Category Archives: Main Page

Scotsman.com warns of “dangerous dragonboat dumplings” in China

Hmmm…..

Why would www.scotsman.com be intererested in a story about “dangerous dragon boat dumplings” in China?

I have eaten sticky rice dumplings wrapped in tea leaves ever since I
was a young child.  I have even helped my mother make them when I
was young.  But now we usually purchase them at the many Chinese
food stores.

Sticky rice dumplings are traditionally thrown into the water to
appease the sea monsters during a dragon boat festival.  In
Vancouver, I think we feel there is enough pollution in False Creek
already – even though the local rats would probably love them!

http://news.scotsman.com/latest.cfm?id=792892006

explorASIAN creates benefit fundraiser for Indonesian Earthquake victims

explorASIAN creates benefit fundraiser for Indonesian Earthquake victims


the following is from explorASIAN executive director Don Montgomery

MEDIA ADVISORY – for immediate release – May 29,
2006
 

On the morning of May 27, 2006, at 05.54 AM local time (at 03.54
PM Pacific Time on May 26, 2006), a powerful earthquake shook the Special
Province of Yogyakarta, inhabited by 2.6 million people, located in the central
part of Java Island, Indonesia. The epicenter of the earthquake, registered 6.3
on the Richter scale, is 15 miles from Yogyakarta, the capital of the Special
Province of Yogyakarta. Fatalities based on the latest official report were
approximately 5,136 people, mostly the residents of the Bantul Regency, in the
Southern part of Yogyakarta (population more than 770.000).

In light of this recent earthquake in Indonesia,
the Vancouver Asian Heritage Month Society (explorASIAN Festival) will
turn its two free concert events at the explorINDONESIAN Batik
and Arts Exhibition at the Roundhouse Community Centre into benefit concerts for
earthquake relief.  Admission to both concerts will be by donation and all
proceeds will go to the Canadian Red Cross. 
We invite the Lower Mainland community to attend the exhibition and the
two concerts and make a donation.
 
 
Friday, June 2
6:00pm – 9:00 pm
Sharon Ong & Hartono's Jazz Trio
Concert
Benefit Concert for Earthquake Relief in Indonesia
Admission by Donation
Introductions by Margaret Gallagher (CBC Radio)
 
 
Saturday, June 3
1:00pm – 3:00pm
Angklung
Concert by Daeng Oktafiandi Udjo (from West Java)
Benefit Concert for
Earthquake Relief in Indonesia
Admission by Donation
 
 
explorINDONESIAN Batik and Arts Exhibition
May
23 – June 3, 2006
Monday to Friday – 10am to 9pm
Sat & Sun – 10am to
4pm
 
 
All three events held at the Roundhouse Community
Centre, Vancouver
181 Roundhouse Mews

 
– 30 –
 
 
Media Contact:
Don Montgomery
Executive Director
 
explorASIAN
Office
604.488.0119
 

Tacoma Dragon Boat Association loves us…. the Gung Haggis dragon boat team!

May 27, 2006

Here's an article from our paddle buddies in Tacoma – Check out the Tacoma Dragon Boat Association.

Babes and Chix make International Debut at Vancouver Regatta
By Janice Brevik

Vancouver, Canada — Under questionable skies at the Dragon Zone (venue
near the Science Dome at former Expo site) in Vancouver, Canada, the
Babes with Blades and Chix with Stix made their international debut at
the 9th Annual False Creek Women’s Regatta.  This is the fourth
year a TDBA crew has participated in the annual False Creek Women’s
fundraiser regatta.  Clad in Hawaiian attire complete with
stunning red lips (provided by Ann Martin) the Tacoma teams with their
Canadian teammates had a great day of racing, eating, and talking
story.  All that kept the rain at bay for the entire day.

The Babes, with first-time captain Ann Martin, started the action very
well with a first place win in their heat with a time of 2:49:74. 
Not to be outdone, the Chix, captained by another first-time captain,
Diane Wetzel, followed suit in their heat, also with a first place time
of 2:49:61.

As luck would have it, the two first place wins had the Babes and Chix
opposite each other in heat two.  The Chix placed first again with
a time of 240:15 and the Babes a close third with a time of
2:41:75.  It was a very close race with the three boats inches
apart.  A great finish watching—for spectators-not those in the
boats.

The third and final heat garnered the Babes with another first place
win with a time of 2:37:87.  The Chix placed third in their final
heat with a time of 2:43:62.  Both teams finished in the top 10 of
the 52 teams entered.  Nice job ladies!

Both boats had composite teams of experienced, novice, first-time
racers and guest paddlers from Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragonboat team
from Vancouver.  Gung Haggis also hosted us with food, water and
shelter, not to mention a healthy dose of good company and paddler
fun.  Topping the racing activities was having Todd Wong serving
as guest drummer /caller/motivational dude with the Babes.  Way to
go Todd!

Tips o’ the paddle go to Merri McHugh as our paperwork queen, Head
Coach Clem for critique of each race and tips to improve and our hosts
Gung Haggis Fat Choy—you are awesome!  A great time was had by all
and we shared the spoils of our day with luscious Canadian chocolates
provided to each team by the race organizers—after the race, of course.

Thanks to all the paddlers, coaches,  supporters and family
members that enjoyed this delightful event.  We couldn’t have done
it without you.

Meet Chinese Anti-Hockey Grandpa: The Tim Horton's tv ad + comment from Russell Jung who played the young father

Meet Chinese Anti-Hockey Grandpa:  The Tim Horton's tv ad 
+ comment from Russell Jung who played the young father


It's May, and a Canadian hockey team is still playing. Edmonton Oilers need one more win
to elminate the Anaheim Mighty Ducks to advance to the Stanley Cup finals, awaiting the
winner of the Buffalo Sabres - Carolina Hurricanes Eastern final.

Canadians, hockey and Tim Hortons - all very Canadian and perfect for a television
commercial.... but wait the hockey father and the hockey grandfather are Chinese?!?!
Do Chinese people play hockey? Where are the Chinese players in the NHL?

Back in 1972 and 1973, when my brother and I were in grades 6 and 7, we lived in
East Vancouver, and would carry our ice skates and hockey sticks to school to play on
Trout Lake after school.

Speaking of which... where are all the Chinese actors?

Russell Jung, who played the young father, in the Tim Horton's commercial contacted me
(see below) + a Maclean's Magazine artile about anti-hockey grandfather.

Hi, my name is Russell, and I wanted to respond to Todd`s article posted
Feb 17,2006.

I played the young father Jimmy in the commercial and I live in Richmond.
When I did the Tim Hortons Commercial I never thought it would be this big.
I`ve been an actor, stuntman and model since 86 and i always thought that with
the asian population in Van. I would see alot of work.

It took a bit of time but this commercial so far is my hilight, all asian cast, hockey
and Tim Horton`s how canadian and we didn`t wear any glasses either. So I`m
glad that people enjoyed it and put asians and hockey in the
same sentence. TTYL Russ

(from Macleans)


Forget Hockey Dad. Meet Anti-Hockey Grandpa.





He's the star of the Tim Hortons Olympic ad. But what kind of monster is he?

TONY KELLER

Just be glad he wasn't your father. Or maybe he was.

Among the ads in high rotation during the Turin Winter Olympics were
Bell's beavers with cellphones, humans with Yoplait-induced logorrhea
— and three generations of Chinese-Canadian men in Tim Hortons'
rinkside soap opera.

At first viewing, it's a heartwarming tale of fathers, sons, immigrants
and hockey. Does it get any more Canadian? Watching it, you probably
choked up a bit. But after seeing it for the fifth or 43rd time, you
may have started to wonder: what kind of a dad hates hockey so much,
and loves his little boy so little, that he refuses to go to his son's
games — though he did once or twice sneak a peek through the Zamboni
tunnel, keeping his visits a secret, as if the rink were a crack house?

Canada, you know Hockey Dad. Meet his nemesis: Anti-Hockey Grandpa. No,
he will not drive you to the rink. No, he will not buy you a chocolate
bar afterwards.

For those who haven't seen the ad, a plot summary: somewhere in Canada,
Grandfather, stern first-generation patriarch of a Chinese-Canadian
family, has come to the rink to watch his grandson, Tommy. The father
is surprised to see grandfather, who has never been to see Tommy play
before. As they sit, the proud father, making small talk, says that
Tommy is a good player. “Better than you,” shoots back grandpa. The
father shakes his head, asking: “How would you know?” You are, after
all, Anti-Hockey Grandpa. You never came to see me. You hated hockey;
thought it a distraction from school and homework. Flashback to the
early 1970s, and the son being dragged out of a road hockey game by the
patriarch. “You must study harder,” admonishes the old man, leading him
into the house while blond neighbourhood boys play on. “Not just hockey
all the time.” He spits out the word, “hockey.”

So how can grandfather know that Tommy is a better player than the
father? “I come watch,” says grandfather. The son can't believe it.
“Okay, what team did I play for?” asks the son. “You right wing,” says
the old man, pulling out his wallet and finding a fading photo of a
preteen in a yellow sweater. And so the secret is revealed: 30 years
ago, he watched at least one game. “Thanks dad,” says the son, as our
tear ducts swell. To which Grandpa replies, never making eye contact
with his son, “gimme my picture back.”

Thanks? What kind of dad waits until his son is pushing 40 to tell him
that — surprise! — back when you were six, I did see one of your
games, and maybe I didn't think of you as quite the disappointment I
always told you you were? And what kind of a son, on learning that,
responds with “Thanks?” Folks have spent years on an analyst's couch
for less.

He's cold, but Anti-Hockey Grandpa could be a genuine Canadian
archetype, one a hockey-mad culture doesn't normally acknowledge. Paul
Wales, president of Enterprise Creative Selling, creator of the spot,
insists that the story's intergenerational differences speak to us,
especially children of immigrants. The Grandpa character, according to
Wales, represents a first-generation, small-business owner whose view
is, “you work hard and you work first, and that's what your life should
be about.”

As for the revelation, 30 years too late, that Grandpa went to his
son's hockey game, “if we'd done it in a more gentle way, it wouldn't
have been genuine,” says Wales. “He wouldn't have told him that he went
and he saw him. Because it's the way that relationship is with that
culture from that generation.”

Wales says there's been a huge response to the ad, with some people
telling him that it makes them feel “like someone was looking right
into my family.”

Victor Wong, executive director of the Chinese Canadian National
Council, may be one of them. He thinks most immigrant parents are more
balanced in their view of life than Tim Hortons' Grandpa — but he also
recalls a time when his teachers told his parents that they were
worried that too many of his essays were about his favourite sport:
hockey. His parents took it in stride; Wong was doing well in school.
“But if you interview more 'Canadian-borns,' ” he says, referring to
Chinese born in Canada, “they'll relay their own hockey story to you.
They all have one.”

Which still leaves us with questions: if Grandfather was so opposed to
hockey, how did his son end up playing? Who bought him equipment? Was
Anti-Hockey Grandpa married to Hockey Grandma? We may never know. Wales
says there are no plans for a sequel.

Review: Asian Comedy Night – What are the 10 most misunderstood things about Asians?

Review:  Asian Comedy Night – What are the 10 most misunderstood things about Asians?



At the afterparty – OPM with Vancouver's Charlie Cho (Hot Sauce Posse) back row: Charles
Kim, Charlie Cho; front row: Janina Gavankar, Ewan Chung, Vancouver's
Philip Gurney, and Jae-Suh – photo Todd Wong

A man steps into the spotlight with a guitar slung over his
shoulders, and a jet black pompadou hairstyle.  The sound track is
Johnny Cash’s “Ring of Fire,” but the words are strange.  It’s
about being Asian, racing “rice rockets” on “Streets of Fire.” 
It’s comedian Tom Chin, doing yet another karaoke musical send up.

The
7th Annual Asian Comedy night opened on May 26th at the Round House
Community Centre, produced and presented by Vancouver Asian Canadian
Theatre.  Flipping racial stereotypes is the norm, and white
actors are the exotic rarities.  The mostly Asian crowd laughed,
tittered and guffawed.  Even the white folks laughed and had lots
of fun identifying with the humour.

“Vancouver has a lot of inter-racial relationships…” starts Vancouver stand up comic Jeffery Yu,
a former social studies high school teacher. “Everybody thinks that
mixed race people are so exotic-looking,” he says and goes into a joke
about how Asian/White couples always seem to be Asian female / White
male.  Yu has lots of jokes, and the audience gets lots of
laughs.  Yu will be featured in a CTV comedy special later this
year, and was written up in the Georgia Straight last year.

“You’re
just not french enough!” say three Asian casting directors who are
auditioning a white actor in a racial role reversal.  “This is the
first time in a long while that we are casting an all-white cast in a
move.  Try a little more Catherine Deneuve, a little more French
Maid.”  

The female actor is clearly exasperated, trying to
please them, but clearly failing in her attempts to portray what they
“think” is French.  Finally she says, “I really don’t want this
part that badly,” like so many Asian actors who get frustrated trying
to portray what white casting directors and producers “think” is Asian,
or Chinese, or Japanese, etc.

“Maybe we can get Keanu, or Meg
Tilly,” the directors decide.  They’re half-white already, nobody
will know the difference.

OPM (Opening
People’s Minds) is a sketch comedy troupe now based in Los Angeles,
after first originating in Seattle.  Charles Kim and Ewan Chung
are the leaders with Jae-Suh and new kid Janina Gavankar.  They
also individually make the tv acting round in L.A. individually racking
up credits in ER, Strong Medicine, Girlfriends and Las Vegas. 
This is one talented troupe! 

The skits are fast and
furious.  Kim plays a Japanese rapper named “50 Yen,” or was that
Chung who did it?  Sometimes Asians look alike to me.  But
there is no mistaking their abilities to quickly change characters from
one skit to the next.  Omigod, it’s like an Asian version of
Saturday Night Live with an all-Asian cast, presenting stories with
Asian themes, as well as a wonderful skit about a male car mechanic and
a female car owner who (gasp!) took her car to a different mechanic for
a hose job, when he was too busy.  The double entendres and the
acting were spot on!

Some of the better characters involved an
Iron Chef spoof featuring the North Korean leader dictator Kim Jong-Il
with a “Capote” accent,
and Savuri from “Memoirs of a Geisha,” the night’s performance who
tries her best to become an “exotic dancer.”

For
the Vancouver show, they are joined by Hot Sauce Posse member
Philip Gurney, their token white actor.  Gurney was only able to
rehearse for about 40 minutes with OPM, but seemed to fit
beautifully.   Saturday's show promises to be an even tighter
smoother production.


Jeffery Yu, Tom Chin and Kermet Apio – at the afterparty! – photo Todd Wong

Kermet Apio
grew up in Hawaii, a land and culture that I consider to be much more
interculturally and accepting of inter-racial relationships.  He
now does stand up comedy in Seattle and tours nationally.  “You
learn to laugh at yourself when your name is Kermet,” he says. 
Apio spins jokes and stories about growing up named Kermet as well as
growing up Hawaiian.  

“How was school today?” my parents would ask when I would come home.

“How do you think it went. I’m named Kermit,” he replies.

“I
was first born,” starts Apio,  “I was the guinea pig. My parents
learned with me as practice.  My sisters got normal names.”

It’s
a friendly “in the know” crowd at the Roundhouse.  They know what
it’s like to grow up Asian.  But the comedy is universal. 
It’s the situations that we laugh at.  The stereotypes, the
mistaken identities, the misunderstandings.  But Asian Comedy
Night goes beyond the obvious.  This is also a night of social
commentary.  Yes there is racial discrimination, but we don’t have
to get down about it.  If we can laugh at the world and ourselves,
we’ll do okay.  

Thanks to Vancouver Asian Comedy Night,
the world is safer for Asians and their friends, and hopefully the
world will understand better why Asians are such bad drivers, don’t
understand the concept of tipping, think White people all look alike,
and why we speak with funny accents.

Check out the Comedy
workshops at the Roundhouse on Saturday afternoon, as well as the final
show on Saturday night.  It's well worth it.  Take your white
friends… or your Asian friends… even if just to have an excuse to
make fun of each other later.

More news articles on Chinese Head-tax + story interview with Gim Wong

Ottawa's 'final decision' on Chinese head-tax due in
June, PM says

VANCOUVER — Chinese immigrants who were
forced to pay a blatantly racist head tax will learn next month how the federal
government plans to address the issue.

Chinese Canadians have been calling on Ottawa for several years
to apologize for the tax and to provide some form of redress.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper indicated during the
recent election campaign that, unlike the previous Liberal government, he was
open to those requests. And he told reporters yesterday that the Chinese
community could expect a response in mid-June.

“We will be announcing our final decision on that
within the next month,” Mr. Harper said. “There have been extensive
consultations across the country. I will be continuing some of those today and
we're very close to a final decision.”


aPs=”boxR”;

var boxRAC = fnTdo('a'+'ai',300,250,ai,'j',nc);
Those who have been fighting for action on the head-tax issue said
they were encouraged by the goodwill extended by the Prime Minister when he met
with head-tax payers and their families in East Vancouver
later in the day.

“This meeting speaks to the sincerity and
personal commitment of the Prime Minister that head-tax redress remains a
priority of this government,” Susan Eng, the co-chair of the Ontario
Coalition of Chinese Head Tax Payers and Families, said in a statement.

“The hopes and expectations of these Chinese
Canadian pioneers and their families for fair and just redress are now placed
in his hands and we expect that he will not disappoint them.”

In all, about 81,000 Chinese immigrants paid
$23-million to enter Canada
under the head-tax scheme between 1885 and 1923. The Chinese Exclusion Act
followed, barring Chinese immigrants altogether until it was repealed in 1947.

Over the past 21 years, more than 4,000 head-tax
payers and families have registered with the Chinese Canadian National Council.
Many have died, and the council wants action while there are still a few
remaining to accept what the government is willing to offer.

But the government has had to determine how it can
properly apologize for the discriminatory tariff and its consequences. Canadian
Heritage Minister Bev Oda has been charged with
conducting national consultations on the issue, and her findings will heavily
influence the government's response.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20060526.BCHEADTAX26/TPStory/National

 

 

Harper
hears first-hand of suffering caused by Chinese head tax

May 26, 2006.
01:00 AM

BRUCE CAMPION-SMITH

TORONTO STAR

 

VANCOUVERQuon Chang Shee
Dere is 102. But old age couldn't stop the Vancouver resident from delivering a sharp
message to Prime Minister Stephen Harper on the issue of the Chinese head tax.

“I am going to
stay alive as long as it takes to get justice. How much longer would you expect
me to live?” she asked Harper in a meeting yesterday.

Dere's husband was one of some 81,000 Chinese immigrants who each paid a
$500 head tax to enter Canada
early in the century.

During a roundtable
meeting yesterday, Dere delivered a blunt appeal for justice in her own Chinese
dialect, said Mary Woo Sims, who sat in on the private meeting.

The Conservatives have
promised to deliver a formal apology for the head tax and redress to those who
paid it. Heritage Minister Bev Oda and Jason Kenney,
Harper's parliamentary secretary, have travelled the
country consulting with Chinese Canadians on the shape of the compensation
package.

For the first time
yesterday, Harper sat in on one of those sessions, saying he wanted to hear
first-hand the tales of racism and hardship before deciding the government's
position on compensation.

Charlie Quan, 99, told Harper how he toiled without break in a Saskatchewan coffee shop
for four years to pay off the money he had borrowed to pay the tax.

“Very hard work to
get money … every day, even Christmas Day and New Year,” he said later.

The session at the Strathcona Community Centre in the city's Chinatown
stretched for 90 minutes, a half hour longer than scheduled.

In total, Chinese
immigrants paid $23 million to enter Canada under the head tax scheme
between 1885 and 1923, when the Chinese Exclusion Act came into effect and
barred Chinese altogether until 1947.

The previous Liberal
government rushed through an agreement before the election providing $2.5
million for an educational foundation but offered no apology or compensation.

That sparked widespread
outrage among community leaders, including Sid Tan, who protested during former
prime minister Paul Martin's visit to Vancouver late last year.

Yesterday, Tan was
among those who met with Harper. Later, he said the progress they've made with
the Conservatives on the issue has been “astounding.”

Prior to the meeting,
Harper said he expects to announce details of the compensation package in
mid-June.

 

http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_PrintFriendly&c=Article&cid
=1148593812113&call_pageid=971358637177

 

Harper meets with Chinese head
tax survivors

image

Prime Minister Stephen Harper speaks during a press conference in Vancouver on Thursday.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper speaks
during a press conference in Vancouver
on Thursday.

 

 

 

 

 

Canadian Press
 
Updated: Thu. May. 25 2006 11:40 PM ET

VANCOUVER
The prime minister will apologize to Chinese head tax payers and their
families before Parliament rises for the summer.

Stephen
Harper had a one-hour meeting with three elderly head tax payers and other
members of the Chinese community on Thursday in Vancouver.

Fewer
than 20 Chinese Canadians who paid the racist tax are still alive.

Parliamentary
Secretary Jason Kenney said the meeting gave the Prime Minister a more human
perspective on the issue.

“If
nothing else this meeting means that when he offers his apology in the House
of Commons, he will be speaking with real feeling, with real meaning and not
just reading a speech that was written for him,'' said Kenney.

“This
has added an important personal dimension to the prime minister to the whole
issue.''

A
redress package will also be announced in parliament within the next month.

No
exact details on the package were discussed Thursday.

“We're
going to try to come up with a package that reflects a consensus within the
community,'' he said. “Not everybody will be
completely satisfied but most people should be generally satisfied.''

Eighty-four-year-old
Gim Wong, an air force veteran and descendant of
head tax payers, attended the meeting with Harper

“He
was very friendly,'' he said.

“I'm
just so happy. He has a patience and he seems so
interested. I think that's very important. One step at a time.''

During
last election's campaigns, the Conservatives won some support from the
Chinese community after promising to apologize for the head-tax.

The
Liberals, however, were unclear at the time on where the stood on the issue.

David
Emerson, the industry minister at the time, suggested they had new advice
that put the government in the clear legally when it came to an apology.

Former
prime minister Paul Martin offered a “personal'' apology on a
Chinese-language radio station.

Governments
dating back to Brian Mulroney's Conservatives have had a no-apology policy.

Kenney
acknowledged that there are many communities who have been victims of racism
but said the head-tax was a particularly appalling mark in Canadian history.

“There
was no other ethnic or cultural community that was so clearly targeted by
racist policies for so long,” he said.

Thousands
of Chinese immigrants were forced to pay the tax as the price of admission to
Canada
between 1885 and 1923.

 

image

image

image

© Copyright
2002-2006 Bell Globemedia Inc.

 

http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20060525/harper_headtax_060525/20060525?hub=Canada

 

http://canadaeast.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060525/CPN/29777022

 

http://www.news1130.com/news/national/article.jsp?content=n0525131A

 

http://www.cknw.com/news/news.cfm?dir=national&file=n0525131A&n=1

PM Harper meets with Head Tax Survivors and community redress leaders in Vancouver

PM Harper meets with Head Tax Survivors and community redress leaders in Vancouver




The BC Coalition of Head
Tax Payers, Spouses and Descendants, quickly organized a meeting for
Prime Minister Stephen Harper to meet with surviving head tax payers
and descendants.  This was similar to when the Coalition organized
a meeting of Head Tax payers, spouses and descendants to meet with
Parliamentary Secretary Jason Kenney, earlier the same day when Kenney
addressed the “town meeting” community consultation back in April.




Head Tax payer Charlie Quan was
there, as well as 83 year old Gim Wong, the WW2 Veteran who rode his
motorcycle to Ottawa last year to ask then PM Paul Martin for an
apology for Chinese Head Tax.




The BC Coalition had a meeting
following their meeting with PM Harper, and the atmosphere was very
jubilant.  Head tax descendant and spokesperson Karin Lee
presented the BC Coalition's proposal directly to the PM, which calls
for redress compensation for each head tax certificate, rather than
limiting to only 1st generation descendants such as sons and
daughters.  On the BC Coalition we feel that a “one payment – one
certificate” compensation package is the most fair.  For example
in some families, only the grandchildren are the surviving descendants
now.  As well, my 95 year old grandmother still holds her father's
brother's head tax certificate.  Her uncle's wife and son died
before he could bring them to Canada due to the exclusion act.  He
never saw his son.

Thursday » May 25 » 2006

 

PM Harper meets with head tax survivors in Vancouver to talk about
apology

 

Elianna Lev

Canadian Press


Thursday, May 25, 2006

 

image

Prime Minister Stephen Harper smiles while
participating in a private round table discussion beside Charlie Quan in Vancouver,
B.C., Thursday. Quan originally paid the
Chinese head tax when he immigrated to Canada. (CP/Richard Lam)

VANCOUVER
(CP) – The prime minister will apologize to Chinese head tax payers and their
families before Parliament rises for the summer.

Stephen
Harper had a one-hour meeting with three elderly head tax payers and other
members of the Chinese community on Thursday in Vancouver. Fewer than 20 Chinese Canadians
who paid the racist tax are still alive. Parliamentary Secretary Jason Kenney
said the meeting gave the Prime Minister a more human perspective on the
issue.

“If
nothing else this meeting means that when he offers his apology in the House
of Commons, he will be speaking with real feeling, with real meaning and not
just reading a speech that was written for him,” said Kenney.

“This
has added an important personal dimension to the prime minister to the whole
issue.”

A
redress package will also be announced in parliament within the next month.

No
exact details on the package were discussed Thursday.

“We're
going to try to come up with a package that reflects a consensus within the
community,” he said. “Not everybody will be completely satisfied
but most people should be generally satisfied.”

Eighty-four-year-old
Gim Wong, an air force veteran and descendant of
head tax payers, attended the meeting with Harper

“He
was very friendly,” he said.

“I'm
just so happy. He has a patience and he seems so
interested. I think that's very important. One step at a time.”

During
last election's campaigns, the Conservatives won some support from the
Chinese community after promising to apologize for the head-tax.

The
Liberals, however, were unclear at the time on where the stood on the issue.

David
Emerson, the industry minister at the time, suggested they had new advice
that put the government in the clear legally when it came to an apology.

Former
prime minister Paul Martin offered a “personal” apology on a
Chinese-language radio station.

Governments
dating back to Brian Mulroney's Conservatives have had a no-apology policy.

Kenney
acknowledged that there are many communities who have been victims of racism
but said the head-tax was a particularly appalling mark in Canadian history.

“There
was no other ethnic or cultural community that was so clearly targeted by
racist policies for so long,” he said.

Thousands
of Chinese immigrants were forced to pay the tax as the price of admission to
Canada
between 1885 and 1923.

© The
Canadian Press 2006


http://www.canada.com/topics/news/national/story.html?id=658185f2-a285-4ac2-a54c-ffa90f94476d&k=97434

http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/Canada/2006/05/25/1597967-cp.html
http://www.940news.com/nouvelles.php?cat=23&id=525117
http://www.680news.com/news/national/article.jsp?content=n0525131A

http://www.940news.com/nouvelles.php?cat=23&id=525127
http://www.brooksbulletin.com/news/national_news.asp?itemid=52780
http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/news/story.html?id=19269f68-be32-4057-aeb8-75241ae52d34&k=61230

http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_Type1&c=Article&pubid
=968163964505&cid=1148593811597&col=968705899037&call_page=TS_News&call_pageid=968332188492&
call_pagepath=News/News

Hip, Hapa and Interculturally Happening…. May 25th to June 1

Hip, Hapa and Interculturally Happening…. May 25th to June 1


I missed doing a HH&IH last week because I was consumed with
readying the Gung Haggis dragon boat team for their races of the season
at the Barnet Marine Park “Bill Alley Memorial Dragon Boat
Regatta.”  This weekend, the team will be racing under the Tacoma
Dragon Boat Association banner on the boats named Chix w/ Stix, and
Babes w/ Blades.  Each boat will have paddlers from Tacoma,
Seattle and Vancouver.  Look for us Saturday racing from 9am to
3:30pm, as part of the False Creek Women's dragon boat regatta, at
Creekside Park (just south of Science World).

Asian Heritage Month continues with lots of great performances, workshops and exhibitions – check it out at www.explorasian.org

Asian Heritage Month series
Meet the Composers: New Music and Poetry from China and the West

A program for Adults


Celebrate Asian Heritage Month with an
evening of inspired music-making, as the Orchid Ensemble perfoms works
by Hope Lee and Mark Armanini. The composers will share their musical
journeys and discuss their works related to contemporary and ancient
Asian poetry.

Vancouver's acclaimed Orchid Ensemble
blends ancient musical instruments and traditions from China and
beyond, creating a beautiful new sound that is both creative and
distinct.

Thursday May 25
7:30 pm
Free
Alice MacKay Room, Lower Level

Central Library

350 West Georgia Street

TIM WARD

Author discusses his new book, Savage Breast: A Man’s Search for the Goddess,
the tale of one man’s discovery of the feminine divine through myth,
art, archaeology, and personal encounter. May 26, 7:30 pm, Vancouver Public Library (350 W. Georgia). Free admission, info 604-331-3602.

THE ROLE OF THE MULTICULTURAL WRITER IN SOCIETY: CHALLENGES AND SOLUTIONS


As part of the 20th-anniversary Conference of Italian Canadian Writing,
Ariadne Sawyer hosts a world-poetry roundtable with a panel including
Carmelo Militano, Pasquale Verdicchio, Diego Bastianutti, Anita
Aguirre-Nieveras, and Victoria Pescha. May 26, UBC (Anthropology-Sociology Rm. 203). Free admission, info 604-526-4729.

CHINESE OPERA DEMONSTRATION

Chinese Opera Demonstration

Afascinating introduction to Chinese opera,
presented by members of Vancouver Cantonese Opera. There will be a
make-up demonstration and display of costumes and accessories, followed
by a workshop with discussions about opera characters and performance
techniques.

  • Make-up Demonstration: 12:00 p.m. -2:00 pm., in the Promenade.
  • Opera Workshop: 2:00 p.m. – 3:00 p.m., in the Alma VanDusen and Peter Kaye rooms (lower level)

DISSECTION OF COMEDY


OPM, Jeffery Yu, and Kermet Apio share insights on their processes and
careers during this forum on sketch comedy, complete with
demonstrations. May 27, 2-3 pm, Roundhouse Community Centre (Pacific & Davie). Free admission, info 778-885-1973.

THE MULTICULTURAL CANADA CONFERENCE: OUR DIVERSE HERITAGE


Simon Fraser University hosts a conference with a focus on the
Multicultural Canada Digitization Project, which is committed to making
historical records of individuals and cultural communities available
online; speakers include historians Henry Yu (UBC) and Hugh Johnston
(SFU). May 31–June 2, SFU Harbour Centre (515 W. Hastings). Info ocs.sfu.ca/multiculturalcanada2006/.

WORLD POETRY READING SERIES

Ariadne Sawyer
and Alejandro Mujica-Olea host a celebration of Asian Heritage Month,
featuring readings by Tibetan lama Pema, Kagan Goh (Singapore), Billy
Yizhong (China), Anita Aguirre Nieveras (Philippines), and Mandana
Rastan (Persia), plus songs in Tagalog performed by the Holy Rosary
Cathedral 12:30 Choir. May 29, 7:30 pm, Vancouver Public Library (350 W. Georgia). Free admission, info 604-526-4729.

Denise Chong: Asian Heritage Month at Vancouver Public Library continues

Denise Chong: Asian Heritage Month at Vancouver Public Library continues






Denise Chong

Alice MacKay Room, Lower Level

Vancouver Public Library
Central Branch

350 West Georgia Street




Denise Chong is best known for The Concubine's Children, one of the first non-fiction narratives of a Chinese family in Canada, which tells of
her grandmother's life as a tea house waitress in the old Chinatowns. 
It is an incredible book about how challenging life was like for the
Chinese pioneers, many of whom paid the head tax to succeed in Canada
despite rampant racism.  This book won the Vancouver Book Award, and
was turned into a play 2 years ago, premiering in Nanaimo. I have met Denise a few times at readings at the library and also in Nanaimo.

Photos of Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team at the Lotus Sports' Bill Alley Memorial Dragon Boat regatta

Photos of Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team at the Lotus Sports' Bill Alley Memorial Dragon Boat regatta.







Gung
Haggis marshalling for their first race. (l-r) Jonas, Gail, Carolyn,
Dave, Julie, Steven, Natalie, Wendy and Jim – photo Todd Wong








Daming finds his seat in the boat – photo Todd Wong







The Pirates team waves their paddles “Hello” – “See Ian… Your team listens to me now!” – photo Todd Wong.







Gung Haggis paddlers join “Smoke on the Water” to fill some empty seats – photo Todd Wong







Gung
Haggis paddlers join “Smoke On the Water” to help fill some empty seats
(l-r) Pam (Sudden Impact), ??, Natalie, twins Sean and Jasmine, Deb,
and Carolyn – photo Todd Wong.








Steve hold the boat steady while Gung Haggis team empties the boat back to the beach – photo Todd Wong







The Hon.
David Lam Award from the 2005 Alcan Dragon Boat Festival for “the team
best representing the multicultural spirit of the Festival.” – photo
Todd Wong.






2006 Gung
Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team at Lotus Sports Club's “Bill Alley
Memorial Dragon Boat Regatta” – seated: Ann-Marie, Jim, Dave, Natlie,
Julie, Wendy, Todd, Jennifer.   Standing: Deb, Rita, Carolyn,
Daming, Steven, Stephen, Jonas, Constance, Dan and Sonja. – photo Mike
Jeffries.