Category Archives: Joy Kogawa & Kogawa House

Kogawa House: The Case to create a literary and historical landmark for Vancouver


Kogawa House: The Case to create a literary and historical landmark for Vancouver

Recently I was asked to state a case for preserving Kogawa House.  You can visit the discussion here on www.darrenbarefoot.com

The best answer is to experience these upcoming events, Vancouver Opera's Naomi's Road

  • Saturday, March 4, 2006 7:00 pm at West Vancouver Memorial Library 
  • March 11, 2006, 7:30pm at Vancouver Japanese Language School Hall

Monday, Feb 27th. Emily Kato book launch – Vancouver Public Library,

I will
MC a special “Emily Kato” book launch for Joy Kogawa.  There will be
special guests and presentations.  This will be the penultimate One Book One Vancouver follow up program as “Emily
Kato” is the reworked (Itsuka) sequel that highlights the JC Redress
movement of the 1980's.

The Case for Preserving Kogawa House…

1 – It is a historical and literary landmark: 
Joy is one of Canada's most influential and honoured authors. 
Vancouver has only two literary landmarks and both are in Stanley Park
– Robbie Burns statue and Pauline Johnson memorial.  Name another
Canadian author listed in BC Almanac's Greatest British Columbians,
Literary Review of Canada, and Quill and Quire's top 100 books? 
Has recieved Order of Canada?
Has had an opera made from their works?

Here's a link for
15 literary and cultural associations across canada that support preservation of kogawa house

Here's a link for
20 Reasons to save Kogawa House

Quote from Margaret Atwood

2 – The house will become a writing centre, and
be restored to it's 1937 to 1942 era while Joy lived in the house as a
young child.  There will be a writers-in-residence program working in
conjunction with writing associations across Canada.  Special
consideration will be considered for “Writers of Conscience”, who write
topic of human rights and racial/cultural harmony/issues.  We will
create programs for author readings and tie in with city cultural
festivals.

See link for The Land Conservancy


3 – The history of the house itself provides a landmark to the Japanese Canadian internment
– one of Canada's darkest historical periods.  There is no
acknowledgement or memorial in Vancouver for this incident.  Kogawa House
is one of the few houses identified as having been confiscated by the
govt. and the only house identified with a cultural and literary
significance.  This was the house that was taken away.  This was the
house that was yearned for and represented a time before Hate and
Negative-Identity virtually destroyed the JC social structure.  This
was the house that inspired the writing of both Obasan and Naomi's Road.

Here are recent news links  generated after having Joy Kogawa as
keynote speaker at the “Order of Canada” luncheon organized by the Canadian Club, to honour BC's 2005 appointees to the Order of Canada.

Tribute like coming home, Kogawa says
Vancouver Sun (subscription), Canada – 16 Feb 2006

Campaign aims to save BC writer's former home as piece of Canadian
Canada.com, Canada – 19 Feb 2006


CBC Nova Scotia
$1 million needed to save Kogawa House
CBC Nova Scotia, Canada – 8 Feb 2006

Saving the House of Joy
TheTyee.ca, Canada – 13 Feb 2006
Deadline to save Kogawa's old home draws near
Globe and Mail, Canada – 16 Feb 2006


Through the power of Blogging and google searches, www.kogawahouse.com and www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com
have been able to help provide information on the continuing saga of
the “Save Kogawa House” campaign.  Media stories have been collected,
and Media reporters have referenced the websites.  Special thanks to Roland Tanglao of www.bryght.com for setting up our blogs.

Naomi's Road and The World of Opera – this weekend Feb 19th at Vancouver Academy of Music

Naomi's Road and The World of Opera – this weekend Feb 19th at Vancouver Academy of Music 

Here are performances of Naomi's Road and The World of Opera (in 45 Minutes) that are coming soon to your community.

Okay… I love Naomi's Road opera…. here is your latest chance to see it!

Please contact local presenters for tickets.

Sunday, February 19, 2006 2:00 pm
Vancouver Opera Guild presents Naomi's Road
Vancouver Academy of Music
1270 Chestnut Street
Vancouver, BC
Admission: $20 adults, $10 children 12 and under
Tickets and Information: 604-874-4042 or 604-682-2871 ext. 5001 (Pat)

Globe & Mail: Deadline to save Kogawa's old home draws near – by Petti Fong


Globe & Mail: Deadline to save Kogawa's old home draws near – by Petti Fong

Yesterday I got home… after having a snack with
Joy, and watching the filming of the Global News story… I found a
message on my voice mail from Globe & Mail reporter Petti Fong,  
Darn… I missed another media quote opportunity! 


Constable Bob Underhill, Joy Kogawa and Todd Wong at the “Order of Canada / Flag Day” luncheon hosted by The Canadian Club – see story at

I really like that Petti included the quote “If everyone who had read Obasan donated $1, enough money would be raised to preserve the house.

I keep telling people… that I would prefer see 100,000 people donate $10 each rather than one person donate $1 Million Dollars.  Kogawa House is a community house.  It lives in Joy's novels Obasan and Naomi's Road.  It should be the community that saves it, uses it, and cherishes it. 

Please donate to Kogawa House by calling The Land Conservancy
Tell them Toddish McWong sent you….

Vancouver Office
5655 Sperling Avenue
Burnaby, BC V5E 2T2
Phone: 604.733.2313
Fax: 604.299.5054

Deadline to save Kogawa's old home draws near

VANCOUVER — Celebrated Canadian author Joy Kogawa has a deadline hanging over her.

By
the end of March, she's hoping that enough money will be raised to save
her childhood Vancouver home from demolition and turn it into a
writer-in-residence's retreat.

But with the
deadline just six weeks away, fundraising has reached just $160,000,
far below the $1.25-million needed to buy the house from the current
owners and maintain it as a writers' retreat.

“We're hopeful that more people will hear about this,” said Tamsin Baker, regional manager with the Land Conservancy.

Along with the conservancy, a Save Kogawa House Committee has been helping to raise money.
Although
Ms. Kogawa lived in the house in the Marpole area for just six years,
the bungalow has become a symbol for many far greater than a place
where a writer once lived.
In 1942, Ms. Kogawa and her
family were removed from Vancouver and interned in the Interior town of
Slocan. Like thousands of Japanese-Canadians, their property, including
the house in Marpole, was confiscated.

For
nearly 100 years, the bungalow has sat on West 64th Avenue. After Ms.
Kogawa's family was forcibly removed during the Second World War, a
succession of owners lived at the house.
But because of its place in literature, through Ms. Kogawa's novel Obasan, the bungalow is anchored in details of a life disturbed suddenly. In Obasan, Ms. Kogawa describes the fruit trees in the back, trees that remain to this day, and she remembers playing in the backyard.

When
city hall voted last November to delay demolition to allow for heritage
preservation efforts, fundraising began in earnest to keep the house
from being destroyed.

The current owners want to build a new house on the lot.

Ms.
Baker with the conservancy said donations ranging from $30 to thousands
have come in, but still more is needed. Faculty at Toronto's York
University have pledged $1,000 and urged other faculties across the
country to match or beat their donation.

Yesterday, Ms. Baker said, a $10,000 donation came in.

Ms.
Kogawa, who talked to students yesterday at a Canadian Club luncheon in
downtown Vancouver, said she's hoping for a miracle. “It's miraculous
enough that the house itself has survived for so long,” she added.

Recently someone suggested to her that if everyone who had read Obasan donated $1, enough money would be raised to preserve the house.

Vancouver Sun: Tribute like coming home, Kogawa says (at Canadian Club “Order of Canada” luncheon)


Vancouver Sun:  Tribute like coming home, Kogawa says
 
(at Canadian Club “Order of Canada” luncheon)


The Vancouver Sun published a nice story about Joy Kogawa's keynote speech at the Feb 15th, “Order of Canada / Flag Day” luncheon held at the Four Seasons Hotel.  It was a very moving talk, motivated by her conflicting emotions of being in awe of the great Canadians and many appointees of the Order of Canada (which she recieved in 1986) and in wanting to give the many children and students in the room a message for their future. – Todd

Vancouver Sun:  Tribute like coming home, Kogawa says

Gerry Bellett, Vancouver Sun

Published: Thursday, February 16, 2006

Vancouver writer and poet Joy Kogawa told the Canadian Club
Wednesday she felt she had “come home” when the City of Vancouver chose
her book Obasan as the city's official book.

At the beginning of the Second World War Kogawa was removed from her Vancouver home to a Japanese internment camp in Slocan.

Addressing her remarks to the many students in the audience, Kogawa
said many children grow up feeling they don't belong in Canadian
society.

“Some of us feel we don't belong and we're not as good as the rest
and it's a bit tough when you grow up feeling there is no home for
you,” she said.

“What I was so happy about Obasan being chosen for the one book for
this city was the tremendous sense of welcome from the city from which
I was exiled as a child. I have come home to my home,” she said.

Kogawa lived in a house at 1450 West 64th, and a national campaign
has been launched to raise $1.25 million to buy the property and save
the home from demolition.

The Land Conservancy, which is spearheading the campaign has until
March 30 to raise enough money to save the Kogawa house, pay for
restoration, and establish an endowment so that the house can be used
for a national writers-in-residence program.

Kogawa spoke of the sense of alienation she has experienced even in
1986 on the day she received her Order of Canada when another recipient
waiting with her to receive the award told her that he'd “been to your
beautiful country.”

She said: “I've been to yours too, I was born in it.”

“Perhaps things are different today. In the urban centres we're used
to seeing people of all kinds and cultures and we accept one another
more or less. But if you go into the countryside it might be
different,” she said.

Kogawa said she was in a small town when her son struck up a conversation with someone he met, and introduced her.

“Oh, does she speak English?” she said he was asked.

She told students that the time would come in their lives when they
would know suffering but to trust in their inner light to get through
it. “If you trust that light you are at peace and that passes all
understanding,” she said.

ORDER OF CANADA:

A luncheon Wednesday, with guest speaker Joy Kogawa, honoured recent B.C. appointments to the Order of Canada.

The Tyee: Saving the House of Joy – new article by Derek Moscato


The Tyee:  Saving the House of Joy – new article by Derek Moscato

The Tyee is one of my favorite webzines.  It is self-described as feisty and presents an alternative view to mainstream media.  I met founder David Beers at a panel discussion at the Vancouver Public Library back in December. This is the first article on Kogawa House in The Tyee.

Saving the House of Joy




Kogawa's childhood home in Vancouver

Activists rally to defend home of celebrated author Joy Kogawa.



By Derek Moscato



Published: February 13, 2006

 

theTyee.ca

When the quest to save a house of historical significance collides
with a booming Vancouver real estate market, the end result sometimes
favors development, and even destruction, over preservation.

So far, that's been the case for the childhood home of author Joy Kogawa,
located in Vancouver's Marpole neighbourhood. Like otherwise
once-overlooked neighbourhoods in the Greater Vancouver area, Marpole
is now experiencing an influx of interest and dollars — to the dismay
of historians and literature enthusiasts across the country. That's
because the Kogawa house, which is located at 1450 West 64th Avenue, is
facing a day of reckoning with a bulldozer.

Kogawa is the most celebrated of Japanese-Canadian writers; her novel Obasan
has not only won a big following internationally, it has single
handedly educated otherwise unknowing Canadians about of Canada's
darkest chapters, the interment of Japanese-Canadians during World War
II (the internment experience in the novel is set in Slocan City).

Please read the whole story at   http://thetyee.ca/Views/2006/02/13/HouseofJoy/

Joy Kogawa is keynote speaker for “Order of Canada / Flag Day” luncheon hosted by Canadian Club

Joy Kogawa is keynote speaker for “Order of Canada / Flag Day” luncheon hosted by Canadian Club


Harry
Aoki, Const. Bob Underhill, Joy Kogawa and Dr. Jean Watters (president
of Canadian Club).  Joy Kogawa was the keynote speaker for the
“Order of Canada / Flag Day” luncheon, and Harry provided the “gift of
song.” – photo Todd Wong.

It was a good day for Save Kogawa House and the Canadian Club
on Flag Day, the 41st anniversary of the Maple Leaf flag, first
unveiled in 1965.    Joy Kogawa was the keynote speaker
for the annual “Order of Canada / Flag Day” luncheon hosted by the
Canadian Club.  Recent BC Order of Canada recipients named in 2005
were honoured with a special ceremony remniscent of the actual
investiture ceremony that takes place at Rideau Hall with the Governor
General.

The Canadian Club is committed to ensuring that each of
its major events all feature an abundance of students in the
audience.  This makes for a very interesting dynamic as many
students began arriving as early as 11am, and the lobby filled with
mingling guests.  There was a definite buzz in the air that
something special was happening.  I spoke with the Canadian Club
members that I knew, as well as helping our committee co-chair Andrew
Winstanley to organize some journalism students from BCIT, who were
doing a news piece on our event.  I also spoke with friends Dr.
Wallace Chung and his wife Dr. Madeline Chung who had delivered
me.  I made a joke as I introduced her to my friends from The Land
Conservancy…  “If Dr. Madeline had dropped me there wouldn't be
a Gung Haggis Fat Choy!”

It was a large head table, and they all
gathered in the lobby, as everybody in the ballroom was asked to sit
down.  Suddenly, the droning of bagpipes was heard, as Pipe
Corporal Rosalie MacDonald, British Columbia Regiment, led the
procession into the ballroom.  She was followed by CC president,
Dr. Jean Watters, Joy Kogawa, and the rest of the 27 member head
table.  The procession came into the centre of the room, and
walked around the table to each find their place – amazing!

MC
Margaret Gallagher welcomed singers Madeline Busby and Meghan Robinson
of the Vancouver Bach Children's Chorus to lead the singing of O
Canada.  This was extra special for young Madeline as her father
Peter Busby was a new Member of the Order of Canada, and being honoured
today.

Rose Point, distinguished Elder from the Musqueam First
Nation, led an invocation thanking the peoples of the land and the
Earth.  I learned that “Hich Ka, Siem” means “Thank you, Honoured
One.”

Dr. Jean Watters, president of the Canadian Club of
Vancouver, gave a warm welcome and read greetings from BC Premier
Gordon Campbell, then announced the Club's newest gold-level sponsor,
Kwantlen University College, and thanked returning event sponsor, Grant
Thornton Chartered Accountants.

MC Margaret Gallagher next
introduced the members of the Head Table which also included new OC
inductees Stewart Blusson, James Cameron Hagg, Peter Busby, Dr. Wallace
Chung, Thelma Finlayson, Nancy McKinstry, and Basil
Stuart-Stubbs.  Also joining the head table were former CC member
Patricia Graham, plus Vancouver Mayor Sam Sullivan, Enzo Guerriero and
Skip Triplett.


The wonderful birthday cake celebrating the 41st anniversary of the Maple Leaf flag – photo Deb Martin.

Lunch
had begun with a Greek salad, then an entre of chicken breast with
mushrooms, very skinny asparagus and mashed potatoes.  It was
amazingly tasty, and the wait staff was very attentive. I took some
time to ensure that my table guests were all looked after, as I had
sponsored one table, and set up another table for the Save Kogawa House
committee and The Land Conservancy.  We had a wonderful group that
included Tamsin Baker, Heather Skydt, Nancy Tiffin and Rich
Kenney.  From the Save Kogawa House committee we had myself,
Ann-Marie Metten, David Kogawa, Ellen Crowe-Swords, Richard Hopkins and
Deb Martin. My guests also included friend Tony Breen and my cousin
Rhonda Larrabee.

Skip Triplett, the president of Kwantlen
University College, introduced Joy Kogawa, highlighting her many
achievements, such as six universities across the country, have
bestowed upon her the
titles of , Doctor of Laws, Doctor of Letters and Doctor of
Divinity.  She is named in Almanac's recent
book of Greatest British Columbians and her first novel Obasan, is
listed as one of Canada's most important books.

Joy spoke to
the audience and acknowledged that while the audience included both
children and many esteemed and honoured Canadians, that she felt it was
the children who were the most important because they represented
Canada's future.  She spoke about how by recieving the Order of
Canada, it gave her a sense of belonging, and that by Vancouver Public
Library honouring her as the 2005 selection for the One Book One
Vancouver program, it meant that Vancouver accepted and wanted her –
this same city from which she had been rejected from in 1942.

She
told a story about standing in line for the Order of Canada, and a
person next to her had told her that they had “visited her
country.”  Incredulously… she was telling a story about how
people in 1986 still assumed that because she had a Japanese name and a
Japanese face that she was from another country other than
Canada.  Her reply was simple.  I have visited “your country”
too, in fact… I was born in it.”

Joy talked about how racism
shapes our cultures and our sense of belonging, knowing that their was
much cultural and racial diversity amongst both the students and the
adults in the room.  She talked about the future of Canada, and
introduced her grand-daughter – half-Japanese, and half-Caucasian,
asking her to stand up.  She did so shyly, encouraged by her
grandfather, David Kogawa, sitting next to me.  Then next she said
that Todd Wong also represented the future of Canada, because of my
activities in cultural diversity.  I sat surprised until Mayor Sam
Sullivan gently said to me “Stand up Todd.”


Constable Bob Underhill, Joy Kogawa and Todd Wong – wearing the “Maple Leaf Tartan”. – photo Deb Martin.

People listened
attentively to Joy speak about how to live our lives despite incredible
challenges.  She said that even up to last night, she wasn't sure
what she would speak about.  But with the prompting of an e-mail
from me… a single word came to her… TRUST.  She expounded that
we must learn to trust ourselves and to act upon our
inspirations.  It was a wonderful talk – warm and heartfelt. 
And many CC boardmembers came up to me afterwords, saying how wonderful
a speaker she had been, and how perfect for the event.

But next
to follow was a gift of song, as a thank you present from the CC to
Joy.  MC Margaret Gallagher introduced Harry Aoki, who himself had
been forced to leave Vancouver during the so-called “coastal
evacuation.”  I knew that Harry was a perfect choice because Joy
had partially based the creation of the Naomi's Road character of
Steven Nakane on Harry.  Because of the internment of Japanese
Canadians, Harry had been forced to leave behind his beloved violin,
and could only take his harmonica with him. Joy always remembered
listening to Harry play harmonica at the music competitions at the
community gatherings following the internment, in Alberta.

Harry
introduced a duo piece as something he had performed before while in
Romania.  They had asked him for something Canadian… “What is
Canadian?” he questioned to the audience, but he said he drew on
something from his own Japanese ancestry, and played a country hoe-down
piece.  As he played you could see the smiles of people throughout
the audience, as they nodded to the rhythm of Harry's
performance.  After the luncheon, OC member Dal Richards, noted
Vancouver band leader and musical legend, went straight over to Harry
to congratulate and talk with him.


Harry Aoki and Dal Richard talk music following the luncheon -photo D. Martin

But the luncheon wasn't over yet.  Next came the Cake Cutting Ceremony
with RCMP Constable Bob Underhill who had selected two students to
participate.  Everybody sang “Happy Birthday” to the Maple Leaf flag.

Dr.
Watters, Joy Kogawa with Enzo Guerriero (Celebrate Canada president)
came up to the stage to each welcome the new 2005 Order of Canada
Appointees resident in Vancouver.  Linda Johnston from Canadian
Heritage read out the citations about each person, detailing their
achivements to Canadian community, arts, society or science.  It
was impressive to be in a room filled with so many members of the Order
of Canada, many more seated around the room, sitting with students.

\
Applauding
and thanking the new Order of Canada recipients:  Canadian Club
president Dr. Jean Watters, keynote speaker Joy Kogawa, and Enzo
Guerriero, president of Celebrate Canada – photo Deb Martin.

The
event concluded with the Vancouver Bach Children's Chorus coming into
the room and performing the song “This is My Home” which had been
commissioned for Expo 86 and was featured at the Canada
Pavillion.  Seated nearby was Patrick Reid O.C. and a special
advisor for the Canadian Club, who had been Commissioner for Expo
86.  The song is beautiful, and I love the chorus, when the melody
goes “This is My Home…. O Canada.”  It did bring a tear to my
eye. 

What a wonderful event.  I am very glad to be
a member of the Canadian Club, and very pleased that I was able to
contribute to this very inspiring and impressive event.  Margaret
Gallagher did an outstanding job as MC.  Joy touched and inspired
people as keynote speaker.  Harry Aoki, thrilled people with his
harmonica performance.  I am so glad to be able to call each of
them my friend.

Joy Kogawa & Friends – Emotionally and Truthful reading at Chapters on Robson, Saturday Feb 11

Joy Kogawa & Friends – Emotionally and Truthful
 
reading at Chapters on Robson, Saturday Feb 11


Authors Joy Kogawa,
Daphne Marlatt, Ellen Crowe-Swords, Heahter Skydt (TLC), Todd Wong
(Save Kogawa House) and Roy Miki at Chapters bookstore on Robson for
“Joy Kogawa & Friends.” – photo Deb Martin.

It was a surprisingly emotional and appreciative audience that thanked
each of the readers on Saturday Feb 11th at Chapters on Robson St.

Roy Miki started by reading segments from his book REDRESS: Inside the
Japanese Canadian Call for Justice.  Miki read passages that set
the tone and described how the government used language to euphemize
and downplay the confiscation of property, the massive uprooting and
tearing of social fabric, and the internment of Japanese Canadians,
labeled as “enemy aliens.”

Daphne Marlatt read from her book of poetry “Steveston”, a collection
of poetry about the Japanese Canadian community in of Steveston in
Richmond BC.  She verbally painted a picture of the community and
its loss.



Joy Kogawa shares a story with the audience while Daphne Marlatt and Roy Miki watch – photo Todd Wong

Ellen Crowe-Swords created a poignant moment when she set the time of
her story, as the 2nd week in December 1942.  She set a 6 year old
Joy Kogawa playing in her cherry Tree, herself as a week old baby,
Daphne Marlatt as new child immigrant to Canada, and Roy Miki as a
“twinkle in your father's eye” as Miki was born after internment while
his parents were relocated on a beet farm.

Joy herself, spoke about the challenges of the recent house
campaign and read from Emily Kato – a reworking of Itsuka.  She
commented that she rewrote Itsuka to try to make it a better book – but
unfortunately it has been very difficult to find.  This is
incredulous because of all the attention that Joy and her works have
been recieving with 2005's One Book One Vancouver program at the
Vancouver Public Library, Vancouver Opera's Naomi's Road touring
production, and now the Save Kogawa House campaign which has gone
national.



Joy Kogawa and Ellen Crowe-Swords listen attentively – photo Todd Wong

When questions from the audience arose, several people thanked the
readers and many had tears in their eyes because the talk and the
experience was so emotional releasing.  Joy had spoken about the
need to overcome the darkness and find the light in redress for both
Japanese Canadians and Chinese Canadians.  She had also read a
letter from a Japanese Canadian person who had grown up as an internee
housed in not a shack, or a stable, but a chicken coop – with fleas.

One Chinese Canadian woman said she had been involved in the CC redress
in Montreal, but hadn't been able to find a sense of community and
like-minded individuals in Vancouver.  She apologized for crying,
saying she didn't know how bad it was for the Japanese Canadians, as
people kept telling her that you cannot compare JC redress to CC
redress.  But while 62 years of legislated racism affected each
group differently (Roy Miki's book Redress points out that Canada had a
“gentleman's agreement” with Japan to limit emmigration from Japan to
Canada), Both were affected very much by the very strong anti-Asian
resentment in Canada at the time, which certainly resulted in the 1907
riots where the Anti-Asiatic League attacked both Chinatown and
Japantown.

Joy will next be giving the keynote talk at the “Order of Canada / Flag
Day” luncheon organized by The Canadian Club.  Feb 15, 2006 at the
Four Seasons Hotel.  This is a very prestigious event that
acknowledges BC's newest Order of Canada recipients.

Joy will give a public reading at the Vancouver Public Library on Feb
27th.  This is to be the Vancouver launch for her book Emily Kato
(reworked Itsuka) which follows Naomi's journey to Toronto to work with
Aunt Emily on the Japanese Canadian redress campaign.


The TLC display for “Save Kogawa House” campaign – photo Todd Wong

CBC Arts: $1 million needed to save Kogawa House

$1 million needed to save Kogawa House

Last Updated Wed, 08 Feb 2006 14:42:52 EST
CBC Arts

The campaign to save the childhood home of novelist and poet Joy Kogawa is entering its final few weeks.



Joy Kogawa outside her childhood home in Vancouver.

Last November, Vancouver City Council gave a
120-day reprieve on the demolition of the house that featured in
Kogawa's 1981 classic novel Obasan.

Arts groups and the author
herself had asked for time to raise money to buy the house, so it could
be turned into a writers' retreat. A developer wants to take it down to
make way for condominiums.

But the modest house on West 64th
St. will cost about $1 million to buy and repair, money that has to be
raised from book lovers and supporters.

The Land Conservancy
of British Columbia is spearheading a fundraising effort with the
support of the Vancouver Heritage Foundation, Vancouver arts groups and
writers groups such as PEN Canada and the Writers' Union of Canada.

Kogawa's Obasan
tells the story of a Japanese Canadian family interned during the
Second World War. Kogawa and her family were removed from their
Vancouver home in 1942 and interned in the B.C. interior.

Obasan won a Governor General's award and the novel has been studied by a generation of Canadian school children.

“The
dream for it, is that these things [the internment] will not happen
again and that there are wonderful countries like Canada where
reconciliation is possible and where these things are not allowed to be
forgotten,” said Kogawa, who will speak at Vancouver's Robson Street
Chapters on Saturday.

Cultural and arts groups want the house to be spared to remind Canadians of the injustice done to Japanese Canadians.

The
proposal is to create a home for writers who have fled oppression in
their own countries and sought refuge in Canada. “And where people care
enough and writers can come and remember what has happened in their
countries as well, I mean, where writers in exile can come, and writers
of conscience can tell about what's happened in their lives. So, then
the dream would be for it [the house] to be something for everybody,
for all Canadians, for all people,” Kogawa told CBC Radio.

In
Obasan, Kogawa writes eloquently of the family life she lived in the
house. It is also featured in a children's version of the tale, Naomi's Road.

“All
the writing that I have ever done about my childhood or
Japanese-Canadians is rooted in that loss of a home and community and
life,” Kogawa said.

The city has planted a cherry tree grafted
from a tree on the Kogawa house property to commemorate the experience
of Japanese Canadians.

The stay of execution on the house runs
out at the end of March and the issue will be back before Vancouver
City Council unless money can be raised in time.

Naomi's Road / Vancouver Opera Touring Ensemble – getting ready again

Naomi's Road / Vancouver Opera Touring Ensemble – getting ready again


Jessica, Angus,
Gina, Gene and Sam – the singers and pianist from Naomi's Road
production of the Vancouver Opera Touring Ensemble – photo Deb Martin

Gina Oh and Jessica Cheung were enthusiastic in their
greetings as I visited their last rehearsal before the Spring touring
session of Naomi's Road – the Vancouver Opera Touring Ensemble
production that is visiting BC Schools. 

“We're going to Seattle, and Lethbridge!” they exclaimed, clearly
excited at the upcoming destinations after having such wonderful
memories of their tour on Vancouver Island where they had visited such
small communities such as Uculet/Tofino and Denman Island.

I will post the interview soon…. in the next day or so.

Check out the Vancouver Opera site for upcoming performances of Naomi's Road.
http://www.vancouveropera.ca/touring/touring-whatson.html

Sunday, February 19, 2006 2:00 pm
Vancouver Opera Guild presents Naomi's Road
Vancouver Academy of Music
1270 Chestnut Street
Vancouver, BC
Admission: $20 adults, $10 children 12 and under
Tickets and Information: 604-874-4042 or 604-682-2871 ext. 5001 (Pat)

Saturday, March 4, 2006 7:00 pm
West Vancouver Memorial Library
1950 Marine Drive
West Vancouver, BC
Admission: Free
Information: website http://www.westvanlib.org/

Saturday, March 11, 2006, 7:30pm
Powell Street Festival Society presents Naomi's Road
Vancouver Japanese Language School Hall
487 Alexander Street
Vancouver, BC
Admission: $10 (general) / $8 (students, seniors) / $5 (children 12 and under)
Tickets and Information: (604) 683 8240 / www.powellstreetfestival.com

Joy Kogawa & Friends – reading at Chapters on Robson, Saturday Feb 11, 2-4pm

Joy Kogawa & Friends – reading at Chapters on Robson, Saturday Feb 11, 2-4pm

Joy Kogawa, Roy Miki, Daphne Marlatt and Ellen Crowe-Swords are reading
at Chapters Bookstore on 788 Robson Street in Downtown Vancouver.

This event is also sponsored by The Land Conservancy, www.conservancy.bc.ca who are helping to save the Kogawa House from demolition. 

Daphne Marlatt is a disinguished poet and currently writer-in-residence
for Simon Fraser University.  Roy Miki is a long time friend of
Joy, as well as being an English professor at SFU, and a leader in the
Japanese Canadian redress movement.  Ellen Crowe-Swords is also a
writer and healer, and a long time friend of Joy's.  Miki,
Crowe-Swords and Kogawa all grew up in the Japanese Canadian internment
camps, during WW2.