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Vancouver Sun: 10 Legendary Vancouverites

Do you know these 10 legendary Vancouverites?
Vancouver Sun article includes Yip Sang, Mary Lee Chan, Wong Foon Sien

Check it out at: Vancouver Sun: 10 Legendary Vancouverites
: http://www.vancouversun.com/legendary+Vancouverites/4567105/story.html



Here are my personal connections to Joe Fortes, Mary Lee Chan, Yip Sang, and Dal Richards.

I learned the story about Joe Fortes when I first worked at the Joe Fortes Library when I started as a teenager.  I can answer trivia questions that his baptized name was “Seraphim”, and he was one of Vancouver's most beloved life guards of English Bay.  Here's a great video of Joe Fortes by Global TV's Mike McCardell.

Mary Lee Chan
I am friends with the children of Mary Lee Chan, and descendants of Yip Sang.  Mary Lee Chan's story about saving Strathcona neighborhood from Free way Destruction is wonderfully captured in the film documentary “Mary Lee Chan Takes On City Hall“.   There is a current campaign to name the newly proposed library in Strathcona neighborhood after Mary Lee Chan: http://buildingopportunities.org/blog/index.php/tag/mary-lee-chan/

Here's a link from historia Chuck Davis' Metropolitan Vancouver http://www.vancouverhistory.ca/archives_strathconaSaved.htm.

Yip Sang was an important figure for the building of CPR Railroad, and Vancouver Chinatown development.  The Yip Sang family reunion is also legendary.  I contacted descendant Hoy Yip when I started organizing a family reunion for the Rev. Chan family descendants for 99 and 2000.  Descendant Steven Wong (on his mother's side) paddles on the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team. Vancouver Archives has the Yip Sang project online: http://vancouver.ca/ctyclerk/archives/digitized/Yip_Sang/index.htm

Wong Foon Sien was a pioneer in fighting for the repeal of the Chinese
Excusion Act in 1947, and asking for redress for the Chinese Head Tax. 
Here's a good story about Wong Foon Sien, by my friend Larry Wong
http://www.vancouverhistory.ca/archives_foon_sien.htm

Dal Richards at the 2010 Canada Day celebrations at Kitsilano Showboat stage – photo T. Wong

I have known Vancouver-born Dal Richards for the past few years from our roles on Canadian Club Vancouver.  I had the honour of being included with Dal for the BC Royal Museum's “The Party”centrepiece display for the 150th anniversary
exhibition – titled Free Spirit: Stories of You, Me and BC – The Party featured 150 British Columbians who’ve helped shape the province. http://www.royalbcmuseum.bc.ca/Content_Files/Files/Press%20Room/stories/RBCMNewsletterAugv6.pdf

Nobody born in Scotland?

Lachlan Hamilton, CPR surveyor and alderman might have been of Scottish ancestry, as were many of Vancouver's pioneers, but a google search isn't revealing anything so far.  Sam Greer is listed as born in Ireland.  Major Skitt Matthews, who started the Vancouver Archives, was born in Wales.

A google search on Alfred Larwill reveals more about the history of Larwill Park, formerly the Cambie street Grounds, and now a parking lot, and the proposed site of a new Vancouver Art Gallery, where the Olympics hosted the Live City Downtown site.

Interesting how 3 of the 10, were evicted (or almost) from their homes: Larwill from the Cambie Street Grounds, Greer from the CPR lands, and Fortes nearly from his shack on English Bay – if not for a blockade of 100 people.  His house was moved to the present location of the English Bay bandstand, where a plaque now commemorates Joe Fortes.

Tyee: “How Strangely You Canadians Elect Your Leader” by Aleeza Khan

Tyee: “How Strangely You Canadians Elect Your Leader”

A global perspective is always interesting…. How are Canadians viewed by the world and how do Canadians view the world.

Liberal leader, Michael Ignatieff has viewed the world as a media correspondent for BBC and CBC, and also as a professor at Harvard University.

Conservative leader Stephen Harper rarely visited another country, until he had to as Prime Minister.

I have met Jack Layton and his wife Olivia Chow and found them both very personable and friendly.  Both have a good understanding of multiculturalism, inclusion, and immigrant issues.  They are such a “Gung Haggis couple” because of their intercultural marriage.

photo

Jack Layton posed with me and my bagpiper friends Allan and Trish McMordie, following the 2009 St. Patrick's Day parade. photo T. Wong

Check out this article in The Tyee, by visiting Brit Aleeza Khan.

Tyee: “How Strangely You Canadians Elect Your Leader”

A visitor from the UK contrasts Conservative PM David
Cameron with Conservative PM Stephen Harper, and what it takes to win
there and here.

By Aleeza Khan
TheTyee.ca http://thetyee.ca/Life/2011/04/08/CanadianCustoms/

KAHN-240.jpg

Visiting U.K. writer Aleeza Khan — here
sampling the other Canadian bloodsport — wishes to be clear that she
likes Canadians and our cultural customs, a lot.




I'm not totally new to your
land. While I'm from London, I have many connections to Canada and have
visited numbers of times. What has made me feel a stranger during my
current visit, though, is this exercise underway called the Federal
Election of 2011.

From my vantage in Vancouver, I've been
taking notes and forming comparisons with the election we in Great
Britain went through less than a year ago. You may have noticed that
the person who became prime minister, David Cameron, calls himself a
Conservative, as does your Stephen Harper. There, most similarities seem
to end in the way the two men present themselves, in the way they've
run for office, and in the effect they have on the voting public,
particularly younger ones like me.

Can I share some observations?

1. In England, we feel the need to like our prime minister. You apparently don't.

2. In Canada, the prime minister says coalitions are evil. In the UK, the prime minister owes his job to one.

3. In Great Britain, candidates want as many people as possible to vote. Not in Canada.

4. Back in England, younger people are a lot more politically engaged than here in Canada.

Read full article here: http://thetyee.ca/Life/2011/04/08/CanadianCustoms/

“We Are The People” is a theatre play about 125 years of Vancouver's heart of the city

“We Are The People” is a theatre play about 125 years of Vancouver's heart of the city

Time
07
April at 20:00
10 April at 14:00

Location
Ukrainian Hall

805 E. Pender Street
Vancouver,
BC

Tonight, I will be going to check out this play.  Apparently some of the characters are people we have only heard about such as “Gassy Jack” Deighton, former pub owner, and Bruce Eriksen, former city councilor.  But both made important contributions to Vancouver's development as a city.]

I first met Vancouver Moving Theatre's creators Terry Hunter and Savannah Walling, at the 2008 BC Community Achievement Awards, when they were honoured for their dedication to both their work and to the community they try so hard to represent.

Check out their website http://vancouvermovingtheatre.com

for more about the play.

We Are The People

An original musical celebration
commemorating 125 years of laughter and tears
in the Downtown
Eastside – the heart of our city.

We Are the People commemorates 125 years of laughter and
tears in the Downtown Eastside – the historical heart of our city. This
concert of original and period songs of struggle, loss, celebration
and perseverance showcases the home-grown creativity of the Downtown
Eastside community.

Historical events highlighted in this City of Vancouver 125th
Anniversary concert include the rescue of Vancouver residents by
members of a Squamish congregation during the 1886 fire, the 1907
Anti-Asian riot, labour struggles of the 1930’s, historic personalities
such as saloon keeper Gassy Jack Deighton, industrial tycoon /
philanthropist Andrew Carnegie, activist and City Councillor Bruce
Eriksen; inner city challenges such as poverty, unemployment,
homelessness, prostitution and addiction; neighbourhood victories such
as the establishment of the Carnegie Community Centre and  the Militant
Moms’ successful protest; and Downtown   Eastside values of tolerance,
courage, compassion and community.

The project’s principal artists are award winning Savannah
Walling (
Artistic Director and lead writer) and Neil
Weisensel
(Music Director, Conductor and co-composer).
The songs are composed by some of Vancouver’s finest composers: Michael
Creber, Earle Peach, Joelysa Pankanea, Wyckham Porteous, Bill Sample,
Yawen V. Wang
and Neil Weisensel. Song lyrics
have been written by Dalannah Gail Bowen, James Fagan Tait,
Bob Sarti, Savannah Walling
and emerging community writers
from the Downtown Eastside.

 

It's officially (finally) Tartan Day in Canada

It's officially Tartan Day in Canada.

Canada finally has it's official Tartan Day, after all the provinces had previously proclaimed Tartan Day.  In 2008, I arranged to have Tartan Day proclaimed in the the City of Vancouver.


-photo courtesy of T.Wong

Xavier MacDonald, Todd Wong and Sean John Kingsley wear their tartans to the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team practice on April 6th, 2011, Tartan Day.

I also wore my kilt at the Vancouver 125 Celebrations where I was helping to supervise the ball hockey games at Jack Poole Plaza in the afternoon.  There was fresh snow on the mountains, so thank goodness it was warm in the sunshine.

Check out the different tartans of each province.  Personally, I like the Nova Scotia and Sasketchewan tartans… Something about the blues and yellows of each.  The BC tartan with its red and green looks too much like a Christmas decoration.
http://www.cassoc.ca/tartans.htm

HAPPY 125th BIRTHDAY VANCOUVER

HAPPY
125th BIRTHDAY VANCOUVER  
I am part of the Vancouver 125 team.  I was
down at Jack Poole Plaza from 1:30-5:30, helping out with the ball
hockey tournaments. The 6pm Happy Birthday ceremonies included: birthday singalong by Vancouver Bach Choir + cake +
cauldron lighting at 6:45pm!
   www.celebratevancouver125.ca
photo
-photo T.Wong

The sky turned blue with occasional clouds, with lots of sunshine for the Vancouver 125 Celebrations, marking the 125th birthday of the City of Vancouver.  Fresh snow decorated the local mountains, yet the Jack Poole Plaza was a warmish 9 degrees in the sunshine.  The concert stage opened at 4pm with Uzume Taiko, followed by Mmm-HoP, and Leela Gilday.  The 6pm ceremonies featured a birthday singalong by the Vancouver Bach Choir, of which city councilor Heather Deal is a singer.

photo – photo Deb Martin
Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson with Vancouver 125 Team city employees Kathy Bengston and Todd Wong.  The Mayor was dressed for ball hockey and he played with some of the teams, then later posed for pictures with the youth teams.  Wong works for the Vancouver Public Library and wore the Fraser Hunting Tartan kilt, because April 6th is also Tartan Day throughout Canada, and because the Fraser Hunting Tartan has the similar blues and greens of the Vancouver Tartan.  Bengston was part of the City of Vancouver Host team and was stationed at the Downtown Live City venue during the Olympics.

My role for the Vancouver 125 Team was to help out with the ball hockey games.  During my breaks, I walked around the Jack Poole Plaza and saw the music performances that featured some of my friends.  Bonnie Mah is part of Uzume Taiko.  Ndidi Cascade was one of the performers of Mm-HoP: Hop Jump Jive.

IMG_0580
Uzume Taiko blends the traditonal and contemporaryarts into a great cultural fusion using Taiko drums, traditional Japanese masks…. and bagpipes!

IMG_0575
Here is the bagpiper for Uzume Taiko wearing Japanese styled outfit.

IMG_0589
A large screen projected rap singer Ndidi Cascade into a large image for the crowd, as she performed with Mm-HoP: Hop Jump Jive

IMG_0642

It was a picturesque day with fresh snow on the mountains, and all the people creating a happy crowd.

Vancouver Sun: Why have most of Vancouver's Mayors been Scottish and none Chinese?

Why has Vancouver had so many mayors with Scottish
roots? When will Vancouver have a mayor with Chinese ancestry?
Vancouver
Sun writer Douglas Todd asks Todd Wong, 5th generation Vancouverite for
the answers.

http://www.vancouversun.com/sight+Vancouver+Scottish+mayors/4559328/story.html

www.vancouversun.com

 I did mention that in the 1st election Chinese voters
were turned away, because they going to vote for their boss, sawmill
owner Richard Alexander instead of Malcolm Alexander McLean, a realtor.
http://communities.canada.com/vancouversun/blogs/thesearch/pages/the-mayors-of-vancouver-a-lively-history.aspx

 It's also important to note that Canadians of Chinese
ancestry were unable to vote for a long period up to 1947, until the
repeal of the Chinese Head Tax/Chinese Exclusion Acts. My grandmother,
born in this country could not vote until she was 37 years old!!! So
racism has also played a big role in not developing any Asian or
non-Scottish mayors.

Charlie Brown Christmas Music by Trio Pacifica with my bagpiper friend Joe McDonald

Vancouver Christmas Music

A Charlie Brown's Christmas with Trio Pacifica

Here's is something seasonably early.  Charlie Brown's Christmas music by Vince Guaraldi, was one of my first records I ever owned as a child.  My friend Joe McDonald is now playing Charlie Brown Christmas music with his musical partners in Trio Pacifica. 

Joe McDonald LOVES Charlie Brown Christmas Music!

Italian-American Christmas jazz music that is universally loved.  What could be more multicultural than this?

Joe has played bagpipes for Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese
New Year events since 2001, both at Chinese Restaurants and the
Vancouver Public Library for Gung Haggis World Poetry events.

Check out this Charlie Brown Christmas Music youtube video:

Thumbnail3:47
Vancouver Christmas MusicTrio Pacifica

If you want a wonderful addition to any Christmas Party!

Check out Joe's website www.joemcdonald.net for more information
http://www.joemcdonald.net/vancouver-christmas-music.htm

Contact Joe McDonald 604 435 2954 jmcdonald@infoserve.net for bookings

Marty Chan visits Kogawa House with Forbidden Phoenix costume designer

Marty Chan visits Kogawa House with Forbidden Phoenix costume designer

Playwright Marty Chan came to a special evening reception at Historic Joy Kogawa House on March 30, to discuss his new play The Forbidden Phoenix, currently being produced by Gateway Theatre in Richmond.

photo

“They are the best costumes” that Marty Chan has seen, of the three different productions for The Forbidden Phoenix.  Marty Chan and Todd Wong are impressed with the “Phoenix” costume for the musical play “The Forbidden Phoenix” written by playwright Marty Chan. They both love Chinese Canadian history, and Chan has written a fascinating father and son story, while incorporating both the story of Chinese building the railway in Canada, and a visit from The Monkey King to Canada.

Todd, president of Historic Joy Kogawa House, facilitated the evening's
fascinating conversation, and drew out the importance of the Monkey
King's famed “Journey to the West”, as actually visiting not North
America, but to go West from China to India.  Monkey King is credited
with “discovering Buddhism” and bringing it back to China.  But in North
American culture, we think of “The West” as Western Canada and the USA,
where many Chinese pioneers came to seek gold in “Gum San” or “Gold
Mountain”.  In a wonderful turn of Chinese North American Identity, Todd
and Marty discussed the graphic novel American Born Chinese, which interweaves 3 different stories and incorporates The Monkey King.

2011_March_Kogawa_Marty_Chan 009

Todd Wong and Marty Chan “ham it up” by standing behind the wonderful costumes created for “The Forbidden Phoenix”.  Todd stands behind the Monkey King costume and Marty is behind the Phoenix costume.

Last May 2010, Todd Wong, as vice-president for Asian Canadian Writers' Workshop, presented Marty Chan with the ACWW Community Builder's Award, recognizing his work for plays, television and children's novels.  Wong first met Chan in 1986 during the first production of “Mom, Dad, I'm Living With a White Girl” was first produced at Firehall Arts Centre.  Wong wrote this article for the Peak Student Newspaper at Simon Fraser University: http://www.peak.sfu.ca/the-peak/96-1/issue7/chan.html

2011_March_Kogawa_Marty_Chan 012



Here is the brilliant costume designer

More pictures here on Flickr

Marty Chan is coming to Kogawa House Wednesday – special price tickets for The Forbidden Phoenix

Special Marty Chan Reception at Historic Joy Kogawa House
on Wednesday March 30th

The Forbidden Phoenix

Playwright Marty Chan (Mom, Dad, I'm Living With A White Girl) is coming to Historic Joy Kogawa House.

This is a special reception, hosted by Kogawa House Society.  Marty is coming, and so is the costume designer.  They will talk about this new exciting play about the Chinese immigration to Canada, and how Monkey King is involved.

The evening is moderated by Todd Wong, creator of Gung Haggis Fat Choy, and who is active on the executive boards of Asian Canadian Writers' Workshop, Historic Joy Kogawa House Society and The Land Conservancy of BC.  Todd loves is a 5th generation Chinese Canadian, and loves Monkey King stories and Asian Canadian history.

Wednesday, March 30th.  7:30 to 9pm

Discount tickets to Marty Chan's
The Forbidden Phoenix

Marty Chan's The Forbidden
Phoenix
opens next month at the Gateway Theatre in Richmond. Become a
member of the Historic Joy Kogawa House Society and get the discount
ticket price.

Bonus: Meet the playwright this Wednesday, March 30, 7:30 to
9pm,
at Historic Joy Kogawa House, 1450 West 64th Avenue, Vancouver.

Cost:
$25 = Tax-deductible one-year membership in Historic Joy Kogawa House
Society

$39 = One ticket to any production of The Forbidden Phoenix,
running April 7 to 23 at the Gateway Theatre in Richmond

$64 total

This event is a fundraiser for our writer-in-residence program at
Historic Joy Kogawa House, which September 15, 2011, to April 15, 2012.

For tickets, email email kogawahouse@yahoo.ca

About the play
The Forbidden Phoenix, combines adventure and martial arts to
present an eye-popping musical that tells the story of a father who
comes to Canada looking for a better life. High drama and visual
spectacle combine for a unique evening of family entertainment.
Performed in English with Chinese surtitles. The play runs April 7 to 23
at the Gateway Theatre in Richmond.

About the event
On Wednesday, March 30, please join us in the living room of Historic
Joy Kogawa House, childhood home of the author Joy Kogawa, for a rare
opportunity to sit with this master author, hear him read from the
playscript, and discuss the issues of history and mythology he raises in
his work.

About the playwright
Marty Chan explores the tensions between opposing forces of assimilation
and the search for heritage and cultural roots.

Marty Chan is an award-winning playwright. His Mom, Dad, I’m Living
with a White Girl
won the Sterling Award for Best New Play and Best
Sound Design, and Harvard University’s A.C.T. Award. The Forbidden
Phoenix
won the Alberta Literary Awards Gwen Pharis Ringwood Award
for Drama in 2004.

For tickets, email email kogawahouse@yahoo.ca

Gung Haggis dragon boat team 1st practice is this Sunday March 27th

Gung Haggis dragon boat team starts practice this Sunday, March 27

photo
Gung Haggis dragon boat team at
Rio Tinto Alcan Festival – a mix of veteran and novice paddlers that
proudly made it to Rec B medal finals!

We start paddling this Sunday – March 27th 11am
Dragon
Zone / South East False Creek Community Centre.

11am Sunday
6pm Wednesday
meet at Creekside Community Centre
Dragon Zone
for more information
contact coach Todd Wong
778-846-7090
email gunghaggis at yahoo.com

photo

2010
was wonderful for the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team. We
started paddling in January then took a break for the Olympics. We
celebrated with a big Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner at Floata where we
first met a Chinese lass born in Scotland, who came to join the dragon
boat team, starting the string of Irish, Yorkshire, French, Belgian and
Australian visitors to Canada who came to paddle and race with us.

Dragon
boat races found us first time in A Division at
Lotus Races with the Community Spirit Award, in Rec B at Rio Tinto
Alcan Festival with a silver medal in Senior B Race, Silver medal and
2nd overall at Richmond with 1st prize of free entry for 2011 in the
challenge race. We partnered with Spirit of Vancouver and went to Banff
for a silver medal in C Division. In Ft. Langley both teams were in
the A Final. Wow!

The Gung Haggis team for 2011 – It will be
incredible….

2011 is year 10, of the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team, paddling
every year @ Alcan Races and beyond since 2002.  It is also year 15 for a
team that started in 1997 under the name Celebration Team and for which
the Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner event was
created as a fundraiser for in 1999.  This is the only team that has
twice won the Hon. David Lam Award for the team that best exemplifies
the multicultural spirit of the dragon boat festival (2001 & 2005)


photo

Gung Haggis Fat Choy paddlers bite
their silver medals at Richmond Dragon Boat Festival
– 2nd place
overall, and 1st in the steering challenge race.