Category Archives: Chinese Canadian History

Head Tax Redress Train leaves Vancouver this afternoon

Head Tax Redress Train leaves Vancouver this afternoon

Here's a report on the Redress Train ceremony in Vancouver, which took place in Thornton Park across from the VIA Rail Station.  It's written by Victor Wong, with my edits.

It was a wonderful send-off from Vancouver this afternoon.  there was a huge turnout of supporters and  media including: Margaret Mitchell, former MP, Vancouver East,  Libby Davies, MP, Vancouver East and  Charlie Quan, one of the last surviving head tax payers.

ACCESS and BC Coalition (a big Thanks to Mary-Woo for coordinating, Sid
for site coordination)

Victor Wong, executive director of the Chinese Canadian National Council was the MC. 

Highlights included:

*  Introductions for Margaret Mitchell, who first brought up the Head Tax redress issue in Parliament back in 1984, and Libby Davies who brought it up again recently.

*  Sean Gunn performed his song “Ballad of Gim Wong”

*  Introduce Charlie Quan, head tax payer

*  Introduce delegates on the train,

*  Introduced Susan Eng of Toronto, Co-Chair of the Ontario Coalition of Chinese Head Tax Payers and Families.  Susan is one of the architects of the CCNC redress campaign.

*  Introduce members of BC Coalition to step forward and Mary-Woo spoke for the group

*  Todd Wong performed “This Train is Bound for (Redress) Glory)”  (back up singers inluced Victor Wong, Cynthia Lam, Harvey Lee and many others)

*  We took a picture with “the Last Spike…” – a commemorative replica presented to the Redress campaign by Pierre Berton.
 
Then media followed the train contingent into the train station

A number of media will be accompanying them: Fairchild TV, Ming Pao,
Sing Tao, Ian Mulgrew of the Vancouver Sun

When the train stops in Edmonton, Mary Mah will hand off the Last Spike
To another HT payer who will take it to Toronto who will hand it off to
James Pon who will hand it off to PM Stephen Harper in Ottawa.

see the press release below….

June 15, 2006

For Immediate Release

Head Tax Payer, Spouse and Descendants Leave for Ottawa on the Redress
Train

A head tax payer, a spouse of a head tax payer, and descendants of head tax payers all set off from Vancouver today on a cross Canada journey  by rail.  Many Chinese workers died helping to build the Trans Canada Railway.  When Chinese labour was no longer needed, governments in  Canada enacted racist legislation to keep the Chinese from immigrating to  Canada (that made their lives even harder).  The Government of Canada imposed  the Chinese Head Tax and then the Chinese Exclusion Act which separated families for decades.

“This is an emotional journey for me.  I am the great-grandson of a Canadian Pacific Railway construction worker and a descendant of two head tax payers and a fourth generation immigrant.  Because of the  Exclusion Act, our family was not allowed into Canada to join my father and I did not see him for 13 years” said Howe Chan one of the passengers on the Redress Train.

“I’m glad that we will soon see closure on this dark chapter of Canadian history” said Ray Chang, son of a head tax payer.  “Many families suffered because of the head tax and the Exclusion Act including mine.”

“Last year, I rode my motorcycle to Ottawa to try to meet with then Prime Minister Paul Martin to get him to resolve this issue once and for all and he wouldn’t meet with me,” said Gim Wong, son of a head tax payer and Air Force Veteran.  “This year, I get to take the train to Ottawa with my wife with me and meet the Prime Minister who will finally apologize for the head tax and Exclusion Act.  I can’t wait to hear it.”

“This train journey will remind Canadians of the contributions of early Chinese Canadian pioneers, thousands of whom gave their lives in blasting through the Rockies to build the national railroad” said Susan Eng, Co-Chair of the Ontario Coalition of Chinese Head Tax Payers and Families who will ride the Redress Train with her mother Chuey Eng, the spouse of a head tax payer.

“Descendants of the railway workers will bring the ceremonial Last Spike with us back to the Railway Committee Room of the House of Commons in Ottawa where the decision to build the railroad was made”.

Those departing on the Redress Train from Vancouver are:

Mary Mah (Head Tax Payer) & support person
Chuey Eng and Susan Eng, Spouse and Descendant of a Head Tax Payer
Gim and Jan Wong (Son of 2 Head Tax Payers and his spouse)
Ray and Foon Chang (Son of a Head Tax Payer and his spouse)
Howe Chan (Great grandson of a CPR worker and son of two head tax
payers)

-30-

For further information:

BC Coalition of Head Tax Payers, Spouses & Descendants
    Karin Lee        778-773-1088
    Gabriel Yiu        604-889-0696

ACCESS (Association of Chinese Canadians for Equality and Solidarity
Society)
Sid Chow Tan        604-783-1853

Chinese Head Tax information and stories. Where to go? What to find?

Chinese Head Tax information and stories.  Where to go?  What to find?


The Head Tax issue affects many Canadians – not just
Chinese-Canadians.  I am a 5th generation descendant of Rev. Chan
Yu Tan, who came to Canada in 1896.  My father's father, Wong Wah,
came to Canada in 1888 at age 16, and later managed his brother's store
as it became the largest Chinese merchant store in Victoria's Chinatown.

I am also a committee member for the BC Coalition of Head Tax Payers,
Spouses and Descendants.  I first became interested in the issue
back in the mid-1980's when I attended a meeting organized by community
leaders, where I saw Margaret Mitchell, Tommy Tao and Roy Miki
speak.  In April 25th, 2006, I met Parliamentary Secretary Jason
Kenney when he came to Vancouver for a Community meeting, held at the
Richmond Gateway Theatre.

Today, there are many questions about head tax registration and for information.

People can go to the websites listed below for head tax
registration with community groups.  This information will be presented
to the Government to help identify head tax certificate information. 
It is NOT official government registration.


BC Coaltion for Head Tax Payers, Spouses and Descendants.
www.headtaxpayers.ca



Chinese Canadian National Council

http://www.ccnc.ca/sectionEntry.php?entryID=72&type=Event

Ontario Coalition for Head Tax Payers and Families
www.headtaxredress.org

Vancouver Public Library is now inundated with patrons seeking head tax information.  Click on http://www.vpl.ca/ccg/
Head Tax Information – info sheets are available in CHINESE and ENGLISH


For stories on head tax issues collected and/or written by Todd Wong:
http://www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com/blog/ChineseHeadTaxissuesGimWongsRideforRedress


Chinese Canadian Historical Society of BC
www.cchsbc.ca



See the video of the historic November 26th, 2005 protest against
Liberal PM Paul Martin and the Agreement in Principle signing of the
ACE program.


Calling for a Just and Honourable Redress

Vancouver, British Columbia


picture:  PM Paul Martin arrives amidst protestors in Vancouver Chinatown


Film Synopsis

On November 26, 2005, government compliant groups met at the Chinese
Cultural Centre in Vancouver to put forward a “no apology, no compensation”
agreement-in-principle between the National Congress of Chinese Canadians
and the Liberal federal government represented by Multiculturalism Minister
Raymond Chan.

Individuals and community groups, representing head-tax payers, their
spouses, descendants and supporters organized a leafletting and information
line at the conference and subsequent photo opportunity attended by Prime
Minister Paul Martin at the SUCCESS complex in Chinatown.

  

Denise Chong: Asian Heritage Month at Vancouver Public Library continues

Denise Chong: Asian Heritage Month at Vancouver Public Library continues






Denise Chong

Alice MacKay Room, Lower Level

Vancouver Public Library
Central Branch

350 West Georgia Street




Denise Chong is best known for The Concubine's Children, one of the first non-fiction narratives of a Chinese family in Canada, which tells of
her grandmother's life as a tea house waitress in the old Chinatowns. 
It is an incredible book about how challenging life was like for the
Chinese pioneers, many of whom paid the head tax to succeed in Canada
despite rampant racism.  This book won the Vancouver Book Award, and
was turned into a play 2 years ago, premiering in Nanaimo. I have met Denise a few times at readings at the library and also in Nanaimo.

Vancouver Sun: Proposal for documentary about first Chinese MP, Douglas Jung, wins $10,000 cultural award.

Vancouver Sun: Proposal for documentary about first Chinese MP wins $10,000 cultural award.

Kevin Griffin reports in Monday May 15th Arts and Life section:

The
second annual Channel M Diversity in Cultures Award went to Wesley
Lowe.  He recieved $10,000 for his proposal to create a
documentary called I Am The Canadian Delegate about Douglas Jung,
who became the firest Canadian of Chinese descent elected as a member
of Parliament when the voters chose him to represent Vancouver Centre
in 1957.

Douglas
Jung was born in Victoria, British Columbia on Feb 24 1924 and passed
away on January 4, 2002.  I think I first met him once during a
Chinese Head Tax redress meeting at Strathcona School back in the
1980's.  I met him a few times after that when I became more
involved in Chinese Canadian issues too.


Jung
lived an extraordinary life with many firsts.  During WW2, he
served  with Pacific Command Security Intelligence.  He was
the first university graduate of Chinese descent throught the Veterans
program, recieving a law degree in 1954.


He
always told a story about going to the United Nations in New York City,
as the chair of the Canadian Legal delegation, selected by Conservative
Prime Minister John Diefenbaker.  When Jung went to sit down at
the Canadian table, he was prevented by UN officials, and told that it
was for the Canadian delegate, and that the Chinese delegate's seat was
“over there.”  Jung's reply was simply, “I am the Canadian
Delegate.”


Jung
is best remembered for his parliamentary work to grant amnesty to the
many Chinese immigrants who came to Canada as “paper sons and
daughters.”  Due to the racist head tax and exclusion act that was
levied against only immigrants of Chinese ancestry to Canada, some
people in efforts to reunite their families “bought” the Canadian birth
certificates or landing papers of other Chinese.


Jung went on to recieve both the Order of Canada, and the Order of BC in 1997, as well as many other community service awards.  He was named Life President for the Veterans Unit 280, which serves the Chinese Canadian veterans such as my Grand-Uncle Daniel Lee, and Wesley :Louie's father.