Category Archives: Commentaries

Chinese Head Tax Redress: Recent letters to the Editors for Vancouver Courier and Shared Vision articles

Here are recent letters to the editor that have appeared in the Vancouver Sun, Vancouver Courier and Shared Vision magazine regarding their recent articles on Redress for the Chinese Head Tax and Chinese Exclusion Act (1897 to 1947).

Vancouver Sun, March 2, 2005
 
Letters: Liberals float a red herring on redress 
 
There are still seniors alive who paid the racist head tax and targeted by legislation separating families. They and their descendants should be the focus of any redress settlement and also dictate the terms of community compensation. 
 
Given that the Japanese Canadian redress did not incur any liability with individual pay-outs and community compensation, why would it be different for Chinese Canadians?
 
The obvious conclusion is Conservative Brian Mulroney's justice depatment lawyers for the Japanese Canadian redress are smarter
than Liberal Paul Martin's for a Chinese Canadian redress. Or is the liability issue cited by Multicultural Minister Raymond Chan a poor excuse?
 
Sid Chow Tan, director

———————————-
Original article, Settling the Score February 2005

Shared Vision, March 2005 
Letters: Head Tax Not Just a Chinese Issue 

I am a fifth-generation Vancouverite. My grandfather paid the head tax, my great-grandfather paid the head tax. I had the pleasure to talk with filmmaker Karen Cho ( In the Shadow of Gold Mountain ), and I was amazed when she told me that the British/white side of the family was more angry about the head tax than the Chinese side of the family.

 
My cousins have all been marrying non-Chinese people, mostly of Scottish, Irish, or English ancestry.
We have fifth-, sixth- and seventh- generation descendents who are only one-quarter Chinese.
We have First Nations children whose great-great-grandfather had to pay a Chinese head tax.
 
This is no longer a Chinese issue—it is a
Canadian issue. When the Canadian government finally realizes there are non-Chinese Canadians demanding head-tax redress for their grandfathers and great grandfathers, maybe then they will wake up.
How many generations will it take to inter-marry into the families of Canadian politicians?

Todd Wong, Vancouver

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original article: Chinese Says Apology Long Overdue
02/09/2005


Vancouver Courier, February 13,
2005                                                                                                          

Letters: Canada owes Chinese justice

Happy Lunar New Year and many thanks for your story on Daniel  Lee's
efforts to seek an apology for the racist head tax on
Chinese immigrants from 1885 to 1923 (“Chinese senior says apology
long  overdue,” Feb. 17).

It enriches our country when elders such as Daniel
Lee speak up  for a redress that tests Canadian laws and
conscience. All Canadians should be inspired by this.

Since 1984, over 4,500 head tax payers, spouses and
descendants, each representing a head tax certificate, have asked
the Chinese Canadian National Council to represent them in seeking
not only an apology, but a symbolic return of a portion of the
head tax money collected.

Where possible, the money should be returned to
individuals and families who paid it. The present day valuation of
the head tax collected would exceed a billion dollars. In the early
1900's, the $500 could buy two houses in Chinatown. Keep in mind
the CCNC seeks a refund of head taxes paid, not compensation for their
application.

The Canadian government unjustly enriched itself by
$23-million with a law to initially deter and then profit from
Chinese immigration. That was close to the cost of building the
Canadian Pacific Railway, which tied together a coast to coast
confederation called Canada. So not only did Lo Wah Kiu (old
overseas Chinese) forbears build the most difficult and dangerous
last 300 miles of the railway, they paid for all of it!

The few living head-tax payers are in their 90s so
redress is urgent if  they are to see it. We hope Prime
Minister Paul Martin will finish his father's work to redress this
racist chapter of Canadian history. In 1947, the elder Paul
Martin, as Secretary of State, brought forth in the Commons the
Canadian Citizenship Act, which allowed the Chinese, then with 
“domestic aliens” status even if born here, to become citizens.

No amount of money can take away the hurt, angst and
oppression of Lo Wah Kiu heroes and heroines who endured and
prevailed over 62 years of targeted racist legislation. However, a
redress which commemorates them and their achievements is a start.
Along with an apology, we are  asking for what any Canadian
would want- refund of an unjust tax and   amends for the
racist family-separating exclusion. Where there are no claimants, the
money could start a foundation for education and research to end
racism.

Justice now. It's only fair.

Sid Chow Tan, director
Chinese Canadian National Council
Vancouver

Is being an ethnic Canadian a 50/50 split? or is being multicultural 100% x ethnicity(s) + 100% Canadian?

Is being an ethnic Canadian a 50/50 split? or is being multicultural 100% x ethnicity(s) + 100% Canadian?

What percentage do we consider ourselves ethnic? or Canadian? 
This idea presented itself to me while I was sitting on the CRTC
judicial hearing for Planet Radio presented by CHUM.  I was invited to be part of the Planet Radio community advisory committee by Prem Gill, host of ColourTV, a weekly show on CityTV about diversity in culture.

The CRTC vice-chair
was labouring over questions about Planet Radio's proposals of what
percentage of the music programming would be in English or French
language vs non-English or French.  Planet Radio proposed a
minimum of 20% music programming for non-English or French, while 35%
programming would be Canadian.

It is important to address the fact that the panel was 100% visibly
white.  While some CRTC judges may be francophone or part First
Nations, that doesn't necessarily make them appear visibly any less
white.  English is just the official language of Canada, as is
French.  You can be 100% Anglophone, 100% Francophone, and 100%
Canadian – just as Pierre Trudeau was, as his father was
French-Canadian and his mother was Scottish/English Canadian. 
Even CHUM interactive Vice President Roma Khanna and I speak better
French than Hindi or Chinese, that's just how Canadian we are.

Canada's
ethnic population feels the same about our individual
multi-heritage:  There are no rules or definitions how we classify
ourselves such as being 20% Anglophone, 20% French, 10%
aboriginal, or 50% Chinese… unless you are applying to be a Status
Indian.

Ndidi Cascade was also
part of the advisory committee with me.  While her father was
Nigerian and her mother Irish and Italian, she is NOT 50% African, 25%
Celtic, 25% Mediterranean.  She can be 100%
Nigerian-Canadian, 100% Irish-Canadian; 100% Italian-Canadian, which
all adds up to 100% Canadian.  We are truly more than the sum of
our ethnic DNA cells. First Nations musicians singing in their
aboriginal tongue is neither English or French – do we classify them as
“foreign language?”  Canadians born of Asian or African heritage,
sing about their cultural ancestry in English – do we classify them as
non-global, or English language?

We don't live our lives by
saying it is 4pm, time to be Chinese for an hour.  We draw on all
of our life and cultural experiences throughout the day – just like our
musical programming.  Take Robbie Robertson, Angelique Kidu, Les
Nubians, Nelly Furtado, Bebel Gilberto, Tan Dun, Buffy Sainte-Marie,
Curtis Clear Sky and put them in the cd play and just hit “shuffle”.

We are now post-multiculturalism.  30 years ago, there were no
radio stations catering to the Vancouver ethnic immigrant
populations.  CRTC would never have granted an individual licence
to address the Canadian born Chinese population for a Co-op Radio
program like “Pender Guy
about Chinese Canadian youth issues – but it still played an important
part in the evolution of Chinese Canadian culture.  
Traditional
Multiculturalism wraps every ethnic group up in a little
box and orders it in little pigeon hole stereotypes for easier
understanding.

Asian Canadians are now 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th and even 7th generation Canadians like my Chan family descendents.
Many of us are now inter-racially married.  We are
now all part of the mainstream – and yet are still marginalized as
the radio licences are given to new immigrants to address new immigrant
issues.  Our music scene has changed, the technology has changed,
and radio programming must change to meet the concerns of youth and
aboriginal culture and our changing Canadian culture.

Multi-generational
Canadians speak English – so it's harder to find us through ethnic
media and communication channels.  We are the “invisible”
visible-minority.  We are inter-cultural, proud of our ancestry
while sharing the diverse cultures of each other, and also perhaps of
our 4 differently diverse grand parents.  Traditional immigrants
tend to predominately remember the culture as it was when they left
their homeland. This is why the many Chinatowns, Japantowns, Little
Italy's and Little India's all seem to be stuck in time. But cultures
evolve, they change, they morph, they mix, and they integrate. 
That is why the Silk Road in Asia was so important – all the cultures
exchanged information, rather than institute isolationist policies
where you could only speak one language or address one culture at a
time. 

100% English speaking, 100% ethnic Chinese-Canadian, 100% West Coast, 100% global, 100% Canadian – that's me!

feedback from CBC Commentary “Terracotta Warriors ingnites war of words”

Here's a comment on my CBC Radio Commentary heard on Early
Edition on May 21st, at approximately 6:45 am, from Dr. Jan
Walls.  Dr. Walls is the Director of the David See-Chai
Lam Centre for International Communications at Simon Fraser
University.  He is also former cultural attache for the Canadian
Embassy in Beijing, and currently an advisor or board member for
many organizations.  Most recently he was invited to Boston
by Yo Yo Ma to perform his “clapper tales” at the Peabody Essex
Museum. http://www.pem.org/events/silkroads.php 

Hello from Seattle, Todd.

I wanted to congratulate you, by the way, for the excellently worded
“Commentary” I hear you deliver on CBC's Early Edition the other
day.  I think you're on to something, which may have to do with
what I would call “misplaced cross-cultural expectations,” a phenomenon
we noticed when comparing the very different responses to “Crouching
Tiger, Hidden Dragon” among Chinese (PRC and Hong Kong, and recent
Chinese immigrants overseas) and among “foreigners.”  to long-time
kung-fu fans, it was not all that great, while Western people who
didn't know all that much about the kung-fu move tradition, but who had
been “prepped” by “The Matrix,” were entranced by it.  I'm sure
it's much more complex than this, and I look forward to having the time
to figure it out.

I'll talk to you when I get back.

Jan

Terracotta Warriors ignite war of words about reviewing art and culture

Terracotta Warriors ignite war of words about reviewing art and culture

By Todd Wong

In Vancouver, a debate over how art should be reviewed is growing.
On one side is Dr. Dennis Law, one of the owners of the Centre in
Vancouver for the Performing Arts and the writer/producer and director
of Terracotta Warriors, the second in a development of show spectacles
he calls “Action-Musicals.” On the other side are Vancouver’s art and
culture critics of the Vancouver Sun, West Ender, Globe & Mail and
Georgia Straight. In the middle are Vancouver’s audiences, many whom
are enjoying “Terracotta Warriors” despite what the reviewers are
writing.

All this is taking place during Asian Heritage Month, throughout
May, recognized across Canada with major events and festivals going on
across the country. From Montreal to Calgary, from Ottawa to Victoria,
Asian Canadians from multi-generation descendents to new immigrants are
staging productions to affirm their identities as Asian Canadians, both
in traditional arts rooted in Asia, and also in contemporary arts that
are strongly Canadian.

“East is East and West is West and never the twain shall meet”,
wrote Rudyard Kipling during the hey day of the once mighty British
Empire. Colonial rule in India, Hong Kong, parts of Africa, Central
America, the Caribbean as well as North America, imposed upon resident
cultures its’ own brand of colonial justice and values, long before the
terms of “cultural relativism” and “multiculturalism” were invented.

And so it would seem to me, that when a new arts impresario from
Denver Colorado steps into our Western frontier town and challenges the
status quo of arts and culture in Vancouver, all the other local guns
have to challenge the newcomer. Indeed, the wagons are being circled
and the posse is being rounded up looking for a lynching.

Terracotta Warriors is neither traditional Chinese Opera nor dance,
neither is it a traditional Broadway Musical. Rather it is an
“Action-Musical,” a new artform that blends traditional Chinese Arts
with modern technology. This could be similarly compared to how Cirque
du Soleil has “borrowed” many traditional art forms from around the
world such as Chinese acrobats and Polynesian fire dancing combining
them with lavish costumes and music to reinvent the Circus in the late
20th Century.

Law is simply doing the same, merging the old with the new, to
create a new way of presenting the once familiar. Isn’t this what Art
is supposed to do? Show us new ways of seeing? Seeing the objects
around us with fresh eyes, the way Marcel Duchamp, Pablo Picasso and
Igor Stravinsky did – much to the dismay and public outcries of a world
not ready for Modernism. But is the world ready for Chinese Dance and
Opera to be reinvented for the 21st Century? If not by Dennis Law, then by whom? And if not in Vancouver or Canada, then where?

Law claims that the reviewers are unfairly biased towards his shows
and instead of writing good journalistic art critiques, they are
writing personal attacks against him. The critics are writing that Law
doesn’t make his show accessible enough for Western audiences and that
the plot is convoluted and hard to understand.

Leanne Campbell (Westender) opens her review by comparing the music
and smoke effects to a Heavy Metal concert. What really happens is that
a Chinese percussion player plays on a large array of Chinese drums and
large bells. One must wonder if Ms. Campbell is ignorant of Chinese
music and art or mistook the theatrical smoke for her hard rock youth.
Such a statement comparing Chinese music to Heavy Metal music smacks of
cultural ignorance similar to bebop jazz music being derogatorily
called “Chinese Music.”

Understanding and appreciating cultural diversity is what Asian
Heritage Month is all about. Being open to new or different forms of
art is important to our culture, otherwise it stagnates. Ms. Campbell
and other reviewers are all Western Caucasians, presumably writing for
a White audience with a Western Caucasian perspective. But isn’t
Vancouver supposed to be the city of great diversity and
multiculturalism and tolerance for other cultures? Perhaps not in the
arts world. or maybe just amongst some specific critics.

Max Wyman, Vancouver dance critic emeritus, writes in his new book
“The Defiant Imagination,” that Canadian culture must embrace cultural
diversity. “Canada is an experiment in constant renewal, a
welcoming society built in a spirit of democratic pluralism. We are
finding that the experience and knowledge of a multicultural population
with roots in many countries and societies is one of our great
strengths. From that diversity flow insight, creativity, wisdom.
Confidence in our culture and belief in its living, ceaselessly
changing diversity gives us a communal ability to counter xenophobia
and cultural paranoia.”

Wyman paints an artistic back drop of a Canada moving beyond
multiculturalism to become a truly global leader of culture, where
Vancouver’s artists are looked upon as leaders in their fields. Artists
such as Kokoro Dance, Battery Opera and Boca del Lupo all receive
worldwide recognition for their cultural fusion led by teams of
inter-racial marriages and partnerships. On the global scene it is
exotic, in Vancouver, inter-racial and inter-cultural is seen as the
norm.

And yet the Vancouver media seems to prefer criticizing Law on a
homogenous set of values based on Western morals and values as opposed
to trying to understand the new cultural ideas he is presenting to us.
Perhaps this is a diversion for what they don’t understand about
Chinese culture and art.

Witness comments by Alexandra Gill, (Globe & Mail), who writes
that Terracotta Warriors is “gorgeous but painfully amateurish” and
wonders if Law is “an artistic visionary who truly believes there is a
Broadway-bound future in his action-musicals? Or is he just a wannabe
director with lots of money and a big theatre to play in?”

Afterall, trying to understand Chinese culture is a tremendous task
4000 years of culture with a country 5 times the size of Europe and as
twice as many cultural subgroups if not more – all rolled up into a few
cliches and stereotypes for easy Western digestion. Small wonder that
after a few hours Westerners minds are hungry again – they didn’t
digest enough in the first place.

Being an impresario is hard work. Law denies he is one, but over the
past three years, he has brought us “Heaven & Earth” his first
action-musical, plus the Denver Ballet’s production of “Dracula” and
“Eagle and Dragon”, a musical concert featuring Chinese and American
classical singers. Vancouver’s own local impresarios have failed and
succeeded in our market. David Y.H. Louie, despite his financial
failings, is still lauded as a visionary to bring exciting dance
companies to Vancouver. And Vancouver Recital Society’s Leila Getz has
succeeded where people told her recitals weren’t viable. Getz herself
has said that it is important to maintain an artistic vision and to
bring artists whom she feels are important and not necessarily just
what the audience thinks they want to see.

But where are all the Asian voices in this debate. Well which Asians
do you mean? Vancouver’s Asian population is as diverse as the many
countries and generations they arrived from. And this may simply be the
problem. Vancouver and it’s artistic community still doesn’t understand
its’ Asian audience.

My own Asian heritage is descended from the Chinese pioneers who arrived in the late 19th
Century. Our families are so integrated into Canadian culture, we are
considered to be the “invisible visible minorities.” Chinese culture
and history is largely foreign to me, so I welcomed the experience that
Terracotta Warriors has provided for me to learn about Chinese art and
culture and especially one of history’s greatest leaders and
visionaries. Emperor Qin Shihuang accomplished not only the unification
of China, but also its language and monetary system, and is considered
only to be have Alexander the Great and Julius Caesar as historical
equals. Even Ramses, Genghis Khan or Napoleon couldn’t maintain an
empire as large or leave as lasting a legacy.

I took my Chinese Canadian parents and my White Canadian girlfriend
to see Terracotta Warriors. All enjoyed it tremendously and nobody had
a problem understanding the story lines. My girlfriend and I compared
it to attending European opera or ballet, sung in foreign languages. We
met people in the audience who planned to see it a second time, and
heard about people who had seen the show three times already. Many
audience members both Asian and Caucasian had their pictures taken with
cast members in the lobby, smiles displaying the enjoyment of the
occasion.

Two years ago, I sat at audience development round table discussions
with the leading arts organizations of Vancouver. It was widely
understood that the Vancouver’s large Asian population was an untapped
market. But the talks were disproportionately represented by the faces
around the table, as only 2 or 3 out of 50 people attending the meeting
were Asian. And from the look and names of the people writing the
reviews of Terracotta Warriors and Asian Heritage Month events, all the
reviewers are white. No wonder the Vancouver media doesn’t understand
the show or Vancouver’s Asian population.