Saltwater City TV:
See how the head tax redress protest got started in Vancouver
Paul Martin walks past angry protestors drowned out by a friendly Lion Dancer when he
arrived to sign the Agreement-in-Principle for "No Apology" and "No Compensation" as
the first part of $2.5 Million for Acknowledgement, Commemoration and Education."
Little did he know that Chinese Canadians really wanted "Apology, Compensation and
Education" - photo Harvey Lee
It was November 26, 2005 when Prime Minister Paul Martin came to Vancouver to sign the
Agreement-In-Principle with the National Congress of Chinese Canadians at the SUCCESS
building in Vancouver's Chinatown.
Chinese Canadians came from throughout the Vancouver Lower Mainland to combine their
voices in protest against an "agreement" that contained pre-conditional clauses of "No Apology"
and "No Compensation."
Saltwater City film crews were there to record the action.
Watch Saltwater City on on Shaw cable 4 in Greater Vancouver and Fraser Valley.
1:00pm Sunday Jan. 15
10:30pm Monday Jan. 16
2:30pm Thursday Jan. 19
11:30am Saturday Jan. 21
See Chinese Canadian seniors from leafletting and information
line in action.
See a music video by the Running Dog Lackeys produced by the
Nugget Peak Railway Collective celebrating Gim Wong's Ride for Redress.
See a short video with Pierre Berton and Gim Wong's presentation from
the Last Spike event Nov. 7, 2003.
Category Archives: Chinese Canadian History
“Our Story” head tax sound bites and turn table hip hop by No Luck Club
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“Our Story” head tax sound bites and turntable hip hop by No Luck Club
Trevor Chan, the laptop samplist, of No Luck Club has created a mashup called “Our Story.”
It address the head tax issue and 62 years or legislated
racism. It is an amazing aural soundscape that splices
together historical and documentary sound bites including quotes from Martin Luther King Jr. The juxtaposition of positive and negative statements for racial equlality is striking.
January 15th is Martin Luther King Jr. Day in the United States. This is a great way to celebrate racial equality and justice for all.
Listen to such quotes as:
“We don't want Chinamen in Canada. This is a white man's country and white men will keep it.”
“The people of Canada do not wish to make a fundamental alteration to the character of our population”
“Large scale immigration from the Orient would change the fundamental composition of the population the of Canada”
“He's telling us what he wants us to know. That's his story not our story.”
“The government passed a special
legisalation which places a tax of $50 on every Chinese entering the
country. The Head tax was raised to $100 and eventually in 1903
to $500.”
“We have suffered political
oppression, economic exploitation and social degradation. The
government has failed us. You can't deny that.”
Vancouver seethed with racial hatred. An Anti-Asiatic league was formed.”
“You know how I want to think of myself – as a human being.”
Trevor has given me permission to post it.
Listen to it on Dogma Radio
Gim Wong's “Ride for Redress” featured in Vancouver Sun head tax story
I have known Gim Wong for a few years. He served in the Canadian
Armed Forces during WW2 when Canadians of Chinese ancestry were
unwanted soldiers, and couldn't vote in the land of their birth.
Gim is a sweetheart of a man, which is why it is hard to believe that
he would ride a motorcycle across Canada to draw attention to redress
for Canada's infamous head tax and exclusion act.
This past summer Gim drove from Victoria BC to Ottawa ON, to try to
meet with Prime Minister Paul Martin. Gim met head tax descendants
across the country and also with NDP leader Jack Layton. But
sadly the PMO did not respond to any requests for a meeting. When
the Paul Martin came to Vancouver to sign the ACE Agreement in
Principle, aggreeing to No Apology, and No Compensation to head tax
survivors, spouses and descendants – Wong was in the audience.
But he still didn't meet with the Prime Minister. Click on my
stories about Gim Wong's Ride for Redress
Gim's story is also featured in the Karen Cho documentary IN THE SHADOW OF GOLD MOUNTAIN which was recently shown on CBC Newsworld “Rough Cuts” on January 3 and 7th.
Gim Wong's motorcycle diaries
Seeking an apology for the notorious head tax

that he still fits into his RCAF uniform,
Gim Foon Wong, 83, rode his
motorcycle to Ottawa to seek redress for the head tax.
It was, he admits, a truly nutty idea. Last summer, Gim Foon Wong
decided, with history weighing on his mind, that he'd ride his
motorcycle from Victoria to Ottawa to have a chat with the prime
Minister. He was a spry 82 and weighed just under 60 kg the day he
mounted his 315-kg Honda Goldwing and started heading for the nation's
political capital.
Now, when an octogenarian straps on his
motorcycle boots and travels thousands of kilometres across the country
to Parliament Hill on his hog, one too heavy for him to right when it
falls over, one might think the politicians might want to know what was
on his mind.
Some did take an interest.
New Democratic
Party leader Jack Layton, for example, met with Wong on Canada Day,
when he roared into the capital decked out in his Second World War
uniform with two carefully polished service medals pinned over his
heart. Toronto Mayor David Miller was moved enough by the old man's
trek to write Wong a letter of commendation that now sits on a shelf in
his modest home in Burnaby.
Prime Minister Paul Martin? Well, that was another story.
“I
got within 15 feet of him,” says Wong, shaking his head ruefully at the
memory of his one-man effort to penetrate the prime ministerial bubble.
“We let his office know I was coming. But the RCMP pounced on me. I
never got to meet Paul Martin.”
Read the rest if the story Gim Wong's motorcycle diaries
Janice Wong's Book CHOW at Vancouver Public Library January 18th + Panel Discussion
Janice Wong's Book CHOW at Vancouver Public Library January 18th + Panel Discussion

Wednesday January 18
7:30 pm
Free
Event
Peter Kaye Room, Lower Level
Central Library
350 West Georgia Street
Janice Wong presents her book, Chow from China to Canada: Tales of Food and Family.
A collection of over 50 traditional Chinese village dishes, it contains
early photographs, immigration documents, 1940s restaurant menus and
handwritten recipes from some of Canada's first ethnic restaurants.
Janice
Wong, a Vancouver-based artist and daughter of a Chinese restaurateur,
has assembled her father's recipes and her family's history in this
unique cookbook;
Panel Discussion on Chinese food and Chinese Restaurants:
Janice is joined by by:
Wong of the Chinese Canadian Historical Society
Todd Wong of the creator of Gung Haggis Fat Choy
Stephen Wong, celebrity chef
Here is the inside story on the event
Janice is my 2nd cousin-once-removed.
We are descendants of Rev. Chan Yu Tan, who arrived in Canada in 1891.
And I only met her earlier this year when she announced that her
book was coming out. We immediately bonded, and I have enjoyed
helping her promote her book. We did a panel discussion together
with Larry Wong at the West Vancouver Library and had so much fun, we
decided to do it for Vancouver.
Mother Tongue TV documentary series launches in Vancouver at Channel M
Mother Tongue TV documentary series launches in Vancouver at Channel M
My friend Susan Poizner is a television director/producer
who has succeeded with her goal of creating a series about the roles of
women from different ethnic groups across Canada.
The Vancouver launch of Mother Tongue happens 7:30pm on Thursday, January 12th at the Vancouver
Museum.
The launch
will show two segments: one about my
Vancouverite Mary Lee Chan who was
born in Canada, sent
back to China
as a child, then she returned in 1947 to forge a life for herself and her
family;
2nd segment features Japanese Canadian Kimiko Murakami who was
interned for 8 years in BC.
The showing will be followed by a Q&A
session with Susan Poizner, Mary Kitagawa,
granddaughter of Kimiko Murakami, and me.
Channel M has bought the series and will begin airing the series from
Jan. 15, 2006, Sundays at 10 pm.
Go to the website below to learn about the 13 Canadian ethnic women whose
personal stories are told through the producer and director Susan
Poizner. www.mothertongue.ca
| Acadian |
Head Tax film: Karen Cho's IN THE SHADOW OF GOLD MOUNTAIN on Rough Cuts on CBC Jan 3 & 7
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Head Tax film: Karen Cho's IN THE SHADOW OF GOLD MOUNTAIN on Rough Cuts on CBC Jan 3 & 7
Karen Cho's IN THE SHADOW OF GOLD MOUNTAIN
is an incredible film that examines the hardships faced by Chinese Canadian pioneers who paid the head tax, and endured the Chinese Exclusion Act, and harsh rascist climate of Canada.
Karen is a Eurasian-Canadian, of both Chinese and British ancestry. In the movie, she shares that her British grandparents and family are more outraged at the injustice of the head tax and exclusion act and the refusal of the Canadian government to make redress, than her Chinese side of the family.
IN THE SHADOW OF GOLD MOUNTAIN
airs on Rough Cuts on CBC Newsworld on Tuesday Jan. 3rd at 10pm ET, 1am ET and 4am ET. or…. 7pmPT, 10pmPT and 1amPT).
It repeats on Sat. Jan. 7th at 3pm ET, 10pm ET and 1am ET (adjust minus three hours for Pacific time zone).
It is an incredible film that brought tears to my eyes, and excellent look at the hardships faced by Canada's Chinese forbears, the impact of head-tax and exclusion and how the mighty Lo Wah Kiu (old overseas Chinese) overcame it all. When my girlfriend of British-Canadian ancestry watched the film last fall, she was amazed and angry that the country she grew up in and loves, could have such a deliberately racist history, and still refuse to address redress issues.
Interviews with Charlie Quan, Roy Mah, Gim Wong and Hanson Lau and some music by Sean Gunn, writer of the song “Head Tax Blues.”
Please tell your friends to watch this film documentary,
For additional information on Head Tax issues
Go to www.headtaxredress.org and www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com/ChineseHeadTaxissues
Also check out:
Todd Wong's short review of In the Shadow of Gold Mountain and his description of meeting Karen Cho at the Vancouver premiere.
http://www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com/blog/_archives/
2004/11/21/189693.html
Toronto Star Nov 6, 2004 Interview of Karen Cho
Immigrants from China recall woes for Karen Cho Film won't let us Canadians forget `skeletons in closet'
by Nicholas Keung
http://www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com/blog/_archives
/2004/11/6/176305.html
Settling the Score: Hope for redress in the Year of the Rooster
by Sean Rossiter (includes interview with Gim Wong, who was featured in the Karen Cho documentary “Shadow of Gold Mountain”)
http://www.shared-vision.com/2005/sv1801/headtax1801.html
REDRESSING THE PAST OF THE LO WAH KUI
(includes interview of film maker Karen Cho, Sid Tan and Mary-Woo Sims)
http://www.langara.bc.ca/prm/2005/past.htm
articles and pictures of 83-year old Gim Wong and his Ride For Redress across Canada
http://www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com/blog?cmd
=search&keywords=gim+wong+ride+for+redress




