Category Archives: Chinese Head Tax issues + Gim Wong's Ride for Redress

Finding your head tax tax certificate documentation at the Vancouver Public Library.


Finding your head tax tax certificate documentation at the Vancouver Public Library.




The Vancouver Public Library's
History Division has created a wonderful information sheet on how to
search for your head tax documenation on micro film. 


http://www.vpl.ca/ccg/Head_Tax_Info.html



The
Vancouver Public Library has created a wonderful website for Chinese
Canadian Genealogy, check out theses links to many of its features.


History & PioneersChinese-Canadian heritage



ChineseNamesTraditions and characteristics of Chinese names



Family Sources, Interviews and heirlooms



Documents & Records Archival and published information about your family





The following excerpt is from the VPL website – check out the full website at

http://www.vpl.ca/ccg/Head_Tax_Info.html

Chinese Head Tax

Introduction

Many
Canadians of Chinese origin are interested in finding records of the
head tax paid by their immigrant ancestors. This guide is designed to
help in the search for this information.

Historical Background

The
head tax on Chinese Immigrants was introduced by the Dominion (federal)
government in the Chinese Immigration Act of 1885. Initially, an amount
of $10 was proposed, but due to anti-Chinese agitation, this was
amended to $50 before the bill's final passage. The Chinese Immigration
Act of 1900 (which went into effect on January 1, 1902) increased the
tax to $100, and finally, in the Chinese Immigration Act of 1903, it
was raised to $500. Some Chinese were exempt. For example, under the
1903 legislation, there were six classes of persons who did not have to
pay: merchants and their families, diplomats, clergymen, tourists,
students, and men of science.

Efforts
to control Chinese immigration, including the administration of head
tax, were overseen by a federal Chief Controller of Chinese
Immigration. The Chief Controller's Department documented Chinese
immigration in detail, generating a large amount of corresponding
paperwork, including certificates, registers and other records. These
are held by Library and Archives Canada. Copies of selected records are
also available on microfilm at a number of libraries and archives
across Canada, including the Vancouver Public Library.

see more at http://www.vpl.ca/ccg/Head_Tax_Info.html

Sing Tao: Jason Kenney tells his view of the Head Tax issue and tells Benson Li off

Sing Tao: Jason Kenney tells his view of the Head Tax issue and tells Benson Li off

Jason Kenney, Parliamentary Secretary to the Prime Minister addresses the Head Tax issue

in a letter to Sing Tao newspaper, criticizing it's columnist Benson Li.  Kenney knows his facts

and correctly identifies Li as one of the organizers of the Liberals failed ACE program, paid by

the Liberals as a “consultant” who recommended NO APOLOGY, and NO Compensation, and

money given to organizations not administered by head tax descendants.

Mr. Victor Ho, Editor-in-Chief

Sing Tao
Daily


VIA ELECTRONIC MAIL: victorho@singtao.ca


Dear
Editor:




In his April 27 column, Benson Li unfairly criticized the Chinese
Head Tax


redress consultations held by Canada's new government.



During
the recent election campaign, Prime Minister Harper made a commitment


to
offer a formal government apology for the Chinese Head Tax, and to


consult
broadly within the Chinese Canadian community to seek a consensus on


the
bestform of redress. His commitment for an apology was repeated in
the Speech from the Throne.





In March, Heritage Minister Bev Oda and I
launched our consultations as one



of the first actions of the new
Conservative government.  We met with the



leadership of major Chinese
Canadian organizations from across the country,



including both the CCNC and
the NCCC.





Since then we have held a series of open, democratic town hall
consultations



in Vancouver, Edmonton, Winnipeg, Toronto, Montreal, and
Halifax, together



with a virtual meeting with community members in St.
John's, Fredericton,



and Charlottetown.





These meetings have been
well-advertised and well-attended, with over 2,000



people attending. 
Everyone who has wanted to express themselves directly at



these meetings has
been able to do so. I am not aware of a single person who



was unable to offer
their opinion at these meetings.





We have done everything possible to
make these meetings accessible for



members of the community, from
providing transportation to seniors, to



simultaneous translation in both
Cantonese and Mandarin.  We have also made



a point of giving special
honour to elders in the community, and encouraging



them to tell their
stories.





In addition to the public meetings, Minister and Oda and I have
solicited



and received hundreds of letters, emails, and phone calls with
peoples'



suggestions, and we have held many private meetings with groups
or



individuals in the community.  For instance, in Vancouver I was
deeply moved



to meet with a dozen seniors and hear the often tragic personal
stories of



how families were divided and humiliated by the effects of racist
government



policies.





The extent and nature of these consultations
between the Government of



Canada and the Chinese-Canadian community is
totally unprecedented.  The



public meetings have also been a valuable
part of the reconciliation process,



giving those who were affected by the
Head Tax the opportunity to



speak directly to their government.





I am
gratified with the support that these consultations have received
from



members of the Chinese community.  In fact, Mr. Li's column is the
only



criticism that I have heard.  Perhaps that is because he was paid
by the



previous government to help with its failed approach to the issue,
which



included no grassroots consultation, no apology, and no redress, and
which



resulted in a deep division in the community.





After years of
Liberal inaction on the historic wrong of the Chinese Head



Tax, Chinese
Canadians finally have a government that is listening to them



directly, and
which will soon act in good faith to seek to heal the wounds



of the
past.





Sincerely,





Jason Kenney, MP



Parliamentary Secretary to
the Prime Minister

Vancouver “Sons and Daughters of Head Tax” Community Meeting May 6 in Chinatown

Vancouver head tax Community Meeting May 6 in Chinatown


Sid Tan welcomes people to
the meeting for “Sons and Daughters of Head Tax”.  George Jung (BC
Coalition) and Victor Wong (CCNC) are seated, while Susan Jang
translates. – photo Todd Wong



Head tax payer Charlie Quan stood up in the audience of almost 300
people, and was applauded.  A 95 year old head tax payer’s spouse
also stood up to applause and acknowledgment from the crowded room at
SUCCESS building in Choi Hall.

“Redress Head Tax Payers now!” and “NCCC doesn’t speak for me!” shouted
from the television set, as video footage of the November 26th protest
against the ACE Agreement in Principle, greeted the assembling
crowd.  Volunteers were quickly adding more chairs to the
auditorium, as people continued to file in.

Almost 300 people attended the community meeting organized by ACCESS
(Association of Chinese Canadians for Equality and Solidarity), and the
BC Coalition of Head Tax Payers, Spouses and Descendants. Sid Tan,
ACCESS president and 20 year veteran of the redress movement, started
off with a passionate appeal for inclusion of families in any redress
settlement.  He then briefly explained the history of the redress
campaign and said that he didn’t think that the promise of apology and
individual compensation for head tax payers and spouses would happen so
quickly


Libby Davies gives her long standing support for head tax redress – photo Todd Wong

Members of Parliament Libby Davies (Vancouver East), Ujjal Dosanjh
(Vancouver South), BC Member of Legislative Assembly Jenny Kwan
(Vancouver Mount Pleasant), each addressed the crowd,  Libby
Davies recalled the early efforts by NDP MP Margaret Mitchell to bring
redress for the Chinese head tax.  She emphasized that it was
about fairness and justice and pledged her support and the federal NDP.


Ujjal Dosanjh
admits the Federal Liberals moved forward on the ACE program without
consensus throughout the Chinese community – photo Todd Wong

Ujjal Dosanjh echoed much of what Davies had said.  Ujjal
acknowledged that the previous Govt had not proceeded with a
consensus and stated that he would support redress for HT payers,
spouses and descendants.  He stated that the first time he
realized that the Chinese Canadian community held divergent views from
the proposed Agreement in Principle for the ACE program, was when he
attended the November 26th signing where the BC Coalition had held
demonstrations throughout the day.  He also stated his long held
positions of support on the head tax
redress issue beginning with his days as a government MLA, which asked
the Federal government to act and resolve the issue.


Jenny Kwan tells a touching story about a woman whose father's head tax certificate was burned at his burial – photo Todd Wong

MLA Jenny Kwan encouraged everybody to keep up the fight for a fair and
honorable redress.  Kwan said she had just talked with a woman who
had just left the meeting because she didn’t think her family would be
eligible for redress because they had  burned her father’s head
tax certificate at his burial,  She spoke both in Cantonese and
English, acknowledging the many seniors in the audience, and also later
translated for both Dosanjh and Davies as they listened to some of the
speakers.


Victor Wong
listens to Cynthia Lam make a point, following the meeting, as
interested head tax descendants listen – photo Todd Wong

Victor Wong, CCNC executive director explained the two step process
proposed by the CCNC, where an apology and immediate compensation would
be made to surviving head tax payers and spouses by July 1, 2006,
followed by a process to determine compensation to the direct sons and
daughters of head tax payers as well as community redress.  Victor
thanked SUCCESS for letting use the hall (same place where Martin
signed the Aip).  He presented the revised framework and
CCNC's position: $21K for HT payers and spouses, $10K for sons and
daughters.

George Jung, presented the BC Coalition position which is to include all
descendant claims (not only sons and daughters), a range of $10K to
$20K, a package of $100 million with the majority for individual
redress.  The seniors like the approach of one single figure and
inclusion of everyone and demonstrated this support in a standing vote.

Members of the audience were invited to speak to the speakers and the
audience.  Several people expressed that they wanted more
descendants to be included and that redress should not be limited to
only head tax payers and spouses, as most have already passed
away.  In general, the speakers were:

critical of NCCC;
critical of the Liberals
urging the one single figure for fairness, and equality
supported CCNC trusteeing any communty endowment



George Jung hands out head tax registration forms to the outstretched arms of head tax descendants – photo Todd Wong

The crowd was very appreciative of the efforts made by the redress
activists and participants.  After the meeting, many people came
to the stage to receive registration forms for head tax certificates
and asked questions about how to find documentation if they no longer
had the certificate.  They were told that microfilm is available
at the Vancouver Public Library as the History department has now
published an information sheet on how to look for head tax
information, which is linked on the VPL Chinese Canadian Genealogy web pages.

http://www.vpl.ca/ccg/

The TRUTH about Head Tax liability questioned on Parliament on May 5th

The TRUTH about Head Tax liability questioned on Parliament on May 5th

As
we know from the last federal election campaign.  The Liberal
Party's Secretary of Multiculturalism, Raymond Chan, kept telling the
public and the Chinese media that IF the government made an APOLOGY for
the Chinese head tax, it would then be liable for UNLIMITED finananical
payments. 

This was also echoed by Liberal leader wanna-be Hedy Fry, who had referred to the Chinese Canadian head Tax campaigners as “those people with their little issues” – recorded on CBC
TV news in the first friday in January.  Even when I questioned her position at an all-candidate's meeting.  She said “An apology
had been made.”  I asked her about individual compensation. 
She said no
compensation.  “It would be a mistake to give compensation because every
group would be asking for compensation. Where would you stop?”

Raymond Chan was nowhere to be seen at the Vancouver area Head Tax community consultations
with Parliamentary Secretary Jason Kenney, even though the Gateway
Theatre is in Chan's home riding.  But I did bump into Darrell
Reid the Conservative candidate who ran against Chan, and seemed very
sincere in helping to develop redress for Chinese Canadian Head Tax
payers, spouses and descendants.

House of Commons in Question Period, Today
 
Mr. Mike Lake (EdmontonMill WoodsBeaumont, CPC): Mr.
Speaker, last year the member for Richmond told the Chinese community
repeatedly that the government could not and would not apologize for
the head tax. It claimed that it had received legal advice that to do
so would create open ended liabilities.
Could the Parliamentary Secretary to the Prime Minister please tell the House if the former government had its facts straight?
Mr. Jason Kenney (Parliamentary Secretary to the Prime Minister, CPC): Mr.
Speaker, last year the member for Richmond, when he was
multiculturalism secretary, said, “My reason for not apologizing for
the head tax is because of the legal position that was given to me by
my department”. That was the excuse, but we have since discovered,
according to access to information, that he received exactly the
opposite advice. The legal advice was that it would appear from a legal
point of view that none of the outstanding claims would meet such a
burden.
The
government is doing what is right for Chinese Canadians under the
leadership of the Prime Minister and the heritage minister. It will
offer a formal apology and I think the member for Richmond should
apologize to Chinese Canadians for not telling the truth.

Kogawa House deadline to raise money to save house is now August 2006

Kogawa House deadline to raise money to save house is now August 2006

It's
been an awesome journey along the campaign to save Joy Kogawa's
childhood home from the wrecker's ball, and turn it into a writers'
centre and historical and literary landmark for Canada.

Even
though The Land Conservancy has decided to purchase the home by
exercising their option worked out with the owner, we are still a ways
from completely saving it. 

So far $230,000 has been raised and pledged, but an additional $470,000 is needed complete the $700,000 purchase price.

I
am working on a fundraiser event for May, and for the summer. 
Please call me or Nancy Tiffin at TLC, if you have any ideas, or major
donors.  See Nancy's letter from the TLC below

Dear Friends and Supporters,

The
Land Conservancy of BC has decided to exercise its option to purchase
the Historic Joy Kogawa House and take out a short term mortgage to
save it from demolition (see press release below).  But we only have until August 2006 to raise the balance of the money needed to purchase the property in order to prevent TLC
from carrying a long term mortgage on this property.  This buys us a
bit more time to work towards the goal of preserving this important
symbol of Canda's cultural heritage in perpetuity.

Our goal of $1.25M as follows:

      Land and House Purchase $700,000

      Restoration of Property    $200,000

      Endowment      
                  
      $300,000    to offset costs of maintaining a
      writers-in-residence program


      Cost of Fundraising          $50,000

To date we have raised $235,000 from over 500 people in donations and pledges. 

This is still a time sensitive campaign
We have until August 31, 2006 to ensure the preservation of this
property in perpetuity.  Your gifts and your ability to connect us to
others who may be intertested in giving is essential to our success.  I
am confident that with your help we can reach our goal of making this
an educational site and a retreat for writers of conscience.  If you or
someone you know has yet to donate or pledge to this important
campaign, please take a moment to go to The Land Conservancy's website
at
www.conservancy.bc.ca and make your donation or pledge today.  You can also print the attached pledge/donation form off and give it to others.

There are silk threads of hope healing and reconcilation running
through this campaign and we've been inspired by the commitment and
interest from people all over Canada, throughout the States and from
parts of Europe and Asia.  It's exciting to see the world become your
neighbour and join together in this great cause. 
We
are a significant step closer to preserving this important symbol of
Canada's cultural heritage in perpetuity, which is important to us as
individuals and as a society.  It's a symbol that will carry with it
the importance of our past, and even more importantly, provide a
reminder for generations to come of the multiculturalism and
interculturalism that provide the backbone to our culture and makes us
proud to be called Canadian.

Thank you for your interest in and support of our campaign.

Sincerely,

Nancy 

Nancy Tiffin

Development Officer – Major Gifts

 

TLC The Land Conservancy of British Columbia

5655 Sperling Ave, Burnaby, BC   CANADA  V5E 2T2

 

CELL: (250) 213-6278    TEL: (604) 733-2313    FAX: (604) 299-5054

ntiffin@conservancy.bc.ca             www.conservancy.bc.ca

Vancouver community meeting for Sat May 6- “Don't Exclude Us Again” say Sons and Daughters of Chinese Head Tax

Media Advisory: For
Immediate Release – May 5, 2006

“Don't Exclude Us Again” say Sons and Daughters of Chinese Head Tax Payers:


ACCESS Convenes Community Meeting for Just and Honourable Redress


Vancouver BC – The Association of Chinese Canadians for Equality and
SolidaritySociety (ACCESS) will convene a community meeting today on
Chinese head-tax/exclusion redress.

Among the speakers will be Victor Yukmun Wong, executive director of
the Chinese Canadian National Council and veteran redress advocate, and
George Jung, convenor of the BC
Coalition of Head Tax Payers, Spouses and Descendants. Elected
representatives of the Conservatives, Liberals and New Democrats have
been invited.

Where: SUCCESS Choi Hall
       28 West Pender Street, Vancouver
When:  2:00PM  May 6, 2006

On April 21, 2006 in a public meeting in Richmond on redress for the
Chinese head-tax and exclusion, Parliamentary Secretary to the 
Prime Minister Jason Kenney stated the government would make an
announcement sometime inmid-May on the longstanding injustice of
62-years of
oppressive legislation from 1885 � 1947 targeted at the Chinese in Canada.

Organized in 1990, the BC Coalition of Head Tax Payers, Spouses and
Descendants is a grassroots group reactivated in early October. Its
basis of unity then was to oppose a Conservative Private Members Bill
(C-333) and the subsequent Liberal government's Agreement in Principle
with the National Congress of Chinese Canadians. It's current basis of
unity is meaningful and significant redress immediately for surviving
head-tax payers and spouses and appropriate redress to families by July
1, 2007.

CCNC is a national human rights organization with 27 chapters across
Canada. Established in 1979, it has campaigned since 1984 with other
redress-seeking groups including the BC Coalition of Head Tax Payers,
Spouses and Descendants (BC Coalition), Association of Chinese
Canadians for Equality and Solidarity (ACCESS), Ontario Coalition of
Chinese Head Tax Payers and Families (Ontario Coalition), and Chinese
Canadian Redress Alliance (CCRA) for Chinese head-tax and exclusion
redress.

ACCESS is a not-for-profit anti-racism, human rights and social justice
society as well as a community television corporation. It is an
affiliate of the Chinese Canadian National Council and a member of the
National Anti-Racism Council of Canada and STATUS Coalition. ACCESS
works with other equality seeking organizations to fight racism and
discrimination, to advance the rights of citizens and migrants living
in Canada and to press the federal government to redress the
Chinese head-tax/exclusion.

– 30 –

Contact:
Sid Tan – 604-433-6169/604-783-1853

Victor Wong –
647-285-2262

HEAD TAX events: Friday May 5 8:30 CFRO + Community meeting Saturday May 6 + Tuesday showing of Karen Cho's “Shadow of Gold Mountain.

HEAD TAX events:  Friday May 5 8:30 CFRO
+ Community meeting Saturday May 6
+ Tuesday showing of Karen Cho's “Shadow of Gold Mountain.




The Following is from Sid Tan, long time head tax redress activist.

Tomorrow Friday May 5 at 8:30AM on CFRO 102.7 FM radio program Wake Up
with Co-op, head-tax redress will be the topic. Also on internet
www.coopradio.org and online radio streaming is
on right side of page.

There's also a comunity meeting Saturday May 6 at 2:00PM Saturday May 6
at SUCCESS called by ACCESS (Media Advisory follows). Speakers include
Victor Wong, CCNC executive director, and Libby Davies, MP for
Vancouver East.  Vancouver Kingsway MP David Emerson
(Conservative) and Vancouver South MP Ujjal Dosanjh (Liberal) have been
invited to speak but no reply yet.  

On Tuesday May 9 at 9:00PM, the Knowledge Network will be broadcasting
Karen Cho's In the Shadow of Gold Mountain (NFB). Vancouver connection
includes Charlie Quan, Gim Wong, Roy Mah and Hanson Lau. Well worth the
watch

We will need some volunteers to do translation and help set-up and
teardown on Saturday.

Please let me know asap to sidchowtan@gmail.com or call 604-433-6169
and leave message if you can put in a couple of hours in some capacity.

There will be an update and report of redress activities in Toronto and here but we mostly want to hear from the community.

Please pass on to your Saltwater City contacts.

Hope to see you Saturday. Peace, love and hope.

Take care.    anon     Sid

Vancouver Sun May 4: “Simple head-tax apology isn’t that simple” + comments

imageimageimage

Vancouver Sun May 4: “Simple head-tax apology isn’t that simple”

Pete McMartin is a nice guy.  He wrote a wonderful story about me and my
Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner back in January  2002 “Toddish McWong marks
Bard’s birthday.”  But he still hasn’t shown up wearing a kilt to taste
the haggis won ton, haggis spring rolls, or haggis lettuce wrap at
subsequent dinners.

McMartin’s family has probably been in Canada for about as long as my 7 generation family (I’m a fifth-generation descendant of Rev. Chan Yu Tan.  If Pete and I aren’t related yet… maybe we can create some “arranged marriages” so that he too can claim to be related to a Head Tax descendant family.  I know our family will be accepting, we already have relatives named McPherson and McLean. 

I have embraced Canada’s Scottish history and culture and customs, and even promote Robbie Burns and haggis at my annual Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner, which even inspired a  regional CBC television special of the same name.

But Pete just doesn’t “get” the Chinese-Canadian head tax issue.  It’s NOT a race issue.  It’s about justice, fairness and all those things for making Canada a better place.

McMartin has written an interesting column (see below) for today’s Vancouver Sun, citing
Gabriel Yiu as an example of a “Chinese-Canadian” with no claims to being a head tax descendant being a spokesperson for the BC Coalition for Head Tax Payers, Spouses and Descendants.  McMartin neglects to mention that Harvey Lee and Karin Lee also serve as “English language” spokespersons, and are both head tax descendants.

Harvey’s case for redress is a dramatic story of family hardship and loss.  His father paid the head tax and worked in Canada to support his wife and children in Canada, but they could not join him because of the Exclusion Act.  Japanese soldiers killed Harvey’s mother when he was a
young boy, and he was finally able to join his father in Canada long after the war was over.

Personally, I admire Gabriel for standing up for human rights and the head tax issue.  Much of the head tax story war has been taking place in the Chinese media, and I have no real access to it because I don’t speak Chinese. 

I thank Gabriel, Tekla Lit of BC Alpha, and Bill Chiu of Chinese Christians in Action for helping address our Chinese language deficiencies.  My born-in-Canada parents didn’t think that
Chinese language would be such a desired skill when I was growing up in the 1960’s.  Nobody foresaw that so many Chinese immigrants would still want to come to Canada after such blatant racist treatment and limiting immigration policies from 1885 to 1967.

But there have been recent Chinese immigrants such as Hong Kong-born former
Multiculturalism Minister Raymond Chan and Malaysian-born Ping Tan, president of the National Congress of Chinese Canadians, trying to make decisions about redress such as the now aborted Liberal ACE program and Agreement in Principle.  They have been telling Canadian born head tax descendants what should be done, such as NO APOLOGY and that the money
should go to Chinese community projects – NOT direct head tax payers, spouses or descendants. Needless to say, these individuals can be told to go back where they came from.

Pete McMartin likes to play devil’s advocate, and push people’s buttons. I can appreciate that.

McMartin is also expressing the views of many White Canadians out there.  One of my own library supervisors who wrote a recent reference letter for me, expressed anger at having to pay out for the “sins” of other people’s ancestors.  This is important to address and to help others understand the real issues of a sad chapter in Canadian history and its legacy.

McMartin is clearly generalizing the topic of redress and guilt to many other issues regarding racism and colonialism, and demonstrating that government policies were linked to the prevailing attitudes of the day.  Yes, I agree that First Nations claims must be addressed, and
Canada will be better for it. But adding these issues clouds the Head Tax picture, and it still does not excuse the 1907 riots by the Anti-Asiatic League that attacked both Chinatown and Japantown for which reparations were made.

Despite the seemingly complicated issue, there are simple questions:

1. Was it wrong for the Canadian government to place a Head Tax followed
by an Exclusion Act, ONLY on immigrants of Chinese ancestry?

2. Was it wrong for the Canadian government to ignore a 2004 request from
the United Nations to make reparations for head tax payers?

3. If the head tax was wrongfully applied, is not a refund and reparation in order?

4. How do we build the Canada now, that we want to live in tomorrow?  By
excluding people and our history, or by acknowledging wrongs and doing
something positive by apology, reparation and forgiveness?

Thank you to Pete McMartin for citing all the reasons for White Colonialism and privilege, that made it difficult for my ancestors to find equal footing in Canada, that gave us a “Chinaman’s Chance” of being found innocent in courts of law, that prohibited us from joining the armed
forces until Great Britain asked Canada for Chinese speaking soldiers, and kept native born Canadians from voting until 1947.  You really are helping to explain the difficulties in growing up Asian-Canadian in Canada, and why it is important to give redress for Head Tax Payers and
their estates.

Seven generations of our family have endured negative identity and racial discrimination for having the wrong DNA, coloured skin, slanted eyes, black hair.  Despite this our family
founders Rev. Chan Yu Tan and Rev. Chan Sing Kai were Christian missionaries;  2nd generation Uncle Luke Chan became a Hollywood actor; 3rd generation brothers Daniel, Leonard and Howard Lee with cousin Victor Wong enlisted in the Armed Forces; 4th generation Rhonda (Lee)
Larrabee became Qayqayt First Nations Chief; 5th generation Joni Mar became a CBC television news reporter.

And somehow our family has developed a continuing fascination for marrying white people with each successive generation.  There are lots of 4th, 5th, 6th and 7th generations of the Rev. Chan Clan who share Chinese, Scottish, English, Irish, Czech, Dutch, Scandinavian, French, German, Italian ancestries  and many more.  This is OUR CANADA and they are all Head Tax descendants.

And by the way…. both myself and head tax descendant Sid Tan had also been spokespersons for a for the BC Coalition for Head Tax Payers, Spouses and Descendants, before Gabriel.

Regards, Todd Wong

Below are some comments from friends across the country:

Unfortunately, some writers take a lot of effort to intellectualize this issue.

Gabriel already pointed it out: A wrong is a wrong.

1. If the Head Tax and Exclusion Act were morally wrong, what is the morally right thing to do?

2. If we are unable to apologize for the wrong, then what do we learn from the injustice?

3. What about the families who were harmed. How do we turn the page?


The federal Government enacted this legislation and the federal Government
is an organic entity, existing since Confederation and some would argue even before then.


Trudeau argued that we must be “just in our time” when he refused to redress the Japanese-Canadians. It’s a convenient and somewhat selfish response. But we see this type of response too often from our political leaders.

The fact is that these sins of the past were wrong in their own time; people opposed the
discriminatory legislation “in their own time”. The Chinese Canadian community opposed the Exclusion Act and delegations regularly went to Ottawa to lobby for its repeal. White society was smug in its racism.  It was legal to be racist.


So, sorry Pete, no limitations on this one.

Victor Wong
long-time head tax redress advocate
Toronto


I think deep down in his subconscious, McMartin questions why whites should apologize to the coloureds. And it also shows, as he keeps using the word “race” instead of “Chinese people” or “Chinese immigrants.”   I am sure if the situation was reversed, for example WWII vets in Japanese concentration camps, he would have demanded apologies a long
time ago.


Cheuk Kwan
Filmaker of “Chinese Restaurants”
Toronto

Popsicle Pete finds the White Man’s Burden a bit heavy right now. Tell him there’s a sale on wheelbarrels at Rona. And while he’s there, pick up some fertilizer to add to his remarks and for the trees, parks and “public” facilities which the “head taxes” paid for “centuries” ago.
 
Kenda Gee
www.asian.ca
Edmonton

 

Simple head-tax apology isn’t that simple

 

 
Pete McMartin
Vancouver
Sun

 

Gabriel Yiu arrived in Canada in 1991 from Hong Kong, riding the huge
post-Expo wave of immigration that forever changed the fabric of the city.

He is a bright guy and a liberal thinker, whose thick round-rimmed glasses
are his trademark. He found Canadian society an economic grind when he first
arrived, but he and his wife, Angela, worked hard and now own a small chain of
upscale flower shops.

A political commentator back in Hong Kong, he continued that work here while
building up his business, and has worked over the years in both Chinese- and
English-language media, including The Sun. Last year, he ran unsuccessfully as
the provincial NDP candidate in Burnaby-Willingdon.

At present, Yiu finds himself as spokesman for the B.C. Coalition of Head Tax
Payers, Spouses and Descendants, a local group formed last year to lobby the
Canadian government for an official apology and compensation. Yiu’s advantage is
his bilingualism — he can take the message to both the established
English-speaking Chinese community and the immigrant Chinese-speaking
community.

But why is a Chinese immigrant, who was never affected personally by the
injustices of the head tax, lobbying for an apology?

Well, for one thing, Yiu said, a significant portion of the recent Chinese
immigrant community wants to see an apology. For another: “Wrong is wrong,” Yiu
said, “and if we want to redress it we have to admit it.”

In this, he is without doubt on the side of the angels. But the question is,
who does Yiu mean by “we”?

Well, when you ask head tax lobbyists who it is they want to see apologize,
the answer is not a “who” but a “what” — the Government of Canada. That is, I
presume, an apology from the government would be a symbolic admission of
national historic guilt. Out of that admission would come a moral reckoning.

But this surely is a deflection of the truth. The present Government of
Canada has done no wrong to head tax payees and their descendants, nor has
today’s society at large. (It could be argued, even, that Canada’s inclusive and
colour-blind system of immigration — which brought people like Yiu here by the
hundreds of thousands — has gone some way toward expiating the racist sins of
the past. It could also be argued that that argument is beside the point.)

No, the wrong against head tax payers was committed by the Government of
Canada of a century ago. And it was not really the Government of Canada of a
century ago that committed the wrong. That government was only a conduit for its
constituents and their prevailing sentiments of the day.

And those constituents were white. And those constituents were my and, odds
are, your forebears. And here is where things get very delicate, because race
and ethnicity invariably intrude into discussions such as this. They cannot help
but do so, as much as we might deny it.

This is, after all, more than just an issue about a small portion of the
populace seeking financial redress from the government, otherwise it would just
be a matter of monetary compensation. Here’s your money, have a nice life.

But it is about more than that, or has become about more than that: It is
about ethnicity and racial pride. How else to explain Yiu’s assertion that a
significant portion of the recent Chinese immigrant population are in favour of
an apology, despite never having been affected by the head tax? And how else to
explain my own hesitation about the apology?

As Yiu wrote to me in a series of e-mails we exchanged discussing the
apology: “If there’s one day when ethnicity is no longer an issue, where every
Canadian is simply Canadian, the head tax issue would be irrelevant.”

But that day has not yet come, as Yiu tacitly admits, and despite the
multicult feel-good crowd who insist that it has. We carry our prejudices
still.

Nonetheless, Yiu said, there are also many whites in the coalition who feel
there should be an apology. And I would guess — since I haven’t been able to
find any polls on the question — that the majority of white Canadians see an
apology as the moral and proper thing to do, as sensitive as they have become to
the history of white racism. And probably it is the proper thing to do.

But it would be disingenuous, I would also suggest, of whites to ignore, or
fail to recognize, what was borne out of that racism, or, at least, out of the
circumstances that encouraged that belief in white superiority.

A short list:

Colonialism. British hegemony in North America. The decimation and clearance
of inconvenient aboriginal populations. (Talk about your apologies!) Manifest
destiny. The creation of Canada. The ensconcement of a uniformly white
Establishment. Power. Affluence. An assumption of privilege so pervasive as to
be taken as a birthright.

In other words, the blessed existence that many white Canadians enjoy today
is due to that historical continuum. And that continuum was peopled by forebears
who were hard and driven and, yes, even racist, though they might not have
recognized themselves as being so.

This column is not to excuse them of that, or to absolve them from what we
now take to be their sins. As Yiu said, wrong is wrong.

But while I know what an official apology would seek to redress, I am not
sure what it would ask us to forsake. In that sense, the easiest part of the
head tax issue to address is not the apology, but the compensation. That is only
money.

But an apology exacts a far greater cost. It apportions blame against sins
and motivations seen dimly through the gauze of history. It does so with the
clear-sighted certitude of hindsight.

It also asks: Are there limits to guilt? Does guilt have a past-due date?

And also this: Are we, from our enlightened, privileged present, enjoying the
luxury of condemning our hard, unfathomable past?

pmcmartin@png.canwest.com

Community meeting: “Don't Exclude Us Again” say Sons and Daughters of Chinese Head Tax Payers

A community meeting is taking place in Toronto on May 4th, to address issues of redress for Chinese Head Tax and Exclusion Act.

A similar community meeting will take place in Vancouver:


Saturday May 6th, 2pm,

SUCCESS. 

28 West Pender  St.

This will be organized by CCNC, ACCESS and the BC Coalition for Head Tax Payers, Spouses and Descendants.


Media Advisory
May 3, 2006

“Don’t
Exclude Us Again” say Sons and Daughters of Chinese Head Tax Payers

Vancouver/Edmonton/Regina/Toronto/Ottawa/Montreal/Halifax/St.
John’s.

Chinese Canadian National Council (CCNC), Ontario
Coalition of Chinese Head Tax Payers and Families (Ontario Coalition), and
redress-seeking groups will convene a news conference tomorrow to call upon the
Government to provide fair and inclusive redress:


Date:               Thursday,
May 4, 2006


Time:              11:00
am EST


\Place:              CCNC
office 302 Spadina Ave Suite 507


Speakers:        Colleen
Hua, National President, CCNC

                      
Victor Wong, Executive
Director, CCNC


                       Susan
Eng, Co-Chair, Ontario
Coalition

                      
George Lau, Co-Chair, Ontario
Coalition
                      
Avvy Go, Legal Counsel, Ontario Coalition

“Don’t
exclude us again” is the message that sons and daughters of Chinese Head
Tax payers presented at cross country consultations organized by Heritage Canada
over the past two weeks. More than 1,500 Chinese Canadians attended meetings in
Halifax, Toronto, Vancouver, Edmonton, Montreal and Winnipeg to share their
painful stories of discrimination, hardship, and decades of separation from
their parents during the Chinese Exclusion Act era, most of whom were elderly
sons and daughters of people who had paid the head tax.

All welcomed the
Government’s commitment to a Parliamentary Apology and Chinese Head Tax
Redress in the Throne Speech and were encouraged by the words and receptiveness
of the
Minister of Canadian Heritage, Hon. Bev Oda, and
Mr. Jason Kenney, Parliamentary Secretary to the Prime Minister.

“This
is a historic moment, and the first step to righting a historic wrong,”

said 88-year-old Head Tax payer James Pon. “Without a
doubt, the process of reconciliation has begun.”

Mr. Pon is one of the few
head tax payers alive today because his father paid his head tax for him when
he was an infant. There were more than 2000 head tax payers or spouses alive in
1984 when the Chinese Canadian National Council started to campaign for head
tax redress. After more than 21 years of inaction by successive federal
governments, there are only about 250 head tax payers and spouses alive today
across Canada.

But the
head tax payers and their wives are not the only victims who endured much pain
and suffering. 
My mother is both a spouse and daughter of head tax payers. She never
met her father who died in Ottawa
in 1916.  She was separated from my father for most of 14 years. Alone,
she raised children through famine and war before they were allowed to come to Canada.
I would be totally against a redress settlement that denies that this racist
legislation did not affect entire families
.”
said Yew Lee, Co-Chair of the Ontario Coalition.

“The sons and daughters
were directly affected by the racist Head Tax and Exclusion Acts in their own
right and it would not be fair to exclude them from redress”

said William Dere of the Chinese
Canadian Redress Alliance [Montreal].
“Surely, the Government got that message
from the consultations – their suffering was real and personal.”

“If the federal government
had acted as quickly in 1984 as the Harper government has so far just 3 months
into its mandate, then the families who have registered with us would have
received redress”
said Colleen
Hua, CCNC National President. “Their sons and daughters
should not be excluded simply because their parents could not outlive
Government intransigence.”

“The only fair settlement is “one certificate,
one payment” so that the sons and daughters of those who have predeceased
and still carry the pain both for what their parents suffered and what they
endured themselves will see justice too.”
said Kenda Gee of Edmonton Chinese HTEA Redress Committee [Alberta].

Chinese Canadian National Council (CCNC) and other redress-seeking
groups including the Ontario Coalition of Chinese Head Tax Payers and Families
(Ontario Coalition), B.C. Coalition of Head Tax Payers, Spouses and Descendants
(B.C. Coalition),
Saskatchewan Chinese Head Tax Redress Committee,
Association of Chinese Canadians for Equality and Solidarity (ACCESS), Edmonton Chinese HTEA Redress
Committee
,  and Chinese Canadian Redress
Alliance (CCRA) are now joined by the Halifax Chinese Redress Committee and Newfoundland and Labrador Head Tax Redress
Committee
in the campaign to redress the Head Tax and Chinese Exclusion
Act.

 
-30-

For more information, please contact:         

Chinese Canadian National Council
Colleen Hua, National President, (647) 299-1775 (Toronto)
Dr. Joseph Wong, CCNC Founding President, (416) 806-0082 (Toronto)
Victor Wong, Executive Director, (416) 977-9871 (Toronto)

Ontario
Coalition of Head Tax Payers and Families

Susan Eng, Co-Chair, (416) 960-0312 (Toronto)
George Lau, Co-Chair (416) 588-1751 (Toronto)
Yew Lee, Co-Chair, (819) 827-3357 (Ottawa)
Avvy Go, Legal Counsel, (416) 971-9674 (Toronto)

BC Coalition of Head Tax Payers, Spouses and Descendants

Gabriel
Yiu
, Chinese-language spokesperson (
604) 889-0696 (Vancouver)
Karin Lee, English-language spokesperson (778) 773-1088 (Vancouver)
Harvey Lee, English-language spokesperson (604) 254-7137 (Vancouver)

Association of Chinese Canadians for Equality and Solidarity

Sid Tan, President/ CCNC National Director, (604) 783-1853 (Vancouver)

Chinese Canadian Redress Alliance


William Dere (514) 488-0804 (Montreal)
Walter Tom (514) 341-3929 (Montreal)

Edmonton Chinese HTEA Redress
Committee


Kenda Gee, Chair, (780)
487-3536 (Edmonton)

Saskatchewan
Chinese Head Tax Redress Committee


Sam
Gee, Chair, (306) 586-7579 (Regina)
Choon
Yong, Vice-Chair, (306) 586-9663 (Regina)

Halifax
Chinese Redress Committee


May
Lui, Chairperson, (902) 423-7802 (Halifax)

Newfoundland and Labrador
Head Tax Redress Committee


Gordon Jin, Co-Chair, (709) 726-7872 (St. John’s)

Chinese Head Tax Redress – A Framework for Reconciliation – Update

This
is the framework for redress suggested by the combined efforts of the
Chinese Canadian National Council and the Coalitions for Redress from
across Canada.  It has been submitted to the Federal government to
aid the Redress process. 

It emphasizes a two stage process
with immediate apology, and compensation for surviving head tax payers
and spouses – because of their advanced age.




The second stage will address
compensation to the estate of deceased head tax payers and spouses, as
their children are also seen as “direct victims” of the tax and
exclusion act.

Chinese Head Tax Redress

A Framework for Reconciliation – Update

Reconciliation has Begun

A Framework for Reconciliation was proposed immediately on the
inauguration of the new government in February 2006, setting out a two stage
process to allow the government’s commitments to be implemented in an
orderly fashion with broad community input.

In a reflection of the priority the government assigns to redress and
reconciliation, a number of significant milestones have been attained in less
than two months, including immediate consultations with community and redress
groups from across Canada, apology and redress set as a government priority in
the Throne Speech and cross country consultations held directly with a broad
reach of Chinese Canadian individuals. Noteworthy is that the consultations
were personally conducted by the Minister of Canadian Heritage and Jason Kenney, Parliamentary Secretary to the Prime
Minister and both Ministers continue to give their personal attention to this
matter.

The Framework outlined the general principles for redress and
reconciliation and the progress to date has honoured those principles,
beginning with the promised apology and the acknowledgement already given by
the Minister and Parliamentary Secretary in their formal comments that the Head
Tax and Exclusion Acts were “racist legislation”. In the 20 year
history of the redress campaign, this is the first acknowledgement that an act
of Parliament was in fact racist, that it was wrong and that an apology was
due. This validates the sense of injustice felt by so many who brought their
wrenching stories to the Minister and Parliamentary Secretary at the public
consultations.

Another important achievement of the consultations was the direct
participation of individual members of the community, unmediated by community
organizations. These particular generations of Chinese Canadians have felt the
sting of racism directly sanctioned by the Parliament of the day, made worse by
the knowledge that there was then no avenue of recourse or appeal. The same
group of people were able to shed more than a little of that sense of
powerlessness by being invited, as it were, to “speak truth to
power”. That too, has resonance, for those particular people and for the
generations that follow.

Without doubt, the process of reconciliation has already begun.

The purpose of separating the process into two phases was to allow the
government to immediately move forward on securing the Parliamentary Resolution
for the apology and on providing direct redress to the surviving head tax
payers and spouses as soon as July 1st, 2006 without being delayed
by the complexities of addressing the concerns of descendents who have much
more diverse positions on appropriate redress beyond that for those survivors.
However, now that hundreds of Chinese Canadians across the country have borne
witness to the impact of the Head Tax and Exclusion Acts on entire families,
the principles that should guide the offering of appropriate redress must be
explored.

General principles – restated:

The principles previously articulated still hold but they must be
refined and extended to deal more specifically with the issues raised in recent
consultations.

1.      The
fundamental purpose of redress is to achieve reconciliation, restore justice and
rebuild trust. It speaks to the credibility of the government and is a test of
its genuine political commitment to eradicate the racism that gave rise to such
wrongs so that they will not be repeated. It is a statement of our values
– inclusion and racial equality.

2.      Consequently,
the government must deal directly with those most affected, the head tax payers
and their families; this underscores the urgency of acting quickly because the
surviving head tax payers and spouses are mostly in their 90s. The two phase
Framework was intended to allow these elders to see justice while they were
still alive but it did not mean to exclude any redress for the injustice they suffered
if they have predeceased.

3.      Apology
is the first step and a precondition in achieving reconciliation;Redress must be commensurate with and be tied
specifically to the injustice to serve justice. 

  1. While the Head Tax and
    Exclusion Acts are the manifest sources of the injustice, the underlying
    cause was the widespread racism of the day. To properly redress such
    wrongs, a broad interpretation of the extent of the injustice must be
    adopted.
  2. The focus must be
    on dignity, respect and vindication. The courts have ruled that redress is
    not an issue of legal rights but moral and equitable rights. A principled
    political decision should not be confined by legal restrictions and
    precedent but rather should serve the public good, in this case, by
    restoring dignity, according respect and vindication to the greatest reach
    of the injured community as realistically possible.


 
The Parameters of Restorative Justice 

A.     This
is a political and moral decision, not one of legal rights and precedents.

B.     The
impact of the injustice and legislated racism was felt by entire families.

C.     The
impact of restorative justice and repudiation of racist legislation will be
felt by generations to come.

D.     Ascertaining
who paid the Head Tax is a practical way of identifying the group of people to whom
redress should be rendered; it may be said that a moral debt is owed to these
people.

E.      There
is no reason, in the cause of moral justice and reconciliation, why such
redress may not be paid to the estate of the head tax payer who has predeceased
although it may be reasonable to limit such payment to the first generation
still living in Canada; but for the 20 years of resistance by successive
federal governments, the Head Tax payers and spouses themselves would have
received the payments directly. They should not be excluded simply because they
could not outlive government intransigence. The redress is due to the head tax
payer or spouse; payment to the estate is merely the method of implementation.

F.      Identifying
and including all those who were directly and unjustly affected must be
balanced against the interest in pressing ahead to achieve an already too long
delayed resolution. Consequently, some limits may be placed on the notion of
“one certificate, one payment”, including the date on which the
Head Tax payer or spouse must have been alive, and as above, limit payment to
the first generation.

G.     The
amount of redress must be substantive to have significance but it has always
been recognized as a symbolic amount, not an actuarial calculation of the debt
owed.

H.     Ceremony
and symbolism play a vital role hence the significance and gratitude accorded
to the steps already taken – the promises in the first Prime Ministerial news
conference, on Chinese New Year’s Eve, on the UN International Day for
the Elimination of Racism, inclusion in the Throne Speech, the target date of
July 1st. There are a number of other symbolic dates such as:

May 17th
the day the Exclusion Act was repealed in 1947; May is also Asian Heritage
Month

November 7th
– anniversary of the Last Spike Ceremony

Dec 10th
International Human Rights Day

I.       
The process of reconciliation cannot be
forced into a predetermined timetable. If the current consultations are
inadequate to ensure that all views have been represented, the first stage should
be allowed to proceed and meet the July 1st target while additional
work on stage two may continue.

While
there are different ideas as to what is the appropriate form and amount of
redress, we should be able to agree on the principles that underpin redress and
reconciliation.

These
suggestions are respectfully submitted.