Category Archives: Chinese Canadian History

Oldest Surviving Chinese Head Tax Subject Gets Compensation

Oldest Surviving Chinese Head Tax Subject Gets
Compensation

The oldest surviving head tax payer received his ex-gratia payment on Saturday March 10th.  Ralph
Lung Kee Lee is 107 years old.  Amazing that he was able to live
this long despite the hardships faced by Chinese pioneers in Canada, as
well as the systemic racism which included denial of citizenship,
naturalization and voting rights.

Victor Wong, executive director of the Chinese Canadian National
Council gives an account of the event attended by CCNC president
Colleen Hua.  The event was covered by Citynews in Toronto.

It was an emotional moment for all of
us who were present at the cheque presentation
yesterday for Ralph Lung Kee Lee. Those of you who
went to Ottawa
on June 22, 2006 will remember Mr. Lee wheeling around Parliament and at our
banquet that evening. He was one of 6 HT payers to receive an apology personally
from PM Stephen Harper that day. Mr. Lee turned 107 yesterday and he is one of
the oldest HT payers, if not the oldest surviving HT payer.  And there he was surrounded by a huge
extended family. MP Colin Carrie presented the cheque
(and received the 30-second lobby on inclusive redress from each of us).
Colleen, George and Doug spoke. Landy, Mr. Lee’s granddaughter, was the MC. We
had a huge feast c/o Bright Pearl and the story was covered by City TV and
various local and Chinese papers.

There’s another cheque presentation tomorrow in
Calgary …good luck to
Teresa and crew. There is an event on the book about the Three Chinese
Cuban-Generals in Vancouver today and tomorrow,
and in Montreal on March 17th and
Toronto on March
25th where we will be talking about HT redress (check below for more
details).

Cheers, Victor

Oldest Surviving Chinese Head Tax Subject Gets Compensation

Watch

Video News Director Watch

Oldest Surviving Chinese Head Tax Subject Gets Compensation

Saturday March 10, 2007

Saturday was Ralph Lee's 107th birthday, but for the Canadian, who just
happens to also be the oldest surviving subject of Canada 's infamous
Chinese head tax, it was also the day he finally got the compensation
and apology he'd waited so many years for.

“Apart from the fact that I'm happy that grandpa's alive to receive the
apology, it's a mixture of emotions,” said grand-daughter Landy
Anderson.

Fron 1885 to 1923 Chinese immigrants in Canada were charged a head tax.
Lee himself paid $500, which at the time was two years pay for the
young man.

“When he came over here he worked pretty hard to make a living,” said daughter Faye Lee.

“He was only 12 years old and he had to work in a restaurant and wash dishes while going to school at the same time.”

Lee was one of many in attendance last June in Ottawa when the Canadian
government announced both the compensation and released an apology for
the tax and the ensuing 24-year ban on Chinese immigration.

“On behalf of the people and government of Canada we offer a full
apology to Chinese Canadians for the head tax and express our deepest
sorrow for the subsequent exclusion of Chinese immigrants,” Prime
Minister Stephen Harper said that day.

That apology came with a $20,000 settlement offered to surviving head
tax subjects or their spouses, though for some of their descendents
that's nowhere near enough.

“It's a wonderful thing that there was an apology, and that redress has
been given to surviving head tax payers and spouses, but this really
only represents 0.6 per cent of the people who really suffered,” said
attendee Colleen Hua.

Currently only about 500 Chinese Canadians are eligible for the
compensation. If the offer were extended to the families of those who
paid the head tax – 3,000 people would be eligible.

The Chinese Head Tax

http://www.citynews.ca/news/news_8644.aspx

Feb 23, 1887 Anti-Chinese Riot Remembered.. .120 years ago today

Feb 23, 1887 Anti-Chinese Riot Remembered… 120 years ago today

My paternal grandfather Wong Wah, arrived in Canada in 1882 and he
lived in Victoria.  My maternal great-great-grandfather Rev. Chan
Yu Tan, arrived in Canada in 1896, following his elder brother Rev.
Chan Sing Kai, who had come to Canada in 1888 to help found the Chinese
Methodist Church a year after the anti-Chinese 1887 riot.

It's amazing that it took 120 years for Chinese to now be considered
part of Canadian history and contributors to building Canadian
society.  But it wasn't always so… Even as late as the 1950's
and 1960's there was still much systemic racism.

Read the story below about the 1887 Anti-Chinese Riot in Vancouver.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

February 23,
2007

1887 Anti-Chinese Riot Remembered

TORONTO .
The Chinese Canadian National Council (CCNC) marked the 120th
anniversary today of the anti-Chinese riot that took place in
Vancouver . “We mark this anniversary
today because it is part of our community’s unique history in facing the
overt and often violent manifestation of racial discrimination that resulted in
the Head Tax and Chinese Exclusion Act,” Sid Tan, National Chairperson of
CCNC said today. “We should all take this opportunity to learn from our
past mistakes, to restore dignity to the direct victims and to re-dedicate
ourselves to a just society built on the foundations of respect and acceptance.”

“We are encouraged by the messages of solidarity from Hon. Jason
Kenney,
Secretary
of State (Multiculturalism and Canadian Identity)
and the Statement in
the House of Commons by Bill Siksay, M.P. for
Burnaby-Douglas.”

After the 1886
Great Fire razed Vancouver ,
the City leased 60 hectares of forested land to some 100 Chinese. However,
this
was the
beginning of the Head Tax era, a period of overt racial discrimination
against Chinese Canadians, which was legitimized by racist legislation. M
ounting
racist sentiment culminated in a riot on February 23, 1887 when an angry mob of
300 assembled to run the Chinese out of town. They tore down the shanty-town
near Coal
Harbour and
roughed up the Chinese, some of whom managed to escape harm by jumping into the
frigid waters.

Two policemen
invoking the name of ‘Queen Victoria ’
stood their ground in between the mob and the Chinese labourers.
The mob soon retreated but set fire to buildings.
The 1887 riot also
sparked a prompt response from police and government officials. The BC Attorney
General
introduced An Act for the
Preservation of Peace within the Municipal Limits of the City
which
removed police powers from the city and sent over thirty-six special constables
from Victoria ,
B.C. to restore the peace. While the riot ended without any death or serious
injury, it did send a clear message to the Chinese that they were not welcome
and they left
Vancouver for
New Westminster , and some moved east to Alberta
and Ontario.The Chinese did eventually return to
Vancouver .

CCNC will work with partners to mark a number of important
anniversaries this year:

February 23, 2007:       120
year anniversary of the Anti-Chinese Riot in
Vancouver

April 17, 2007:               25 year anniversary of Charter of
Rights

May 14, 2007:               60 year anniversary of repeal of
Chinese Exclusion Act

June 10, 2007:               50 year anniversary of election of
Douglas Jung, the first CC MP

June 22, 2007:                 1 year anniversary of
Chinese Head Tax apology

Canada Day, 2007:      140
years of Confederation

September 8, 2007:      100
year anniversary of Anti-Asian Riot in Vancouver

October 1, 2007:            40 years of independent immigration
(points) system

CCNC recently led a delegation to Ottawa to seek inclusive redress for
the head tax families who are excluded from the June 22, 2006 announcement, and
will continue to work collaboratively with other redress-seeking groups to seek
a just and honourable resolution of the Head Tax and
Chinese Exclusion Act.

 

-30-

 

For media interviews, please contact:
Sid Tan, CCNC National Chairperson at (604) 433-6169
Victor Wong, CCNC Executive Director at (416) 977-9871

end

Ottawa ,
February 22, 2007

By Jason Kenney

Secretary of State
(Multiculturalism and Canadian Identity)

Secretary of State Kenney Regrets 120th Anniversary
of Anti-Chinese riot in Vancouver

Jason Kenney, MP, PC, Secretary of State (Multiculturalism and
Canadian Identity) sends his personal expressions of regret and solidarity with
Chinese Canadians in Vancouver
on the occasion of the 120th Anniversary of the Anti-Chinese Riot of
1887.

“The Riot of February 23, 1887 is one of the regrettable
episodes in the history of the Chinese in
Canada ,” Kenney said.

“It is also an occasion to recognize the role that our
police have played in maintaining peace, order, and good government. In this
case, police invoked the name of Queen Victoria
to protect the Chinese minority from a violent mob. It’s a reminder that
the Crown is the traditional protector of minorities in our great
country.”

“That a
rioting mob set fire to the private property of Vancouver's Chinese community
this day 120 years ago should serve as a reminder that we should cherish and
uphold a just and tolerant society.”

Information


Tenzin Khangsar

Chief of Staff

Office
of the Secretary of State

(Multiculturalism
and Canadian Identity)

819
934-1122

Douglas Jung film biography “I AM the Canadian Delegate” airs this Sunday, Feb 18th

Douglas Jung film biography “I AM the Canadian Delegate” airs this Sunday, Feb 18th

 Watch
“I Am the Canadian Delegate” this coming Sunday, February 18th, on
Chinese New Year Day, Film maker Wesley Lowe recently completed the
documentary
biography on Douglas Jung, WWII Veteran and Canada's first Chinese
Member of Parliament.

 
There was a private screening on Sunday, February 5th, for a hundred politicians, funders,
community leaders and veterans group.  Lowe wrote to me and said “In addition to applause, there
was a most unexpected response – tears, not only for the man but for a
community.”

In BC, it will air on Channel M at 9:00 pm.
Nationally, it will air on the Biography Channel at  8pm and 11pm
Eastern Standard time.

I
first met Douglas Jung at an mid 1980's Head Tax meeting at Strathcona
Community Centre.  Then, he seemed tall, and elegant with his
white hair, wearing a turtle neck.  He spoke very well and told
the story about how Chinese-Canadians were pecieved both in Ottawa and
the world.  When he led the Canadian delegation to the United
Nations.  When he approached the desk marked “Canada” – he was
motioned away, and was told that the Chinese desk was over there – this
is for the Canadian delegate.  Jung's reply was “I am the Canadian
delegate.”

Jung led an amazing life.  He signed up as a
soldier when Canada didn't want Chinese-Canadian soldiers.  He was
part of Operation Oblivion – Chinese-Canadians who were trained as
commando troops to go behind enemy lines in Burma and Southeast Asia.

Returning
to Canada, the Chinese Canadian veterans led the fight to gain the
francise for Canadians born of Chinese ancestry, so we could have full
citizenship rights and voting privileges.

Douglas Jung became
the first Chinese-Canadian Member of Parliament in 1957 for Vancouver
Centre. He ran as a Progressive Conservative because the Mackenzie King
Liberals had passed the Exclusion Act and wrote the secret memorandum
discriminating against Chinese, and keeping them out of the Candian
Armed Forces during WW2, until Great Britain and Churchill asked Canada
for soldiers who spoke Chinese.

Jung recieved many honours during his lifetime, including both the Order of BC, and the Order of Canada.

Here are links for Douglas Jung O.C.

Order of BC Biography – Douglas Jung

Douglas Jung – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Burma Star biography: Jung

Polygamy and Head Tax: what's the point? Only 0.7% of head tax certificates are being recognized anyways!

Polygamy and Head Tax: what's the point?  Only 0.5% of head tax certificates are being recognized anyways!



(revised Feb 13, 11:30pm)

The Vancouver Sun, today on Monday February 12th, published an alarmist story Polygamy warning issued on head tax: Federal government told redress program might raise 'huge' legal issues
about a non-issue regarding the possibility of multiple claimants as
surviving spouses of head tax payers.  It was a front page
headline on page A1. 

This is a 'huge' non-story because
99.95% of the 81,000 head tax payers from 1885 to 1923 are already
dead.  Only 44 head tax survivors applied for the $20,000
ex-gratia payment.  Only 337 widowed spouses have applied for the
ex-gratia payment.  The government is still REFUSING to recognize
any head tax certificates where both payer and spouses are predeceased,
even if there are surviving sons or daughters.  Less than 1% of
the 81,000 head tax payments are being recognized – only half a percent – 0.5%!

Who
really cares if one dead head tax payer had 2 or 3 wives?  The
chances of more than one being still alive is less than any of the
original head tax certificates being honoured.   We should be
thankful that anybody is still alive at this late point.  And the
government will still only honour one payment per certificate, so
what's the point of the article – other than being alarmist?

Blame the head tax for imposing the high costs that kept families
apart, or for making it a financial hardship to bring a wife to
Canada.  Blame the Chinese Exclusion Act from 1923 to 1947 for
driving married men to start up a new family in Canada, or remain a
bachelor for the rest of their life because of the scarcity of Chinese
women.

Who really cares if Chinese men had 2 or 3 wives, the Canadian
government at the time believed that Chinese would not make good
citizens, would not contribute to the development of Canadian society,
would not stay to live in Canada… and consequently the Canadian
government would not grant naturalization or full citizenship rights
nor even voting privileges to Canadians born in Canada of Chinese
ancestry.

I personally know of stories where families became separated because of
the head tax and Exclusion Act, then believed each other dead or
missing because of loss of communication because of both civil war in
China, and WW2.  The husbands re-married in Canada, resulting in a
second wife.  This is NOT polygamy.

When families were later rediscovered and/or reunited after the war –
the existence of another family caused great anguish to the wives and
families.  It even drove some wives to suicide – both in China and
Canada.

The real story is that:

1)  The government has trouble reconciling justice without
admitting it was previously wrong, and continuing to deny true justice
for Chinese head tax payers, spouses and descendants – short of giving
a refund for a wrongful and a racially discriminating tax.

2) 
The government didn't know how to recognize a “full apology,” give
symbolic compensation to surviving head tax payers and spouses, without
being seen as unfair to descendants whose head tax paying parents and
grandparents are pre-deceased.   

3)  The government continues NOT to consult and negotiate with
actual head tax descendants such as they did with actual
Japanese-Canadian internment survivors for the historic 1988 Japanese
Canadian redress

4)  The government monitors the Chinese language media in an
effort to appeal to the Chinese language immigrant vote, to be seen as
“multicultural.” They see the immigrant Chinese language voting group
as more important than English speaking, born in Canada, head tax
descendants.

Activist groups such as the Chinese Canadian National Council
and the BC Coalition of Head Tax Payers and Familes, said “One payment
for each certificate.”  Event though 99.95% of the original head
tax payers are already dead, both the present and past governments do
not want to to incur a potentially expensive redress to descendants.

But head tax activists are only asking for symbolic but fair
redress.  How can you give a payment to some people but say no to
others by saying “Sorry, your parents and grandparents are already
dead.  Too bad they couldn't survive long enough after unfair and
racist laws made extreme hardships for them.”

My paternal
grandfather had a total of 6 wives, of whom my paternal grandmother is
wife #5.  He came to Canada at age 16, around 1882.  He would
have married his wives during his visits back in China, or in
absentia.  In those days, if you were wealthy you could afford
multiple wives or concubines – especially if wives #1, #2, #3, and #4 didn't
give you any children.  Because my grandfather was living in Canada,
and his wives were in China, he wouldn't have been properly able to
look after them, while he tried to raise money to pay the head tax to
bring them to Canada. We don't know what happened to wives #1,
#2, #3 or #4.   But grandfather did bring wives #5 and #6 to
Canada.  And he would have had to pay the head tax for each of his
wives, and the money would have gone into the Canadian governmnent's
bank account because there was no income tax in those days.

I
was told that my grandmother, wife #5, was the only one to have her
marriage recognized in Canada.  She was the one that lived with
grandfather through his last years in their tiny appartment in
Strathcona, on the edge of Chinatown.  He died in 1964, and she
died in 1968. 

If grandfather had survived to see head
tax redress in 2006, he would have been 140 years old.  Grandma
died when she was 73, if she was still alive in 2006 she would have
been 111.  My point is that head tax redress came too late for the
head tax payers and their spouses.  Every certificate should be
honoured.  If the original payer or spouse is predeceased, the
symbolic ex-gratia payment should be given to their descendants.

The
Chinese protested when the first head tax of $50 was levied in
1895, and they protested when it was raised to $500, and again they
protested when the “Chinese Exclusion Act” was created in 1923. 
After WW2, returning Chinese Canadians who fought for Canada, were able
to gain the voting franchise for Canadians born of Chinese ancestry in
1947.  As well, the “Chinese Immigration Act” known as the
“Chinese Exclusion Act” was repealed.

In
1984, the first head tax redress campaign was launched when an elderly
man went to his MP, Margaret Mitchell, to ask for help in reclaiming
the head tax money.  In 1988, the Mulroney Conservative government
apologized and gave redress for the internment of Japanese-Canadians
and the confiscation of their property.  However, despite
discussions about Chinese head tax redress, subsequent Canadian
governments refused to bring a closure to 62 years of legislated racism.

Finally on June 22, 2006, Conservative Prime Minister Harper offered an apology for Chinese Head Tax,
and expressed his “deepest sorrow” (but no apology) for the Chinese
Exclusion Act, while promising to give symbolic individual payments of
$20,000 to living Chinese Head Tax payers and living spouses of
deceased payers. 

Meanwhile, a possible 381 head tax
certificates are recognized while an estimated 80,600 are
ignored?  This is not fair recognition!

And now… a
non-story about possible multiple surviving wives making the same
claims on a possible head tax certificate gets a front page story in
the Vancouver Sun?

Contrast this non-news item with the very real news of  Head Tax Payer Charlie Quan receiving the first head tax – The Vancouver Sun buried the picture and story on page B8, and ran a self-congratulatory front page on their list of 100 Influential Chinese Canadians in BC 
which was criticized by prominent community leaders for whom the list
left out, while including people of Chinese ancestry who most likely
weren't Canadian citizens if they've only been in Canada for 1
year.  Isn't the definition of a Chinese-Canadian somebody who is
actually born in Canada? or a Canadian citizen of Chinese ancestry?

Anyways… this latest non-story.

Government warned of legal problems from head tax
http://www.canada.com/topics/news/national/story.html?id=a59347f2-
acbc-4365-8ef4-e65119945e11&k=34946

Polygamy warning issued on head tax: Federal government told redress program might raise 'huge' legal issues

The Vancouver Sun, 12 Feb 2007
Dateline: OTTAWA
Byline: Peter O'Neil

OTTAWA
— The Conservative government, which last year announced a Chinese
head tax redress program, had earlier received internal warnings that
the initiative might raise “huge” legal problems and possibly risk
offending community members over the issue of polygamy, The Vancouver
Sun has learned.
“On the issue of Chinese spouses, we risk offending
the community by 'exposing' the whole polygamy question,” stated an
unsigned Canadian Heritage briefing note prepared in early 2006. It was
obtained through the Access to Information Act by researcher Ken Rubin.
“In
fact, this will be a failure in the eyes of the community and will be
seen as a perpetuation of a 'wrong today' unless we can develop an
approach which treats all forms of spouses in a dignified and gracious
manner and which recognizes their experience without unduly exposing
the whole issue of polygamous unions or 'non-legal' marriages.”
The
briefing note added: “Of course, this does not address the bigger
question of Charter 'retroactivity' which, as you know, we believe is a
'HUGE' issue.”
The warning referred to concerns that the government
could expose taxpayers to enormous costs if it provides retroactive
compensation for rights violations before the Charter of Rights'
equality provision came into force in 1985.
Another internal
document, stamped “secret” and obtained by The Sun Friday, also warned
the former Liberal cabinet on June 21, 2005, that redress for
Chinese-Canadians would “increase substantially” the Canadian
government's exposure to legal action from numerous ethnic minority
groups seeking compensation for racial injustices.
Prime Minister
Stephen Harper apologized last June to Chinese-Canadians and promised
$20,000 payments to surviving head tax payers or the spouses of
deceased head tax payers to recognize an historical injustice.
Canada,
after welcoming some 15,000 Chinese labourers to help build the
Canadian Pacific Railway, imposed a $50 tax on Chinese immigrants
starting in 1885. The tax gradually rose to $500 before legislation in
1923 banned Chinese until that law was repealed in 1947.
Canadian
Heritage spokesman Len Westerberg said Friday that the legal issue was
addressed by making clear the $20,000 payments to head tax payers and
widows announced last June were “ex gratia” and voluntary.
That was
the same terminology used by the federal government in 1988 when it
provided a $422-million redress program for Japanese-Canadians and
their immediate descendants interned during the Second World War.
Westerberg,
asked about the polygamy issue raised in the documents, noted that the
payments to spouses could only go to women in “exclusive conjugal”
relationships.
The newly released documents state that many
marriages performed in China until the 1940s “were either potentially
or actually polygamous.” Most head tax payers in Canada would have
married in China, either before leaving for Canada or during a trip to
their home country, it said.
Neither Victor Wong, executive-director
of the Chinese Canadian National Council, nor former Liberal
multiculturalism minister Raymond Chan said they were aware of serious
government concerns over the possibility that more than one spouse
might claim to be the widow of the same head tax payer.
Multiculturalism
Minister Jason Kenney denounced the former government on May 5, 2006,
for relying on legal concerns as an “excuse” for not apologizing and
providing redress.
Kenney, who was then Harper's parliamentary secretary, relied on an Aug. 5, 2004 briefing note to Chan.
That
note concluded that Chinese-Canadians and other aggrieved groups would
have difficulty making a successful Charter of Rights challenge for the
same treatment that Japanese-Canadians got in 1988. The government has
always maintained that the Japanese-Canadian experience was unique.
But
the 2005 cabinet document obtained by The Sun indicates a redress
package for Chinese-Canadians would “increase substantially … the
risk of litigation by a broader field of communities seeking similar
treatment.”
One internal document said Canadians of Ukrainian,
Italian, Jewish, Indo-Canadian, German, Polish, Czech, Slovak,
Croatian, Bulgarian, Austrian, Turkish and Romanian descent could make
claims with respect to alleged mistreatment during the First and Second
World Wars. So could members of the Mennonite, Hutterite and Doukhobor
religions.
“If the government were to accept any or all of the new
redress proposals [from Chinese-Canadians and other groups], its
ability to defend the Japanese redress payments as unique and
unparalleled, and hence not subject to section 15 of the Charter, would
be undermined,” states the 2005 cabinet briefing note.
Another
internal document cited a current case before the Supreme Court of
Canada, in which five gay plaintiffs are asking for survivor pension
benefits dating back to when the Charter of Rights' equality provision
took effect in 1985.
Canadian recognition of historical injustices
pre-dating the Charter of Rights risks “adversely influencing” the
Supreme Court decision in the gay pension case, the Canadian Heritage
documents on the head tax issue warned.
It added that a head tax
redress package dating back to matters decades before the Charter took
effect “creates a further risk that a court may treat this as a legal
precedent and require the government to do so in all federal laws that
extend benefits.”
The document also warns about possible court challenges that the government's redress package is unfair.
“If
the payments are made to all spouses, then other family members may
challenge these payments on the basis that they discriminate on the
ground of family status under the Charter,” it warns.
“For example,
the head tax payer may have had children who were alive during that era
and so were more directly affected by the hardships associated with the
tax than a more recent spouse who may have no direct connection to the
harm suffered.”
Kenney said Sunday the government stands by its decision.
“The
bottom line is that lawyers can make an argument for or against any
course of action. It's up to political leaders to apply common sense,
and make principled decisions,” Kenney said in an e-mail to The Sun.
“That's what Stephen Harper did in making the apology for the Chinese head tax.”
Westerberg
said 44 applications from head tax payers have been filed, and in 37 of
those cases $20,000 cheques have already been mailed out.
Another 337 applicants from widowed spouses have been filed, he said, but those claims still haven't been processed.
The
CCNC's Wong said his group agrees with the warnings in briefing notes
that the government is being unfair to some head tax victims.
He
said his group wants the government to expand the program, at a cost of
at least $60 million, by giving $20,000 cheques to each of the 3,000
families of descendants of head tax payers.
Wong, who said Harper
has done more to advance the issue than any of his last six
predecessors, said his group has no plans to spoil current goodwill by
heading to the courts.
“There probably will not be any legal action. We'll just keep pressing the issue,” Wong said.
Patrick
Monahan, dean of the Osgoode Hall Law School at York University in
Toronto, said it's not clear if other groups will be able to use the
Chinese head tax package in court.
“I'm inclined to think that ex-gratia payments do not give rise to a legal obligation in other cases,” he said.
“But
the more such payments are made, I think the more difficult it is to
resist claims of equal treatment. So I think there is some risk
associated with that.”
poneil1@hotmail.com
– – –
COUNTING THE COST
Ottawa
used “actuarial estimates and assumptions” to calculate the number of
living head-tax payers and their descendants existing in 2006. The
multiple wives question was included, as shown below.
110 head-tax payers
229 Spouses of the era (1 wife)
458 Spouses of era (2 wives)
293 Spouses of era and present (1 wife)
586 Spouses of era and present (2 wives)
2,045 Descendants (if 1 wife/1 child)
6,135 Descendants of era
12,270 Descendants (assuming 2 wives/3 children each)
Ran with fact box “Counting the cost”, which has been appended to the end of the story.
Colour Photo: Certificate

Dragon Boys, CBC mini-series premieres Sunday January 7 – inside scoop from Kwoi

Dragon Boys, CBC mini-series premieres Sunday January 7
– inside scoop from Kwoi

Dragon Boys (Part 2) (2006)

CBC's Dragon Boys is the heavily anticipated drama about Chinese gang
life in the Vancouver/Richmond community.  I first heard about the
project when my friend Jim Wong-Chu (Asian Canadian Writer's Workshop)
became one of the cultural consultants for the project.  Jim was
excited, because this was the first time CBC or CTV was creating a
mini-series on Chinese Canadians.  There would be lead roles and
story themes – not just supporting roles in side bar stories. 

See the story in the Georgia Straight where Dragon Boys director talks
about the importance of having community counsultants filmaker Colleen
Leung and Jim Wong-Chu: http://www.straight.com/article/dragon-boys-shoot-for-truth.
Also check out what Jim wrote about Chinese Canadian history for the In Context section on the Dragon Boys website.

While this is all good.  The next step will see CBC creating a
mini-series about multigeneration Chinese-Canadians beyond any
stereotypes of “typical immigrants,” “gang members,” and
“prostititutes.”  Gee… maybe they will watch the upcoming CBC
Generations documentary on the Rev. Chan Yu Tan family – my seven
generation Chinese-Canadian family. see: GungHaggisFatChoy :: Generations Rev. Chan Yu Tan

My friend Kwoi in Toronto sent out the following letter to friends
across the country giving people his personal view with some inside
scoops.  With Kwoi's permission – here is his letter:

Dragon Boys, the two part mini-series
is airing this coming Sunday and Monday, Jan 7 and 8 at 8 pm to 10 pm.
Working closely with the Asian Community, Writer/Exec Producer Ian Weir
did a great job keeping it real, working with material outside his own
culture. It stars some of my TO friends Jean Yoon & Simon Wong.
Simon's character was especially real for me personally as I had
started a youth gang upon my early arrival in Toronto. We even called
ourselves “Nine Dragons” as there were initially nine of us from the
same hood in Kowloon (translates 9 Dragons). I started the gang as a
means of survival. I was constantly getting beat up after school by
trailer trash bullies. The same trailer trash that were portray in
Dragon Boys. My gang involvement strained my relationship with my dad
whose Baldwin St eatery was struggling with extortion threats from the
triad at the time. Watching the preview on Tuesday night was like
having my childhood flash me by.

The cast worked hard at keeping it real. The character of Chavy Pahn
was changed from Chinese to Cambodian to reflect current immigration
patterns, Stephanie Song, who had already been cast in the role, had to
learn to deliver her lines in Khmer. Byron also objected to his
character’s wife being changed to Chinese because he saw his character
as a banana who “grew up thinking he’s a white man, a guy who has never
dated Asian women.” Unlike most Hollywood depictions of Asian males as
de-sexualized monk like beings, it was refreshing to see the brothers
hooking up with White Woman on the big screen. Thanx Byron, Lawrence
& the Dragon Boys  for “getting some” on behalf of the
brothers.

It could have easily been another Asian exploitation flick like Year Of
The Dragon, with the dominant culture's set of assumptions about power
relationships and power structures which is completely skewed towards
the White perspective, but keeping it real with all the family &
human stories really made the piece into a Chinese Canadian Sopranos if
you will. Excellent performance from the cast including the amazing
Eric Tsang (the Asian De Niro) who my friend Jean Yoon got to slap
around for real.

The Canucks have been known to follow their American counterparts
politically as well as culturally. The Americans pass the Head Tax Law,
they follow. The Americans pass the Exclusion Act, they follow. The
Americans started the Japanese Internment, they follow. Finally,
they've initiated something positive for their American counterparts to
envy over. The American networks are in envy & amazement how an
all-Asian lead cast without any White leads can be made possible. This
would not have been a reality in the States. Now if we can only get our
own writers, producers & directors in there…

Dragon Boys is a dark & gritty right-between-the-eyes crime story.
Please check it out & forward this to anyone you think might enjoy
it. Oh heck…on 2nd thought, forward it to them even if you think they
might not enjoy it! Cheers!

 

Banana Kowboy.
 
Check out sites here
 
http://www.dragonboys.ca/

http://www.schemamag.ca/Dragon_Boys/
 
And Articles:

http://jam.canoe.ca/Television/2007/01/01/3116203-cp.html

Chinese Canadian Head Tax issue one of 2006's top events

Chinese Canadian Head Tax issue one of 2006's top events



So was it? or wasn't it?

The Chinese head tax issue made
top newsmaker in every chinese media's year end review.  But was
rarely seen in English Language media year end summaries. 

Top
Chinese-Canadian stories listed by Susanna Ng includes Head Tax redress
apology plus the resignation by Michael Chong over recognizing Quebec
as a “nation” within a united Canada.  see Susanna's
Chinese in Vancouver: Year end review  and her stories on Chinese Head Tax.

But
Chinese head tax should be more than just an “ethnic issue.” It is a
Canadian issue.  Canadian parliament charged a head tax from 1895
until 1923 when parliament creeated the “Chinese exclusion act” which
lasted until 1947.  That's 52 years of legislated racism! Oh…
plus an additional 49 years without an apology – not to mention a tax
refund.

Chinese
language media was a leading force in the head tax issue, covering it
almost  every day during the election campaign after November
25th, when 200 people protested the Liberal signing of the ACE program
– see

Chinese Head Tax: Protest in Vancouver Chinatown.


English Language media still seemed slow on this issue, often relegating it to ethnic issue side bar stories.  The first real head tax story in the Vancouver Sun was from Toronto head tax descendant Brad Lee who wrote The liberals bungle a great opportunity to do the right thing: This was followed by Daphne Bramham's Dec, 2 column
Compensate Chinese immigrants fairly:
  I didn't see an actual news story in the Vancouver Sun, until Dec 8 when
Stephen Harper and Conservatives jump on the Head Tax apology band wagon
.   


But also notable was the coverage by the Georgia Straight's Charlie Smith. Head tax unites activists,
Georgia Straight: Harper Stickhandles Redress
as well CBC Radio did a number of audience call-in shows + interviews with head tax redress activists. 

At
year end of 2005, Chinese head tax was listed in the top ten by a
number of Asian newspapers, citing it to have both importance for
Canada, as well as global importance.  Last year, this time, the
Chinese Head Tax emerged as the sleeper issue for the January 2006
Federal Election.  Three Conservative candidates broke from Stephen
Harper's former No Apology stance, to join with the NDP, Bloc Quebecois and
Green Party.  Then with the Liberals facing themselves behind the
Conservatives in polling, Liberal PM Paul Martin mumbled a so-called
personal apology about head tax on Fairchild Chinese language radio
station, but would not commit to a formal governmental apology – nor
did he repeat the same “apology” for English language media.   see:
Political debate heats up over Chinese head tax.

Then on June 22nd, the 
Head Tax Apology Ceremony

finally happened.  In the days leading up, English language media
finally got on the head tax band wagon, literally, by putting reporters
on the head tax redress train from Vancouver to Ottawa

In October, The Vancouver Sun even put together a list of 100 Influential Chinese Canadians in BC…
listing head tax activist Sid Tan.  But while the Sun made it
their lead feature on the front page, they relegated a story about
Charlie Quan receiving the first head tax redress cheque to backwater pages in the West Coast section.  Even the Globe & Mail had made it the lead story in their BC edition.

But
Head Tax redress groups say the Conservative government hasn't gone far
enough for a just an honourable redress, only honouring 0.6% of a total
81,000 head tax certificates that were issued from 1885 to 1923. 
Only surviving head tax payers and spouses will receive a $20,000
ex-gratia payment.  And it took the government months and months
to settle on the definition of a spouse, even asking that

Proof must be provided that the person was ordinarily residing with the
Head Tax Payer in a conjugal relationship of some permanence that would
be, as an indication, for at least a year.”
  see  Head Tax – Applicant's Guide


Meanwhile,
the Conservative cabinet ministers and MP's make a big photo
opportunity of presenting the ex-gratia payments to senior citizens in
the '90's, at great distress and effort on behalf of this very aged
seniors.  My own maternal grandmother is 96 years old, and is much
too weak to be trotted out for display.  And the irony is that
there will be NO ex-gratia payment for her father's head tax
certificates because he died back in the 1920's.  Any family whose
head tax paying parents or their spouses died prior to the
Conservatives reaching power in February 2006 is out of luck.  Too
bad… so sad…

Chinese-Canadian head tax redress is still burning up the blogs.  Susanna Ng has created a poll listing Top news of importance to CC society in 2006. And yes… head tax is leading the polls.

David Wong also writes about it for his year end observation the-tax-on-giving-head on his blog titiled  The Ugly Chinese Canadian and “struck a nerve” with many readers getting many comments including my own.

If
anything, the head tax redress campaign served as a wonderful history
lesson for all Canadians.  It also exposed past racism as well as
present bigotry and ignorance.

Will the Conservative government follow through on the two stage redress process proposed by the Chinese Canadian National Council, or will they stall at only honouring 0.6% of head tax certificates?

Will
the Liberals under Stephane Dion step up to the plate, eager to one-up
the Conservatives, after opening up the redress can of worms with their
appallingly underwhelming ACE program for acknowledgement,
commemoration and education of head tax redress, not even considering a
formal apology or individual compensation which the Mulroney
Conservatives did for Japanese-Canadian internment redress?

Will
the NDP, Bloc Quebecois and Green Party, continue to support individual
compensation for head tax descendants whose original payers left them
in care of the head tax certificates, hoping that one day there would
be a tax refund?

All I can say is this:
I will continue to
support head tax redress for descendants whose ancestors are
predeceased for the present Conservative ex-gratia program.
I will continue to blog and attend head tax issues and events.
I believe in social justice, and that each head tax certificate should be treated equally.

The
Chinese Year of the Dog is not over until February 18th, when the Year
of the Pig takes over.  2007 was a good year for Chinese head tax
redress.  It's been a long time since Margaret Mitchell first
raised this issue in Parliament back in 1984. 

Who would
have thought that it would take 24 years before the 1923 Chinese
Exclusion Act would repealed in 1947?  Who would have thought that
it would take until 1988, 46 years later, when the Japanese Canadian
would receive redress, after their homes and property were
“confiscated” from them from 1942 to 1945.

The Militant: Canadian Chinese call for redress over head tax

Here's an article from Dec 18th in the Militant

Canadian Chinese call for redress over head tax

I attended the Nov. 25th meeting – check my article:
   Head Tax Familes call  for Good Fatith negotiations- nearly 500 people show up

The Militant (logo)
 
   Vol. 70/No. 48   
       December 18, 2006


 
 
 
Canadian Chinese call for
redress over head tax



(front page)
 
BY STEVE PENNER
AND NED DMYTRYSHYN
 
VANCOUVER, British Columbia—Chanting, “Head tax redress,
justice now!” more than 300 people voted at a November 25 meeting to
demand compensation for every one of the 82,000 Chinese-Canadian
families forced to pay a head tax last century. Many of those attending
the event at the Chinese Cultural Center in Chinatown were in their 70s
and 80s.

The Canadian government imposed the racist head tax on all Chinese
immigrants to this country between 1885 and 1923. Initially $50, it was
raised to $100, then $500 in 1903, the equivalent of two years’ pay for
a laborer.

Frank Chan told the Militant, “People had to work for 10
to 15 years to pay off” the money they had borrowed to pay the tax. “If
they died, their family in China was still stuck with the burden of
paying the money back.”

In 1923 the Canadian government imposed the Chinese Exclusion
Act, which banned all immigration from China and remained in effect
until 1947. As a result, many of those who paid the head tax, almost
all men, were separated from their wives and children for decades.
Chinese-Canadians were also denied the right to vote and faced many
other racist laws and practices.

In June of this year, after a decades-long fight for justice by
Chinese-Canadians, Ottawa agreed to compensate about 400 surviving head
tax payers and their spouses. The Head Tax Families Society of Canada
(HTFS), which organized the November 25 meeting, noted that a bare 0.6
percent of families subjected to the head tax will be compensated.

Wayne Lee, an activist in the HTFS, said that the redress fight
is “important for today because it strengthens other struggles for
justice.”

Another activist, Ron Mah, said winning redress has been a
deeply felt issue for different generations of Chinese-Canadian
families. “I remember how as a boy our family always talked about the
need to pursue justice and how unfair the head tax was,” he said.

Vancouver city councilor David Cadman, who spoke at the
meeting, said, “Many people say this happened a long time ago. But
today in our society there are people who are still being discriminated
against.”

Several members of Parliament spoke, including New Democratic
Party (NDP) leader Jack Layton and former Liberal cabinet minister
Ujjal Donsanjh. Layton said the NDP supports the HTFS demands.

Sid Tan, a co-chair of the HTFS vowed, “We’re building a
movement of such strength” that it will “outlast the [Prime Minister
Stephen] Harper government and any other government” until justice is
achieved.

Grace Schenkeveld, English-language spokesperson for the HTFS,
presented Layton with 1,600 letters from descendants of head tax payers
and a petition demanding redress to be introduced in Parliament.

Dozens lined up to join the HTFS during the meeting. 

Chinatown gentrification in Boston: protest by adapting Christmas carols

Chinatown gentrification in Boston: 
protest by adapting Christmas carols


The following comes to me from one of our GHFC dragon boat paddlers.
BARBARA WALDERN - now doing an anthropology degree at SFU.

Vancouver Chinatown is undergoing its own gentrification. Some people think that
Vancouver Chinatown is dying. In fact, it's vitality has been in decline for decades.
But there are revitalization projects forhistoric Vancouver Chinatown.
Will it make a difference?

NEWS: Boston Carolers Sing About Gentrification

Carolers: Gentrification means many not merry

By Laura Crimaldi
Boston Herald

Chinatown residents are hoping a few fa-la-las, and maybe a ho, ho,
ho, will
help residents battle the gentrification blues.

Wednesday, December 13, 2006


The Chinese Progressive Association (CPA) and the Chinatown Resident
Association will go caroling throughout Chinatown next week to raise
awareness about the influx of high-rises, hotels and ritzy restaurants
squeezing residents of the neighborhood.

"This is the first time we're doing this," said Amy Leung, a CPA
activist, who is helping organize the caroling stops at six apartment
buildings. "The idea is to get the information out in a fun way."

CPA Executive Director Lydia Lowe has penned pointed lyrics to the
tune of Christmas classics like "We Wish You a Merry Christmas" to describe
what gentrification is doing to Chinatown.

The lyrics of "Won't Be Living Long In Chinatown," which is sung
to the tune of "Walking in a Winter Wonderland," include "We always said that
what we need is housing, / But penthouse condos isn't what we meant. / Who
knew that C-town could be like the South End / This strip where migrant
workers pitched their tents,"

Four carolers practiced the songs, which will be sung in English
and Chinese, at the CPA office yesterday. Carolers plan to bring maps of
Chinatown with their sheet music to show tenants how much development
is going on in their neighborhood.

These are the lyrics to one of the "carols" that Chinatown neighborhood
groups will sing to battle gentrification:
(To the tune of 'We Wish You a Merry Christmas')

The MP3, "Won't Be Living Long in Chinatown"
http://www.bostonherald.com/audio/20061213chinatown/song1.mp3
The MP3, "We Wish That We Get to Stay Here"
http://www.bostonherald.com/audio/20061213chinatown/song2.mp3

Refrain:

We wish that we get to stay here,
We hope that we get to stay here,
We'll fight so we get to stay here!
Chinatown is our home!

Verse:

Support other tenants
To stay in their homes,
Follow our master plan
As development grows.

Refrain:

We wish that we get to stay here,
We hope that we get to stay here,
We'll fight so we get to stay here!
Chinatown is our home!

Verse:

We need some laws changed
To make ourselves heard
Some real city planning
That's not just in word.

Cheque presentation in Toronto for surviving head tax payers.

Cheque presentation in Toronto for surviving head tax payer

The first stage for the Chinese head tax redress, of ex-gratia payments for surviving head tax payers, continued with a cheque presentation in Toronto today.

The next stage will include payments to surviving spouses of pre-deceased head tax payers.  This will include several of my maternal grandmother's sisters who live in the Toronto area.  Even though my grandmother and her 13 siblings were born in Canada, my grandmother and her sisters married men who paid the head tax and came to Canada, prior to the Chinese “Exclusion Act” of 1923.

Payments to surviving head tax payers and spouses will amount to 0.6 % of a total 81,000 head tax certificates, as many payers and spouses have long since passed away.  The government says they will not give ex-gratia payments to the estates of the head tax familes, but the Chinese Canadian National Council is asking for all head tax certificates to be treated equally.

In my own family, both of my father's parents died during the 1960's.  His father arrived in Canada at age 16, around 1882.  My father's mother arrived in Canada around 1910 at age 16, after the Chinese head tax had been raised to $500 in 1903.

Victor Wong, executive director of the Chinese Canadian National Council writes the following:

A huge turnout today at the cheque presentation.

Minister Oda presented cheques to 4 individuals who made it in person Bing Yen Tom, Betty Fong (Lee Toy Kew), Frank (Poy Fong) Lim and Gook Fung Tom (see govt news release).

Colleen, Joseph and I represented CCNC, Karen and Kristyn were there from CCNCTO, George, Susan, Har Ying, Doug, Binh and Rebecca from Ontario Coalition and many of our volunteers. We invited Jack and Maria from CCCO (CBC-Canada). I think there were 17 people present from our end and there were a handful of representatives of the Congress as well.

Some media questions (actually most) were on the issue of descendants redress. The Minister reiterated the Govt position and seemed quite firm that the door was closed.

CCNC and redress groups will continue to press the federal Government to redress all head tax families. The June 22nd redress announcement covers just over 10% of the head tax families registered with us and represents only 0.6% of all of the individuals who paid the Chinese Head Tax or Newfoundland Head Tax.

CCNC continues to work with other redress groups including the Ontario Coalition of Chinese Head Tax Payers and Families (Ontario Coalition) and Head Tax Families Society of Canada (formerly the B.C. Coalition of Head Tax Payers, Spouses and Descendants) in the campaign to redress the Chinese Head Tax and Chinese Exclusion Act.

-30-