Category Archives: Literary Events

CALL FOR POEMS: “SEVEN FOR '07”

CALL FOR
POEMS: “
SEVEN FOR '07

Chris Lee of the UBC English Department is heading up the call for poems to help recognize the Anniversaries of Change project that is drawing attention to significant events in Asian Canadian history from 1907, 1947, 1967 and 1997.  The catalyst for these historic events is the 100th anniversary of the September 8th, Chinatown Riots by the Anti-Asiatic League.

Vancouver has come a long way from a small pioneer town on the edge of civilization, to become a bustling global city that celebrates ethnic and cultural diversity that no other city in Canada can match.  Vancouver was one of the entry points for Asian immigration to Canada, and thus was also a lightning rod for Anti-Asian or anti-immigration sentiment.

A call for poetry to celebrate the historic event, and to recognize how far we have come, is a worthy project that will help bring contemporary insight to historical hindsight, combined with artistic creativity.  Okay… I admit… I had a hand  (or rather some brain cells) in helping to spark this creative project.  Hope you can help out… write a poem… tell you poet friends…

CALL FOR POEMS: “SEVEN FOR '07”

2007
Anniversaries of Change is a broad-based coalition of
institutions and
organizations that have come together to mark 2007 as
an anniversary year in
the quest for equality and justice in
Canada.
The years 1907, 1947, 1967, and 1997 each mark a watershed moment
in
the history of Asian migrants in Canada and their struggles to
fight
discrimination and oppression. These anniversaries not only call for
historical reflection, but also offer
opportunities to renew ongoing
efforts in anti-racism.

On September 8,
2007, there will be an all-day public event at the
Vancouver Public Library
Central Branch that will include panels,
displays, multimedia, and performing
arts. We are currently soliciting
short poems (maximum 20 lines) from local
writers addressing the
themes of this year of anniversaries. Please note:
Writers do not have
be of Asian descent and submissions do not have to
directly address
the historical events being commemorated. We are seeking
entries that
can, in conjunction with other community events, creatively
provoke
reflection on the current state of diversity and justice in
Vancouver
and British Columbia.

Seven poems will be chosen and circulated in the following
ways: (1)
large wall-size posters of each poem will be produced and displayed
in
the VPL atrium on September 8; (2) smaller posters with all seven
poems will be printed and widely distributed as
part of commemorative
activities in the fall. We will extend a token
honorarium to each
writer chosen to participate in Seven for '07.

Please email entries to
instrcc.events@gmail.com by August 9,
2007.
Please attach entries in either .pdf or .rtf formats and ensure
that
no identifying notes or markers are included in the file. In the
body
of the email, please provide the following information: name,
address,
telephone number, contact email, and a short (maximum 40 words)
biographical
statement. After a blind review process, chosen writers
will be contacted in
order to arrange publication details.

For more information about Seven for '
07
please contact Chris Lee (UBC
Department of
English) at leechr@interchange.ubc.ca. More
information
about the Anniversaries of Change can be found on
www.anniversaries07.ca.
Thank you for your interest!


Roy Mah, founder of Chinatown News dies. Saltwater City laments the passing of a true local Chinatown hero.

Roy Mah, founder of Chinatown News dies.  Saltwater City laments the passing of a true local Chinatown hero.

Chinese Canadian veterans: John Ko Bong, Roy Mah, Ed Lee – photo Todd Wong

It's a sad day in Vancouver Chinatown today.  Roy Mah died on
Friday. He was the WW2 veteran who joined a “suicide squad” to fight
for a country called Canada – that wouldn't even let him vote in the
land he was born in.  The Edmonton AB born son of a head tax payer
was founder and long time editor of Chinatown News, founder of the BC
Ethnic Press, 1st Chinese-Canadian admitted to the Canadian Club
Vancouver, and recipient of the Order of BC.

Just after noon I was contacted by a Georgia Straight reporter asking
about my thoughts and relationship with Roy Mah.  I told him that
Roy was one of my iconic role models.  I used to read Chinatown
News at my Great-Grandmother's house when I was a child.  I used
to see Roy in Chinatown during the 1970's and knew where his office
was.  During the 1980's I approached Roy, and submitted some arts
reviews for Rosie's Cafe, and Cats – including my developing social
commentary about Asian Canadian arts and history and racism.  Roy
even gave me a letter when I travelled to New York City, to request a
review pass for M. Butterfly on Broadway.

In 2002, with my involvement with Asian Canadian Writer's Workshop, we
honoured Roy with the inaugural Community Builder's
Award. Roy also enjoyed attending the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner.  He last
attended in 2005, and when I acknowledged him to the 570 strong
audience, he was given a spontaneous standing ovation.

In recent years, he would always wave hello to me when he
walked past me working at the Vancouver Public Library information
desk.  Roy always liked to come into the library to read the
newspapers.  It was harder for him because he was on kidney
dialysis.  But we usually managed to have some nice chats, and
occasionally some coffee together.

I last saw Roy on May 12th at the 60th Anniversary dinner for Canadian Citizenship, sponsored by Pacific Unit 280.  I was sorry I had to miss his “90th Birthday party” on Easter Weekend. This was the first time I had seen Roy in a wheelchair.  His health had taken a downturn a couple of years ago, and I had missed him hobbling into the library with a big smile on his face whenever he saw me.  At the dinner, the Chinese Canadian Military Museum gave out dvd's containing interviews with many of the veterans.  Claudia Ferris was the documentary producer.  Roy's niece Ramona Mar was one of the interviewers.  Gloria Leung is Claudia's sister-in-law, and also heloed out on the project.  And we all adore Roy Mah!
 

There will be a public Celebration of Life for Roy Mah on Thursday, July 12 at 2:00 pm
at the Chinese Cultural Centre in the David Lam Hall. 

Vancouver Sun published a story Monday on Roy with interviews with his nice Ramona Mar.
CBC Radio interviewed Ramona and Wesley Lowe on Monday, and Larry Wong was interviewed for Channel M.

Here are some links about Roy Mah:

O.B.C. Biography – Name

Roy Quock Quon MahVancouver. Click on image for full-size version Roy Mah was He sat on the board of the Vancouver Sun Yat-Sen Garden Society when it

GungHaggisFatChoy :: Vancouver Sun: Chinatown's 'quiet

It is always great to see a story about Roy Mah in the media. Roy Mah has left his imprint on almost every major event in Vancouver 's Chinese community

Chinatown Monument

When Chinese veterans like Roy Mah & Daniel Lee

Roy Mah's ACCW award dinner 29 Sep 02: Roy Mah receives his Community Builder Award from Asian Canadian Writers' Workshop President  Jim Wong-Chu on September 29, 2002
Roy Mah and Jim Wong-Chu at the 2002 ACWW dinner where we honoured Roy with the inaugural ACWW Community Builder's Award.

50 Years of Chinatown Stories Dinner Sept. 2002

Tonight's dinner honoured Roy Mah by presenting him with the first ever Asian Here's a picture of Roy Mah (on the left) receiving his award from ACWW

Welcome to the Vancouver Courier – On Line – News

Their faces, lit by the afternoon sun, bear the lines of years of hardship and sorrow. …. Roy

Roy Mah – Veterans Affairs Canada

Did you know that Roy Mah led an emotional debate arguing that Chinese-Canadians should go to war before they received the right to vote?

Ruth Ozeki's “My Year of Meats” chosen for 2007 One Book One Vancouver

Ruth Ozeki's “My Year of Meats” – chosen for 2007 One Book One Vancouver

Wayson Choy's “The Jade Peony” was the first choice for the inaugural One Book One Vancouver program in 2003.  I was invited in January  2003 to be part of the organizing committee, but I had to promise not to say anything.  It was a revolutionary idea in libraries at the time.  Build a book club for the entire city… encourage every citizen to read the same book… and create a whole range of programs to explore its themes and related issues.

Check out the Vancouver Public Library website for information on this year's choice!

One Book One Vancouver – My Year of Meats

Ruth Ozeki's My Year of Meats Chosen the Book for 2007!

Get ready for another great summer of reading and exciting programs, and join the fun as VPL's award-winning One Book, One Vancouver presents our “meatiest” title yet! On April 23,
The Library announced Ruth Ozeki's
My Year of Meats

as the title for this year's program, and released 450 copies of the
book to library branches across Vancouver for people to read and enjoy.

Receiving critical acclaim around the world,
My Year of Meats
is a juicy cross-cultural tale that brings together the media, the global meat industry,
and two women from opposite ends of the earth with hilarious and haunting results.

From May to June, read
My Year of Meats
, and join us for some great events and book discussions created to explore the book's themes and bring
the book alive. One Book, One Vancouver related programming will also be held at Word on the Street in September.

 

For more info on these and other upcoming events, visit our events page.
For more One Book updates, highlights, and activities, visit our OBOV webpage from May to June.

Happy reading, Vancouver!

Upcoming events:

Ruth Ozeki, Inaugural Author Reading

Monday, May 7; 7:30 p.m.

Alice MacKay Room, Lower Level

Central Library (350 W. Georgia St.)

Book Discussions with special guest, Ruth Ozeki

Tuesday, May 8

3 p.m. – Oakridge Branch  (To register, call 604-665-3980.)

7:30 p.m. – Joe Fortes Branch  (To register, call 604-65-3972.)

Join our author for an lively and intimate discussion of this year's choice.

Media, Culture…What's Your Reality? Panel Discussion

Tuesday, May 22; 7:30 p.m.

Alice MacKay Room, Lower Level

Central Library (350 W. Georgia St.)

From reality TV to mainstream journalism, find out what is the media's influence on today's mainstream culture?
With special guests, Ruth Ozeki and Vancouver Sun Arts & Life Editor Dominic Patten.

David Suzuki: The Autobiography… wins the BC Bookseller's Choice Award

David Suzuki: The Autobiography…
wins the BC Bookseller's Choice Award
 
David Suzuki…



Congratulations to the winners
announced on Saturday, April 28, 2007
at the Lieutenant Governor's
BC Book Prize Gala
, emceed by William Deverell at Government House,
in Victoria.



BC
Booksellers' Choice Award in Honour of Bill Duthie

David
Suzuki and Greystone Books
David Suzuki: The Autobiography


This is a great book!  I received it as a gift from my friend Ian
for my birthday last year.  Suzuki details many aspects of his
life.  His time spent in the Japanese-Canadian internment camps is
discussed in the chapter “My happy childhood in racist BC.”

Suzuki describes how his tenure at UBC was affected by his divorce, but
also how the assination of Martin Luther King affected his activism on
social and racial issues.  Some chapters describing his growing
commitment to environmental issues is fascinating, particularly the
descriptions of the Stein Valley Music Festival.

He also shares some stories about his children, both from his first
marriage and his second marriage.  Particularly interesting is how
his daughter Severn Suzuki-Cullis becomes committed to environmental
issues and develops the drive to attend the Earth Summit at Rio de
Janiero, becoming an environmental celebrity that captures the media
attention and an invitation to speak at the United Nations.

Dr. David Suzuki is indeed on of Canada's greatest living Canadians…

If you would like to sign a petition to have a park named after him….
call Vancouver Parks Commissioner Spencer Herbert.  Herbert has
proposed to have the park at 72nd Ave and Selkirk St. named after David
Suzuki.  This park is just around the corner from the Suzuki
childhood home that that was confiscated by the Canadian government
when the Canadian-born Suzuki family was interned during WW2 for being
“enemy aliens.”

CBC Radio Studio One Book Club: featuring Jen Sookfong Lee

CBC Radio Studio One Book Club: featuring Jen Sookfong Lee

The following is from CBC Radio's Sheila Peacock and the CBC Radio Studio One Bookclub website:

Jen Sookfong
Lee with
The End of East

Wednesday May
2, 2007
6:30 to 8:00 p.m.

The CBC Radio Studio One Book Club
takes place in Studio One, in the CBC Broadcast Centre.
Please note we have a new entrance at 775 Cambie Street
(between Robson and Georgia).

The End of East by Jen Sookfong Lee

In celebration of ExplorASIAN 2007, the CBC Radio Studio One Book Club
is pleased to present Jen
Sookfong Lee
on Wednesday, May 2, 6:30 to 8
pm, at the CBC Broadcast Centre.

Her debut novel The End of East
has been garnering great reviews from across the country. It's an
evocative portrait of three generations living in Vancouver's
Chinatown, spanning most of the last century.
Jen Sookfong Lee

Sammy Chan was sure she’d escaped her family obligations
when she fled Vancouver six years ago, but with her sister’s
upcoming marriage, her turn has come to care for their
aging mother. Abandoned by all four of her older sisters,
jobless and stuck in a city she resents, Sammy finds
herself cobbling together a makeshift family history
and delving into stories that began in 1913, when her
grandfather, Seid Quan, then eighteen years old, first
stepped on Canadian soil.


Here's your
opportunity to discuss the art of writing, and the struggles of young
writers, with one of Canada's newest literary stars!

The only way to get in, is to win!
For all the details and to enter online, go to www.cbc.ca/bc/bookclub .

check out these Links and reviews.

March 23, 2007

“The End of East is just her start”
Jen Sookfong Lee profiled in 7 section of The Globe and Mail

March 22, 2007
“End of East chronicles immigrants' gamble”
The End of East reviewed in The Georgia Straight

March 22, 2007
“Vivid Vancouver”
The End of East reviewed in NOW Magazine

March 17, 2007
“Uprooted from Vancouver”
The End of East reviewed in The Globe and Mail

March 10, 2007
Listen
to the archived conversation of SPiN talking with Sheryl
MacKay on North by Northwest at CBC Radio One's archive,
www.cbc.ca/nxnw

BC Book Prizes annual soirée: I love it… lots of literary connections and prizes!

BC Book Prizes annual soirée: I love it…
– lots of literary connections and prizes!

On Saturday, April 21, 2007, I attended the annual BC Book Prize Soirée at Vancouver
Lookout
,
Harbour Centre.  It is one of my favorite literary events of the
year.  Now I can hardly wait for the actual BC Book Prizes Awards
Gala later this year…. check PHOTOS
taken by Deb Martin and myself that are featured on the BC Book Prize Soiré  website. 

I love meeting up with my good friends in the BC literary community… and making new friends!  


BC Book
Prize board member George McWhirter, recently named Vancouver's inaugural
poet laureate, was crowned with a laurel wreath and read a poem for
an appreciative crowd. (photo: Deb Martin)

I
introduced myself to George McWhirter who last year became Vancouver's
inaugural poet laureate.  I also invited George to be a special
guest for next year's Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner – he was
thrilled.  George told me that while he is “technically” born in
Ireland – his family has a generations long history crossing back and
forth between Ireland and Scotland.  He even shared with me that
his daughter-in-law is Chinese from Singapore…. I think.  I will
have to reconfer with George on that.  When I joked about creating
a “McWong” tartan, George suggested that I could even use the term “Ma
Wong” which in Gaelic means “son of Wong” – but he also knew that “Ma”
was a chinese name meaning “horse.”  “That's my mother's maiden
name!” I exclaimed… I think it will be a great 2008 Gung Haggis Fat
Choy dinner with Vancouver's first poet laureate.



Literary men about town, Todd Wong and Ian Chunn posed with BC Book
Prizes board member Ann-Marie Metten. (photo: Deb Martin)

Ann-Marie
Metten is a favorite liteary friend of mine. She is an editor for many
publishing houses and magazines in BC… and she is also the Secretary
for BC Book Prizes.  And most important of all… we are two of
the coordinators for the Joy Kogawa House committee, working hard
throughout 2005 and 2006 to find ways to raise the profile of the Save
Kogawa House campaign and fundraise with The Land Conservancy of BC,
who were so impressed with the campaign, that they ultimately stepped
in to lead fundraising and eventually purchase Joy Kogawa House.



The silent
auction featured great stuff, including a gorgeous dragon puppet donated
by the BC Library Association, books, weekend getaways and much more.  (photo: T. Wong)

Silent Auction prizes are always great at the BC Book Prizes Soiree. This beautiful red dragon donated by the BC Library Association was later picked up by Todd Wong to become a new member of the
Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team… Red is definitely one of our
team colours.



BC Book
Prizes Executive Director Bryan Pike and Melanie Reid, successful
bidder of a signed Vancouver Canucks jersey. (photo: Deb Martin)

When
I put my $140 bid on the Canucks jersey, Melanie Reid warned me that
she would outbid me.  It was a thrill to reconnect with my former
English Drama instructor from Capilano College.  Last year, I met
up with Stan Perskey, my former Political Science instructor from
Capilano College who was also a Book Prize nominee.



|
At the
end of the evening, Todd Wong showed off his successful bid sheets
with Executive Director Liesl Jauk and BC Book Prizes board president,
Michael Hayward. (photo: Deb Martin)

Other events for BC Book Prizes:


Monday, April 23, 2007
Vancouver reading event at Chapters on
Robson | 7 pm

April 23-27, 2007
BC Book Prizes On Tour: Southern
Leg PHOTOS
Kamloops | Salmon Arm | Vernon | Kelowna | Princeton
| Osoyoos | Oliver | Victoria

Thursday, April 26, 2007
Vancouver reading event at Wonder of Words
| 7 pm

Saturday, April 28, 2007
End of
BC Book and Magazine Week

imaginASIAN” Bedtime Stories Collection 2007 – Part 2

imaginASIAN” Bedtime Stories Collection 2007 – Part 2


From the explorASIAN website:



Due
to popular response, we have extended the imaginASIAN program to the
end of May in celebration of Asian Heritage Month in Canada.

We
invite Canadians of all ages and ethnic backgrounds for their original
bedtime stories that weave together both Asian and Canadian culture.

“imaginASIAN”
seeks to generate a new legacy collection of fun, witty, and
imaginative bedtime stories for all Canadian children and in particular
those of Asian background.

Created as part of the 2010 Arts
Now program, the goal of the “imaginASIAN” Bedtime Stories Collection
is to celebrate the unique experience of Canadians of Asian descent.

We
hope these new bedtime stories will help to strengthen family bonds,
instill pride in young people’s cultural identity, and help to further
greater understanding between the ethnic communities. In addition,
Ricepaper Magazine seeks to revitalize the storytelling tradition and
to stimulate creative writing in children and adults as part of an
overall desire to improve literacy and reading skills in these
communities.

The story criteria are as follows:
– Language: English
– Subject matter: must be suitable for children aged 5 and under
– Must feature at least one prominent Asian character
– Story should be between 300 to 1000 words in length (no images or graphics)
– Submissions should be created in electronic form in TEXT or MS WORD format
– Submissions should be sent by email to: imaginasian@ricepaperonline.com

The submission deadline for imaginASIAN is May 31, 2007 (Part 2)

A
selection of qualified stories will be posted on these websites:
Ricepaperonline.com, CBC.ca, and explorASIAN.org. Some of the stories
will also be selected to be featured and read on CBC Radio One and at
the explorASIAN festival celebrating Asian Heritage Month in May 2007.
A selection of the best stories will be published in 2007.

Presented by the Asian Canadian Writers’ Workshop and Ricepaper Magazine.

Sponsored by CBC Radio One, explorASIAN, and Vancouver Public Library.

The imaginASIAN Bedtime Stories Collection is made possible with the financial support of Arts Now.

For more details, please visit our website at http://www.ricepaperonline.com/imaginasian

Richard Rodriquez, author of Brown: “The Last Discovery of America” speaks at UBC

Richard Rodriquez, author of Brown: “The Last Discovery of America” speaks at UBC

The
following announcement has been sent to me from Glenn Deer, Assistant
Professor of English, University of British Columbia. 

It's
funny how I just read about Richard Rodriquez, and wished that I could
have attended a talk that he just gave in town…. Well, thanks to
Glenn Deer sending me this announcment of upcoming talks by
Rodriquez… I guess I can!

Glenn has been teaching Asian
Canadian literature in his courses.  He is a head tax descendant,
and knows of my interests in interculturalism and racial
identies.  Glenn is also a supporter of my Gung Haggis Fat Choy
Robbie Burns Chinese New Year dinners.

Richard Rodriguez,
author of Hunger of Memory (1982), Days of Obligation (1992), and
Brown: The Last Discovery of America (2002) will give two presentations
at UBC on April 25th. These talks are free and open to the
public.  (Please distribute this notice to others who might
be interested in attending.)

“On Being Brown: Identity and Impurity in North America”

Wednesday,
April 25th, 3:30 p.m.
at the Buchanan Penthouse,
University of British Columbia.
 
“Writing the World: The Essayist Within the Americas”

Wednesday, April 25th, 7:30 p.m. at UBC Robson Square (Campus Level),
HSBC Hall.
 

Richard Rodriguez (B.A. Stanford, PH.D., Berkeley)
is the author of an acclaimed autobiography — Hunger of Memory (1982)
— along with two other books that explore Mexican American identity,
multiculturalism, family life, language, and literature, including Days of Obligation:
An Argument with My Mexican Father (1992) and Brown: The Last Discovery
of America (2002). He has written regularly for publications like
Harper's and The Los Angeles Times, and his works have been honoured with
many awards, including the Frankel Medal from the National Endowment for
the Humanities and the International Journalism Award from the World
Affairs Council of California.

Richard Rodriguez's visit has been made possible through the
generous support of the American Consulate General in Vancouver and, in
particular, the support of Indran Amirthanayagam, Public Affairs Officer
for the Consulate. This visit is also sponsored by the UBC Department
of English.