana
Vancouver Courier,  Canada – 16 Jan 2009
25
is Robbie Burns' 250th birthday, yet one more good reason to head down
to Floata Restaurant for the utterly unique, “only in Vancouver,” Gung Haggis Fat
Obama’s inauguration proves that poetry isn’t completely dead, yet
Georgia Straight, Canada – 20 Jan 2009
He has, however, written works for Gung Haggis Fat Choy, the Vancouver International Writers Festival, and other culturati events.

Georgia Straight: Why Canada will never have an Obama, except maybe Todd Wong

2008_Dec 033 by you.

I didn't expect to be in the same Georgia Straight Headline as Obama… but maybe because it's because I am a person of colour?

re: Why Canada will never have an Obama, except maybe Todd Wong

http://www.straight.com/article-197382/why-canada-will-never-have-obama-except-maybe-todd-wong

I told the Georgia Straight's Pieta Woolley –
that it was author Terry Glavin who first told me about bi-racial Gov. James
Douglas's
vision for a British Columbia that could welcome people from
every corner of the world… that it was Douglas who invited Black
Americans from San Francisco when he heard that were being
discriminated against…

BC's history is not the two solitudes
of English and French – but it is the 3 pioneer cultures of First
Nations, Scottish, and Chinese.  But we have had to go through the
Potlatch Law, the Chinese Head Tax and Exclusion Act, the Komagata
Maru, the Internment of Japanese Canadians – before we could understand
ourselves and our future.

It
has taken 150 years for us to finally understand the multicultural/
intercultural vision that Douglas wanted for BC, instead of BC as a
“White Man's Province” in the years that followed Douglas.

The Obama presidency in the United States is historic.  He has a vision to bring people together, to move beyond racial divides, perceived stereotypes and the cultures of blame and “otherness.”

My own life views have been shaped by growing up as a multi-generational racial minority in Canada.  I have learned about the discrimination and hatred faced and overcome by my ancestors, since the time my maternal great-great-grandfather Rev. Chan Yu Tan arrived in 1896, as a Methodist lay preacher for the Chinese Methodist Church of Canada.  Similarly, my paternal grandfather also faced many challenges arriving in Canada in 1882 at the young age of 16.

But I have also learned about the importance of communities working together.  My life path has involved me with many community organizations such as Canadian University Press, Hope Cancer Health Centre, Terry Fox Run Organization, Canadian Mental Health Association, Chinese Cultural Centre, Dr. Sun Yat Sen Gardens, Asian Canadian Writers' Workshop, Vancouver Asian Heritage Month Society, and many many more.

In the past few years, I have learned much about Robert Burns' views on social justice, equality, political change, speaking up for others, love of life.  These are as important today as there were 250 years ago in Burns' time, or 150 years ago in Douglas' time.  Maybe it's actually more important today, because we have the choice to embrace our responsibilities or to take them for granted.  We have the choice today, to choose to be selfish or community minded.  We have the choice today –  not tomorrow – not yesterday, but the choice is today –  to make a difference or not.

Why Canada will never have an Obama, except maybe Todd Wong

Yesterday (January 20), the world’s most powerful man placed his hand on Lincoln’s Bible and became the 44th president of the U.S. Next week, on a dark day in Ottawa, Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s government will present a budget, and a coalition led by Michael Ignatieff, Jack Layton, and Gilles Duceppe might take the opportunity to bring it down.

While the U.S. has its super-leader, Canada has the old, clichéd
“crisis in leadership”. Looking south, it’s easy to feel, well, a
little jealous.

So, who is Canada’s Barack Obama? Who can lead us out of years of deadlocked minorities?

I argue that not only is an Obama figure not waiting in the wings; he or she simply can’t exist here.

Here’s why: Obama represents the high-minded ideals of the 1791 U.S.
Bill of Rights, while Canada treats our history like yesterday’s soup
cans.

Americans love their history. In his inaugural speech—really, in every
speech—Obama took every opportunity to join his personal story to the
greater story of the United States. It’s an easy connection to make.
For Canada to breed an Obama, we have to have a better picture of what
Canada means, and promote someone who’s comfortable tying his or her
own story to Canada’s not-always-glorious history.

As a kid, Obama grew up without a dad around, in relative obscurity. He
is the biracial son of an African immigrant and a white-bread Kansas
hippie, and was raised by his grandmother in Hawaii. Now he’s
president. That speaks to opportunity.

Think quick: what document was Canada built on? If you guessed the British North America Act of 1867, you’re right. It’s not exactly stirring stuff.

Frankly, it would be difficult to know if someone came along who
represented the early ideals of Canada. He or she must speak English
and French and respect the authority of the Queen’s representative, but
apart from that, it’s pretty fuzzy.

So who is Canada’s Obama? Justin Trudeau’s name
has been floated, but there’s a couple of problems. First, he’s
Canadian royalty—the son of a prime minister, he has been immersed in
privilege forever. Second, he’s a white guy. Third, he hasn’t
established a career for himself yet, beyond teaching high school
French. Sure, he’s a young dad, charismatic, attractive, and extremely
well-spoken, but he’s already entrenched in party politics. And that is
Obama’s magic. He seemingly came out of nowhere.

Here’s my nominee for an Obama in Canada: Todd Wong, the founder of Gung Haggis Fat Choy.

The wildly charismatic Vancouverite is a leader in bridging cultures
in an unpretentious, original way. His Gung Haggis Fat Choy event has
been replicated all over the world. A fifth-generation Chinese
Canadian, Wong also lobbied to save Joy Kogawa’s childhood home and for head-tax redress. He organizes dragon-boat teams.

But what’s sold me on Wong as Canada’s Obama is that he’s a Vancouver
library assistant. It’s a humble job, but it’s a little like Obama’s
background as a community organizer. At least the way Wong does it.

On the picket line in 2007, he played his accordion and organized a strike reading series with Hiromi Goto, Stan Persky,
and others. At Gung Haggis Fat Choy, politicians from every party come
out for deep fried haggis wontons. He describes the event, to be celebrated this year on January 25 at Floata Seafood Restaurant in Chinatown, as something that “represents Canada in the 21st century”.

“Anyone in that room could be part of your family,” he told the Straight.

Here’s where it falls apart. Wong has no interest in politics.

“If I get into politics, I wouldn’t be able to do the kind of community service work I do now,” he told the Straight.

That may be true, Todd. But I, for one, think that as prime minister
you could be one wicked Obama-esque orator, reinvigorate our connection
to history, and offer a fresh face to represent the new Canada.

So, how about it?