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Hip, Hapa and Interculturally Happening: May 5 – 12 – It's Asian Heritage Month!

Hip, Hapa and Interculturally Happening:  May 5 – 12
It's Asian Heritage Month!

What
to see?  What do do?  Where to go?   With Asian
Heritage Month there will be no shortage of interculturally Asian
events to attend during the explorASIAN festival – check it out!

Think I will start off the week by going to the Musica intima concert
at Ryerson United Church.  They are a wonderful choral group, and
can always be counted on to do something wonderful and absolutely
gorgeous.  Too bad I will have to miss the No Shit Shirleys –
another one of my favorite performers.  They mix and match gospel
songs, lullabies and songs of protests from all over the world. 
Very cool – very intercultural.  

Looks like I will be heading down to Richmond to see two plays that
each deal with how Asian ethnic groups settled in Richmond.  Simon
Johnston's Rice
Rockets and Yacht People addresses recent affluent immigrants from
Shanghai and Daphne Marlatt's the Gull, deals with  the Japanese
community returning to the BC Coast after internment when they had much
of their personal property and homes confiscated including their
fishing boats.

May 11th is my birthday…  Hmmm… what will I do?  Go for a
drive to Whistler?  Go paddle a canoe, or go to the Aquarium to
see my favorite sea otter Nyack?  Maybe go celebrate at Doolin's
Irish Pub, because the Halifax Wharf Rats always put on a good
show.  Always a good excuse to put on the kilt too!

MUSICA INTIMA – The Canadian Concert
www.musicaintima.org


May 5, 8 pm,


Ryerson United Church (Yew St. & 45th Ave.)


May 7, 3pm

Evergreen Cultural Centre, (Coquitlam)

Wonderful 12
person self-conducted choral group sing traditional and classic
Canadian songs, including writers such as Gordon Lightfoot, Joni
Mitchell, Gilles Vigneault, Stan Rogers and many more.



THE NO SHIT SHIRLEYS
www.shirleys.ca


May 5, 8 pm,

St. James Hall (3214 W. 10th).

Local octet
performs a capella versions of Afro-Cuban Orisha music,
African-American spirituals, originals, Native American lullabies, and
Russian folk songs. Tix $16/13, info 604-736-3022.






NO GREAT MISCHIEF

Ends May 6, Mon.-Sat. at 8 pm (mats. Sat., select Wed.-Thurs. at 2 pm),

Vancouver Playhouse (Hamilton & Dunsmuir).

The Playhouse
Theatre Company presents David S. Young’s adaptation of Alistair
MacLeod’s novel that follows three generations of Clan MacDonald from
the shores of Scotland to Cape Breton Island. Starring Allan Morgan and
Duncan Fraser and directed by Dean Paul Gibson. Tix $24 to $51 (plus
service charges and fees) at Ticketmaster, 604-280-3311.




RICE ROCKETS & YACHT PEOPLE 
www.gatewaytheatre.com/whatsons2.html


May 4-13,

Gateway Theatre (6500 Gilbert Rd., Richmond).

The Gateway’s
New Play Series presents Simon Johnston’s drama about the clash of
values between new Canadians and longtime Caucasian residents, focusing
on a well-to-do couple from Shanghai and their street-racing kids. Tix
$24/22, info www.gatewaytheatre.com/.




STRINGS AND STRIKES

May 6, 8 pm,

Scotiabank Dance Centre (677 Davie).

Vancouver New
Music, in association with explorASIAN and Asian Heritage Month,
presents a concert of boundary-crossing musical performance by Mei Han
(zheng), Aiyun Huang (percussion), and Lee Pui Ming (piano). Tix $15/10
(plus service charges and fees) at Ticketmaster, 604-280-3311.

Alcan Dragon Boat Festival COMMUNITY PADDLING
www.adbf.com


May 7 & 14, 1:00 pm,

Dragon Zone @ Creekside Park – just south of Science World
Come learn to paddle a dragon boat – just to say that you've done
it.  It's the Vancouver thing to do.  A 30 minute on-land
introduction to dragon boating with safety and paddle instruction,
followed by a 30 minute paddle on False Creek including 2
mini-races.  Assisted by the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team
with coach Todd Wong.  Lots of Fun – $2 -Please pre-register at 604 688-2382 ext 3, or email Nicole at
nicole@adbf.com with names, phone number and number of participants.



AFRICAN PEACE FESTIVAL

May 7, 7:30 pm,

Unitarian Church of Vancouver (949 W. 49th

The African
Working Group of the World Peace Forum presents performances by local
African artists and musicians, DJs and dancing, and market sales of
African art, food, clothing, and gifts. May 6, 11 am–9 pm, Ukrainian
Cultural Centre (805 E. Pender). Info 604-715-4816,
www.africapeaceforum.com/.




SUSHI-MAKING WORKSHOP

May 7, 12-3 pm,

Silk Purse Arts Centre (1570 Argyle Ave., West Van.).

Learn to make both nigiri and norimaki sushi with Kinuko Hagashio. Fee $10, info 604-925-7292.



GENDER, RACE, ISLAM, AND THE WAR ON TERROR

May 11, 5-9 pm,

Heritage Hall (3102 Main) & May 13, 5-7 pm, Vancouver Public Library (350 W. Georgia).

SFU department
of women’s studies and Researchers and Academics of Colour for
Equality/Equity host a pair of community dialogues on Muslims in Canada
and the promotion of peace, democracy, and human rights, with panelists
set to include Asma Barlas of Ithaca College, Amina Jamal of Concordia
University, and Sunera Thobani of UBC. Free admission, info
rwwchair@sfu.ca.



Adrift on the Nile?

NEW PLAY FESTIVAL

May 8-14, 8 pm,

Playwrights Theatre Centre Studio (Festival House, 1398 Cartwright).

Weeklong
festival offers a preview of new scripts from emerging and established
playwrights, including Marcus Youssef and Camyar Chai’s adaptation of
Naguib Mafhouz’s Adrift on the Nile?;  My friend Adrienne Wong performs with
Marcus.


By donation, info 604-685-6228.



TWELVE MINUTES MAX XXXII

May 9-10, 8 pm,
www.firehallartscentre.ca


Firehall Arts Centre (280 E. Cordova).

Showcase of
interdisciplinary live performance works lasting 12 minutes or less,
featuring 10 works curated by choreographer and Dancers Dancing
artistic director Judith Garay, playwright Jan Derbyshire, and
composer-director Ya-wen Wang. Tix $12, info 604-689-0926.




THE GULL: THE STEVESTON NOH PROJECT

May 10-14, Wed.-Sat. at 8 pm (mats. Sat.-Sun. at 2 pm),

Plaza at Richmond City Hall (6911 No. 3 Rd.).

Pangaea Arts
presents Daphne Marlatt’s new play about Japanese-Canadian fishermen
returning to the coast after the internment. Featuring Japanese Noh
performers and Canadian theatre artists. Tix $25 at Gateway Theatre box
office, 604-270-1812, info www.pangaea-arts.com/.


CBC Radio: The North By Northwest Cooking Club – share your favorite cookbook story


CBC Radio: The North By Northwest Cooking Club – share your favorite cookbook story



I have just discovered the CBC Radio North by Northwest Cooking Club

They have a contest to share a story about your favorite cookbook.  You can win a copy of the CBC cookbook “Flavours of Vancouver: Dishes from Around the World

Here is my story:

I was in grade 7, when I purchased the Charlie Brown Cook Book… and I loved reading the cartoons more than the recipes.



I have
a small cook book collection that takes up 1 1/2 shelves on my book
case.  There are cook books that emphasize vegetarian, seafood or
grilled foods.  I even have Sarah McLachlan's book “Plenty” and a
book by Naked Chef Jaime Oliver.




I listened to CBC radio one time, and they were interviewing chef

Wolfgang
Puck, when he was still working in Vancouver, but was out on Vancouver
Island's wild west coast with Westcoast Expeditions for a kayaking
tour.  He was talking about sea asparagus, and I had to try
it.  I even went on the West Coast expeditions kayak tour and had
incredible huge halibut steaks cooked over the fire, by owner/host
Rupert Wong.




My
all-time favorite cook book is now “Chow” by Janice Wong.  Janice
has created a new genre – the family memoir cook book.  She has
taken the recipes that her father used in his restaurant in Prince
Albert SK.




It's a
special book because Janice's great grandfather was Rev. Chan Yu Tan,
who came to Canada as a Christian Missionary.  Janices grandmother
was my great-grandmother's younger sister.  So it was especially
wonderful to hear about family stories that I didn't know even
existed.  It's hard to believe that we had never met before, even
though we both share a strong interest in family history.




It was great to read about her father Dennis, Rev. Chan Yu Tan, and

Even
grand uncle Luke who became an actor in Hollywood Movies.  One
time, Janice excitedly contacted me when she had found one of Uncle
Luke's movies on-line – one that he actually starred in – “The
Mysterious Mr. Wong.”




Janice
first contacted me asking to help invite family members to her book
launch.  I have since followed much of the media and events
surrounding Chow, even being a panelist at Janice's presentations at
the West Vancouver and Vancouver Public libraries.




My
girlfriend has really taken the book to heart, preparing some of the
recipes for me.  Chow is very special to me, because it really
symbolizes my wonderful new friendship with a formerly unkown 2nd
cousin-once-removed.



Check out Janice Wong's websites

FOR MY BOOK  http://c-h-o-w.blogspot.com

FOR ME http://what-is-she-up-to.blogspot.com

And I'm updating the http://www.janicewongstudio.com site...new
images coming in June!!!!!!!


HEAD TAX events: Friday May 5 8:30 CFRO + Community meeting Saturday May 6 + Tuesday showing of Karen Cho's “Shadow of Gold Mountain.

HEAD TAX events:  Friday May 5 8:30 CFRO
+ Community meeting Saturday May 6
+ Tuesday showing of Karen Cho's “Shadow of Gold Mountain.




The Following is from Sid Tan, long time head tax redress activist.

Tomorrow Friday May 5 at 8:30AM on CFRO 102.7 FM radio program Wake Up
with Co-op, head-tax redress will be the topic. Also on internet
www.coopradio.org and online radio streaming is
on right side of page.

There's also a comunity meeting Saturday May 6 at 2:00PM Saturday May 6
at SUCCESS called by ACCESS (Media Advisory follows). Speakers include
Victor Wong, CCNC executive director, and Libby Davies, MP for
Vancouver East.  Vancouver Kingsway MP David Emerson
(Conservative) and Vancouver South MP Ujjal Dosanjh (Liberal) have been
invited to speak but no reply yet.  

On Tuesday May 9 at 9:00PM, the Knowledge Network will be broadcasting
Karen Cho's In the Shadow of Gold Mountain (NFB). Vancouver connection
includes Charlie Quan, Gim Wong, Roy Mah and Hanson Lau. Well worth the
watch

We will need some volunteers to do translation and help set-up and
teardown on Saturday.

Please let me know asap to sidchowtan@gmail.com or call 604-433-6169
and leave message if you can put in a couple of hours in some capacity.

There will be an update and report of redress activities in Toronto and here but we mostly want to hear from the community.

Please pass on to your Saltwater City contacts.

Hope to see you Saturday. Peace, love and hope.

Take care.    anon     Sid

Vancouver Sun May 4: “Simple head-tax apology isn’t that simple” + comments

imageimageimage

Vancouver Sun May 4: “Simple head-tax apology isn’t that simple”

Pete McMartin is a nice guy.  He wrote a wonderful story about me and my
Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner back in January  2002 “Toddish McWong marks
Bard’s birthday.”  But he still hasn’t shown up wearing a kilt to taste
the haggis won ton, haggis spring rolls, or haggis lettuce wrap at
subsequent dinners.

McMartin’s family has probably been in Canada for about as long as my 7 generation family (I’m a fifth-generation descendant of Rev. Chan Yu Tan.  If Pete and I aren’t related yet… maybe we can create some “arranged marriages” so that he too can claim to be related to a Head Tax descendant family.  I know our family will be accepting, we already have relatives named McPherson and McLean. 

I have embraced Canada’s Scottish history and culture and customs, and even promote Robbie Burns and haggis at my annual Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner, which even inspired a  regional CBC television special of the same name.

But Pete just doesn’t “get” the Chinese-Canadian head tax issue.  It’s NOT a race issue.  It’s about justice, fairness and all those things for making Canada a better place.

McMartin has written an interesting column (see below) for today’s Vancouver Sun, citing
Gabriel Yiu as an example of a “Chinese-Canadian” with no claims to being a head tax descendant being a spokesperson for the BC Coalition for Head Tax Payers, Spouses and Descendants.  McMartin neglects to mention that Harvey Lee and Karin Lee also serve as “English language” spokespersons, and are both head tax descendants.

Harvey’s case for redress is a dramatic story of family hardship and loss.  His father paid the head tax and worked in Canada to support his wife and children in Canada, but they could not join him because of the Exclusion Act.  Japanese soldiers killed Harvey’s mother when he was a
young boy, and he was finally able to join his father in Canada long after the war was over.

Personally, I admire Gabriel for standing up for human rights and the head tax issue.  Much of the head tax story war has been taking place in the Chinese media, and I have no real access to it because I don’t speak Chinese. 

I thank Gabriel, Tekla Lit of BC Alpha, and Bill Chiu of Chinese Christians in Action for helping address our Chinese language deficiencies.  My born-in-Canada parents didn’t think that
Chinese language would be such a desired skill when I was growing up in the 1960’s.  Nobody foresaw that so many Chinese immigrants would still want to come to Canada after such blatant racist treatment and limiting immigration policies from 1885 to 1967.

But there have been recent Chinese immigrants such as Hong Kong-born former
Multiculturalism Minister Raymond Chan and Malaysian-born Ping Tan, president of the National Congress of Chinese Canadians, trying to make decisions about redress such as the now aborted Liberal ACE program and Agreement in Principle.  They have been telling Canadian born head tax descendants what should be done, such as NO APOLOGY and that the money
should go to Chinese community projects – NOT direct head tax payers, spouses or descendants. Needless to say, these individuals can be told to go back where they came from.

Pete McMartin likes to play devil’s advocate, and push people’s buttons. I can appreciate that.

McMartin is also expressing the views of many White Canadians out there.  One of my own library supervisors who wrote a recent reference letter for me, expressed anger at having to pay out for the “sins” of other people’s ancestors.  This is important to address and to help others understand the real issues of a sad chapter in Canadian history and its legacy.

McMartin is clearly generalizing the topic of redress and guilt to many other issues regarding racism and colonialism, and demonstrating that government policies were linked to the prevailing attitudes of the day.  Yes, I agree that First Nations claims must be addressed, and
Canada will be better for it. But adding these issues clouds the Head Tax picture, and it still does not excuse the 1907 riots by the Anti-Asiatic League that attacked both Chinatown and Japantown for which reparations were made.

Despite the seemingly complicated issue, there are simple questions:

1. Was it wrong for the Canadian government to place a Head Tax followed
by an Exclusion Act, ONLY on immigrants of Chinese ancestry?

2. Was it wrong for the Canadian government to ignore a 2004 request from
the United Nations to make reparations for head tax payers?

3. If the head tax was wrongfully applied, is not a refund and reparation in order?

4. How do we build the Canada now, that we want to live in tomorrow?  By
excluding people and our history, or by acknowledging wrongs and doing
something positive by apology, reparation and forgiveness?

Thank you to Pete McMartin for citing all the reasons for White Colonialism and privilege, that made it difficult for my ancestors to find equal footing in Canada, that gave us a “Chinaman’s Chance” of being found innocent in courts of law, that prohibited us from joining the armed
forces until Great Britain asked Canada for Chinese speaking soldiers, and kept native born Canadians from voting until 1947.  You really are helping to explain the difficulties in growing up Asian-Canadian in Canada, and why it is important to give redress for Head Tax Payers and
their estates.

Seven generations of our family have endured negative identity and racial discrimination for having the wrong DNA, coloured skin, slanted eyes, black hair.  Despite this our family
founders Rev. Chan Yu Tan and Rev. Chan Sing Kai were Christian missionaries;  2nd generation Uncle Luke Chan became a Hollywood actor; 3rd generation brothers Daniel, Leonard and Howard Lee with cousin Victor Wong enlisted in the Armed Forces; 4th generation Rhonda (Lee)
Larrabee became Qayqayt First Nations Chief; 5th generation Joni Mar became a CBC television news reporter.

And somehow our family has developed a continuing fascination for marrying white people with each successive generation.  There are lots of 4th, 5th, 6th and 7th generations of the Rev. Chan Clan who share Chinese, Scottish, English, Irish, Czech, Dutch, Scandinavian, French, German, Italian ancestries  and many more.  This is OUR CANADA and they are all Head Tax descendants.

And by the way…. both myself and head tax descendant Sid Tan had also been spokespersons for a for the BC Coalition for Head Tax Payers, Spouses and Descendants, before Gabriel.

Regards, Todd Wong

Below are some comments from friends across the country:

Unfortunately, some writers take a lot of effort to intellectualize this issue.

Gabriel already pointed it out: A wrong is a wrong.

1. If the Head Tax and Exclusion Act were morally wrong, what is the morally right thing to do?

2. If we are unable to apologize for the wrong, then what do we learn from the injustice?

3. What about the families who were harmed. How do we turn the page?


The federal Government enacted this legislation and the federal Government
is an organic entity, existing since Confederation and some would argue even before then.


Trudeau argued that we must be “just in our time” when he refused to redress the Japanese-Canadians. It’s a convenient and somewhat selfish response. But we see this type of response too often from our political leaders.

The fact is that these sins of the past were wrong in their own time; people opposed the
discriminatory legislation “in their own time”. The Chinese Canadian community opposed the Exclusion Act and delegations regularly went to Ottawa to lobby for its repeal. White society was smug in its racism.  It was legal to be racist.


So, sorry Pete, no limitations on this one.

Victor Wong
long-time head tax redress advocate
Toronto


I think deep down in his subconscious, McMartin questions why whites should apologize to the coloureds. And it also shows, as he keeps using the word “race” instead of “Chinese people” or “Chinese immigrants.”   I am sure if the situation was reversed, for example WWII vets in Japanese concentration camps, he would have demanded apologies a long
time ago.


Cheuk Kwan
Filmaker of “Chinese Restaurants”
Toronto

Popsicle Pete finds the White Man’s Burden a bit heavy right now. Tell him there’s a sale on wheelbarrels at Rona. And while he’s there, pick up some fertilizer to add to his remarks and for the trees, parks and “public” facilities which the “head taxes” paid for “centuries” ago.
 
Kenda Gee
www.asian.ca
Edmonton

 

Simple head-tax apology isn’t that simple

 

 
Pete McMartin
Vancouver
Sun

 

Gabriel Yiu arrived in Canada in 1991 from Hong Kong, riding the huge
post-Expo wave of immigration that forever changed the fabric of the city.

He is a bright guy and a liberal thinker, whose thick round-rimmed glasses
are his trademark. He found Canadian society an economic grind when he first
arrived, but he and his wife, Angela, worked hard and now own a small chain of
upscale flower shops.

A political commentator back in Hong Kong, he continued that work here while
building up his business, and has worked over the years in both Chinese- and
English-language media, including The Sun. Last year, he ran unsuccessfully as
the provincial NDP candidate in Burnaby-Willingdon.

At present, Yiu finds himself as spokesman for the B.C. Coalition of Head Tax
Payers, Spouses and Descendants, a local group formed last year to lobby the
Canadian government for an official apology and compensation. Yiu’s advantage is
his bilingualism — he can take the message to both the established
English-speaking Chinese community and the immigrant Chinese-speaking
community.

But why is a Chinese immigrant, who was never affected personally by the
injustices of the head tax, lobbying for an apology?

Well, for one thing, Yiu said, a significant portion of the recent Chinese
immigrant community wants to see an apology. For another: “Wrong is wrong,” Yiu
said, “and if we want to redress it we have to admit it.”

In this, he is without doubt on the side of the angels. But the question is,
who does Yiu mean by “we”?

Well, when you ask head tax lobbyists who it is they want to see apologize,
the answer is not a “who” but a “what” — the Government of Canada. That is, I
presume, an apology from the government would be a symbolic admission of
national historic guilt. Out of that admission would come a moral reckoning.

But this surely is a deflection of the truth. The present Government of
Canada has done no wrong to head tax payees and their descendants, nor has
today’s society at large. (It could be argued, even, that Canada’s inclusive and
colour-blind system of immigration — which brought people like Yiu here by the
hundreds of thousands — has gone some way toward expiating the racist sins of
the past. It could also be argued that that argument is beside the point.)

No, the wrong against head tax payers was committed by the Government of
Canada of a century ago. And it was not really the Government of Canada of a
century ago that committed the wrong. That government was only a conduit for its
constituents and their prevailing sentiments of the day.

And those constituents were white. And those constituents were my and, odds
are, your forebears. And here is where things get very delicate, because race
and ethnicity invariably intrude into discussions such as this. They cannot help
but do so, as much as we might deny it.

This is, after all, more than just an issue about a small portion of the
populace seeking financial redress from the government, otherwise it would just
be a matter of monetary compensation. Here’s your money, have a nice life.

But it is about more than that, or has become about more than that: It is
about ethnicity and racial pride. How else to explain Yiu’s assertion that a
significant portion of the recent Chinese immigrant population are in favour of
an apology, despite never having been affected by the head tax? And how else to
explain my own hesitation about the apology?

As Yiu wrote to me in a series of e-mails we exchanged discussing the
apology: “If there’s one day when ethnicity is no longer an issue, where every
Canadian is simply Canadian, the head tax issue would be irrelevant.”

But that day has not yet come, as Yiu tacitly admits, and despite the
multicult feel-good crowd who insist that it has. We carry our prejudices
still.

Nonetheless, Yiu said, there are also many whites in the coalition who feel
there should be an apology. And I would guess — since I haven’t been able to
find any polls on the question — that the majority of white Canadians see an
apology as the moral and proper thing to do, as sensitive as they have become to
the history of white racism. And probably it is the proper thing to do.

But it would be disingenuous, I would also suggest, of whites to ignore, or
fail to recognize, what was borne out of that racism, or, at least, out of the
circumstances that encouraged that belief in white superiority.

A short list:

Colonialism. British hegemony in North America. The decimation and clearance
of inconvenient aboriginal populations. (Talk about your apologies!) Manifest
destiny. The creation of Canada. The ensconcement of a uniformly white
Establishment. Power. Affluence. An assumption of privilege so pervasive as to
be taken as a birthright.

In other words, the blessed existence that many white Canadians enjoy today
is due to that historical continuum. And that continuum was peopled by forebears
who were hard and driven and, yes, even racist, though they might not have
recognized themselves as being so.

This column is not to excuse them of that, or to absolve them from what we
now take to be their sins. As Yiu said, wrong is wrong.

But while I know what an official apology would seek to redress, I am not
sure what it would ask us to forsake. In that sense, the easiest part of the
head tax issue to address is not the apology, but the compensation. That is only
money.

But an apology exacts a far greater cost. It apportions blame against sins
and motivations seen dimly through the gauze of history. It does so with the
clear-sighted certitude of hindsight.

It also asks: Are there limits to guilt? Does guilt have a past-due date?

And also this: Are we, from our enlightened, privileged present, enjoying the
luxury of condemning our hard, unfathomable past?

pmcmartin@png.canwest.com

Paul Yee and his book “Saltwater City” featured for CBC Studio One Book Club

Paul Yee and his book “Saltwater City” featured for CBC Studio One Book Club


I first met Paul Yee back in 1986.  He was a very unassuming man
of quiet intensity.  My older cousin Hayne had invited me to
become involved on a project celebrating 100 years of Chinese Canadian
history in Vancouver.  It was to be the Chinese community's
contribution to the Vancouver centennial celebrations.


It was a
turning point in my life.  I learned lots about Chinese Canadian
history, and it helped my own family history to come more alive for
me.  There were mentions about my Great-great-grandfather's
involvement with the Chinese Methodist Church, Rev. Chan Yu Tan. 
My cousin Joni Mar was mentioned as one of the first Chinese Canadian
television news reporters.  And my Uncle Daniel Lee loaned his
Airforce uniform and medals for the exhibit.

I helped to paint some of the displays, bang nails, hang things up, and
I met some great people.  Rah Mah was a graphic designer who went
on to found his own company, Leap Creative.  Elizabeth Sheffrin
was a textile artist who became the event manager.  Elizabeth
Johnson was a curator at the Museum of Anthropology.  David Wong
was an architectural student who later founded his own company. 
Joyce Lam was volunteer coordinator and later founded Vancouver Asian
Canadian Theatre.

During the exhibit I helped to provide information on the exhibit, and
give people tours.  When nobody came through, I sat and read
Paul's books “Teach Me to Fly Skyfighter,” and “Curse of Third Uncle.”


In 1989,
Douglas McIntyre published Paul Yee's “Saltwater City.”  I
remember attending the book launch at the Chinese Cultural Centre
boardroom.  I have a picture of myself with Paul – my head is bald
due to the chemotherapy treatment I was going through at the time.

Over the years, I have attended many of Paul's readings and book
launches in Vancouver.  He is an amazing presenter with a very
good speaking style.  In September 2002, I was on the board of the
Asian Canadian Writers' Workshop, and we presented Paul with a
Community Achievement award.

On May 17th, Paul Yee will be presenting a newly revised edition of
“Saltwater City” for the CBC Studio One Book Club – see information
below.


Hope to see you there….

See below for informaiton from the CBC Radio website on how to enter.
http://www.cbc.ca/bc/bookclub/paulyee.html


CBC Radio One, The Georgia Straight, The Vancouver Readers &
Writers Festival, The Vancouver Public Library, and explorASIAN are
pleased to present…
Paul Yee - Saltwater City: The Story of Vancouver's Chinese Community
Paul Yee with Saltwater City: The Story of Vancouver’s Chinese Community
Wednesday, May 17, 6:30 to 8:00 p.m.
CBC Radio Studio One
700 Hamilton Street, Vancouver
Paul YeeCome
celebrate the completely redesigned and revised edition of this
best-selling landmark book, first published in 1988, which told the
epic story of Vancouver's Chinese community and its extraordinary
growth from marginal to centre stage in a new world order. The new
edition includes the years 1987 to 2001, when Vancouver’s Chinese
population grew rapidly.
The text
resonates with often painful first-person recollections and includes
200 photographs, most reproduced for the first time, to form a
chronological portrait of the community from its earliest beginnings to
the present. With the assimilation of its people into the mainstream of
Canadian life following World War II, Saltwater City, as early Chinese
immigrants called the community, was threatened, but changes in
attitude, government policy, and the opening of diplomatic relations
with China instead caused a renaissance. Now, Vancouver's Chinese
community enjoys considerable political and financial influence and has
matured beyond recognition into one of Canada's most successful ethnic
enclaves.
Paul Yee, a third-generation
Chinese-Canadian, was born in Saskatchewan, grew up in Vancouver’s
Chinatown, and worked for the Vancouver City Archives before moving to
Toronto in 1988. He has written several fiction, non-fiction, childrens
and young adult books. His latest books include Bamboo, Chinatowns in Canada, and Is This Screwed, Or What?.
The
CBC Studio One Book Club is an intimate gathering of ONLY 120 audience
members. It is hosted by Sheryl MacKay of CBC Radio and John Burns of
the Georgia Straight, and is recorded for broadcast on North by
Northwest and other CBC Radio programs. Microphones are set up for
audience questions. We encourage you to join in, your participation in
the CBC Radio Studio One Book Club is an important part of the
broadcast. This is your chance to talk to Paul Yee about his books,
fiction and non-fiction, his work as an archivist, his history and more!
The only way to get in, is to
win!
For
your chance to win two tickets to be part of this Book Club, tell us
(in 200 words or less) why you would like to be in the audience to meet
Paul Yee.
Or fax: 604-662-6088 *
Or mail: CBC Studio One Book Club *
P.O. Box 4600
Vancouver, B.C.
V6B 4A2
* Don't forget your name and daytime telephone number.
Entries close midnight, Sunday, May 14, 2006

All winners will be notified by email. Each winner will receive two tickets. No tickets available at the door.

Community meeting: “Don't Exclude Us Again” say Sons and Daughters of Chinese Head Tax Payers

A community meeting is taking place in Toronto on May 4th, to address issues of redress for Chinese Head Tax and Exclusion Act.

A similar community meeting will take place in Vancouver:


Saturday May 6th, 2pm,

SUCCESS. 

28 West Pender  St.

This will be organized by CCNC, ACCESS and the BC Coalition for Head Tax Payers, Spouses and Descendants.


Media Advisory
May 3, 2006

“Don’t
Exclude Us Again” say Sons and Daughters of Chinese Head Tax Payers

Vancouver/Edmonton/Regina/Toronto/Ottawa/Montreal/Halifax/St.
John’s.

Chinese Canadian National Council (CCNC), Ontario
Coalition of Chinese Head Tax Payers and Families (Ontario Coalition), and
redress-seeking groups will convene a news conference tomorrow to call upon the
Government to provide fair and inclusive redress:


Date:               Thursday,
May 4, 2006


Time:              11:00
am EST


\Place:              CCNC
office 302 Spadina Ave Suite 507


Speakers:        Colleen
Hua, National President, CCNC

                      
Victor Wong, Executive
Director, CCNC


                       Susan
Eng, Co-Chair, Ontario
Coalition

                      
George Lau, Co-Chair, Ontario
Coalition
                      
Avvy Go, Legal Counsel, Ontario Coalition

“Don’t
exclude us again” is the message that sons and daughters of Chinese Head
Tax payers presented at cross country consultations organized by Heritage Canada
over the past two weeks. More than 1,500 Chinese Canadians attended meetings in
Halifax, Toronto, Vancouver, Edmonton, Montreal and Winnipeg to share their
painful stories of discrimination, hardship, and decades of separation from
their parents during the Chinese Exclusion Act era, most of whom were elderly
sons and daughters of people who had paid the head tax.

All welcomed the
Government’s commitment to a Parliamentary Apology and Chinese Head Tax
Redress in the Throne Speech and were encouraged by the words and receptiveness
of the
Minister of Canadian Heritage, Hon. Bev Oda, and
Mr. Jason Kenney, Parliamentary Secretary to the Prime Minister.

“This
is a historic moment, and the first step to righting a historic wrong,”

said 88-year-old Head Tax payer James Pon. “Without a
doubt, the process of reconciliation has begun.”

Mr. Pon is one of the few
head tax payers alive today because his father paid his head tax for him when
he was an infant. There were more than 2000 head tax payers or spouses alive in
1984 when the Chinese Canadian National Council started to campaign for head
tax redress. After more than 21 years of inaction by successive federal
governments, there are only about 250 head tax payers and spouses alive today
across Canada.

But the
head tax payers and their wives are not the only victims who endured much pain
and suffering. 
My mother is both a spouse and daughter of head tax payers. She never
met her father who died in Ottawa
in 1916.  She was separated from my father for most of 14 years. Alone,
she raised children through famine and war before they were allowed to come to Canada.
I would be totally against a redress settlement that denies that this racist
legislation did not affect entire families
.”
said Yew Lee, Co-Chair of the Ontario Coalition.

“The sons and daughters
were directly affected by the racist Head Tax and Exclusion Acts in their own
right and it would not be fair to exclude them from redress”

said William Dere of the Chinese
Canadian Redress Alliance [Montreal].
“Surely, the Government got that message
from the consultations – their suffering was real and personal.”

“If the federal government
had acted as quickly in 1984 as the Harper government has so far just 3 months
into its mandate, then the families who have registered with us would have
received redress”
said Colleen
Hua, CCNC National President. “Their sons and daughters
should not be excluded simply because their parents could not outlive
Government intransigence.”

“The only fair settlement is “one certificate,
one payment” so that the sons and daughters of those who have predeceased
and still carry the pain both for what their parents suffered and what they
endured themselves will see justice too.”
said Kenda Gee of Edmonton Chinese HTEA Redress Committee [Alberta].

Chinese Canadian National Council (CCNC) and other redress-seeking
groups including the Ontario Coalition of Chinese Head Tax Payers and Families
(Ontario Coalition), B.C. Coalition of Head Tax Payers, Spouses and Descendants
(B.C. Coalition),
Saskatchewan Chinese Head Tax Redress Committee,
Association of Chinese Canadians for Equality and Solidarity (ACCESS), Edmonton Chinese HTEA Redress
Committee
,  and Chinese Canadian Redress
Alliance (CCRA) are now joined by the Halifax Chinese Redress Committee and Newfoundland and Labrador Head Tax Redress
Committee
in the campaign to redress the Head Tax and Chinese Exclusion
Act.

 
-30-

For more information, please contact:         

Chinese Canadian National Council
Colleen Hua, National President, (647) 299-1775 (Toronto)
Dr. Joseph Wong, CCNC Founding President, (416) 806-0082 (Toronto)
Victor Wong, Executive Director, (416) 977-9871 (Toronto)

Ontario
Coalition of Head Tax Payers and Families

Susan Eng, Co-Chair, (416) 960-0312 (Toronto)
George Lau, Co-Chair (416) 588-1751 (Toronto)
Yew Lee, Co-Chair, (819) 827-3357 (Ottawa)
Avvy Go, Legal Counsel, (416) 971-9674 (Toronto)

BC Coalition of Head Tax Payers, Spouses and Descendants

Gabriel
Yiu
, Chinese-language spokesperson (
604) 889-0696 (Vancouver)
Karin Lee, English-language spokesperson (778) 773-1088 (Vancouver)
Harvey Lee, English-language spokesperson (604) 254-7137 (Vancouver)

Association of Chinese Canadians for Equality and Solidarity

Sid Tan, President/ CCNC National Director, (604) 783-1853 (Vancouver)

Chinese Canadian Redress Alliance


William Dere (514) 488-0804 (Montreal)
Walter Tom (514) 341-3929 (Montreal)

Edmonton Chinese HTEA Redress
Committee


Kenda Gee, Chair, (780)
487-3536 (Edmonton)

Saskatchewan
Chinese Head Tax Redress Committee


Sam
Gee, Chair, (306) 586-7579 (Regina)
Choon
Yong, Vice-Chair, (306) 586-9663 (Regina)

Halifax
Chinese Redress Committee


May
Lui, Chairperson, (902) 423-7802 (Halifax)

Newfoundland and Labrador
Head Tax Redress Committee


Gordon Jin, Co-Chair, (709) 726-7872 (St. John’s)

Chinese Head Tax Redress – A Framework for Reconciliation – Update

This
is the framework for redress suggested by the combined efforts of the
Chinese Canadian National Council and the Coalitions for Redress from
across Canada.  It has been submitted to the Federal government to
aid the Redress process. 

It emphasizes a two stage process
with immediate apology, and compensation for surviving head tax payers
and spouses – because of their advanced age.




The second stage will address
compensation to the estate of deceased head tax payers and spouses, as
their children are also seen as “direct victims” of the tax and
exclusion act.

Chinese Head Tax Redress

A Framework for Reconciliation – Update

Reconciliation has Begun

A Framework for Reconciliation was proposed immediately on the
inauguration of the new government in February 2006, setting out a two stage
process to allow the government’s commitments to be implemented in an
orderly fashion with broad community input.

In a reflection of the priority the government assigns to redress and
reconciliation, a number of significant milestones have been attained in less
than two months, including immediate consultations with community and redress
groups from across Canada, apology and redress set as a government priority in
the Throne Speech and cross country consultations held directly with a broad
reach of Chinese Canadian individuals. Noteworthy is that the consultations
were personally conducted by the Minister of Canadian Heritage and Jason Kenney, Parliamentary Secretary to the Prime
Minister and both Ministers continue to give their personal attention to this
matter.

The Framework outlined the general principles for redress and
reconciliation and the progress to date has honoured those principles,
beginning with the promised apology and the acknowledgement already given by
the Minister and Parliamentary Secretary in their formal comments that the Head
Tax and Exclusion Acts were “racist legislation”. In the 20 year
history of the redress campaign, this is the first acknowledgement that an act
of Parliament was in fact racist, that it was wrong and that an apology was
due. This validates the sense of injustice felt by so many who brought their
wrenching stories to the Minister and Parliamentary Secretary at the public
consultations.

Another important achievement of the consultations was the direct
participation of individual members of the community, unmediated by community
organizations. These particular generations of Chinese Canadians have felt the
sting of racism directly sanctioned by the Parliament of the day, made worse by
the knowledge that there was then no avenue of recourse or appeal. The same
group of people were able to shed more than a little of that sense of
powerlessness by being invited, as it were, to “speak truth to
power”. That too, has resonance, for those particular people and for the
generations that follow.

Without doubt, the process of reconciliation has already begun.

The purpose of separating the process into two phases was to allow the
government to immediately move forward on securing the Parliamentary Resolution
for the apology and on providing direct redress to the surviving head tax
payers and spouses as soon as July 1st, 2006 without being delayed
by the complexities of addressing the concerns of descendents who have much
more diverse positions on appropriate redress beyond that for those survivors.
However, now that hundreds of Chinese Canadians across the country have borne
witness to the impact of the Head Tax and Exclusion Acts on entire families,
the principles that should guide the offering of appropriate redress must be
explored.

General principles – restated:

The principles previously articulated still hold but they must be
refined and extended to deal more specifically with the issues raised in recent
consultations.

1.      The
fundamental purpose of redress is to achieve reconciliation, restore justice and
rebuild trust. It speaks to the credibility of the government and is a test of
its genuine political commitment to eradicate the racism that gave rise to such
wrongs so that they will not be repeated. It is a statement of our values
– inclusion and racial equality.

2.      Consequently,
the government must deal directly with those most affected, the head tax payers
and their families; this underscores the urgency of acting quickly because the
surviving head tax payers and spouses are mostly in their 90s. The two phase
Framework was intended to allow these elders to see justice while they were
still alive but it did not mean to exclude any redress for the injustice they suffered
if they have predeceased.

3.      Apology
is the first step and a precondition in achieving reconciliation;Redress must be commensurate with and be tied
specifically to the injustice to serve justice. 

  1. While the Head Tax and
    Exclusion Acts are the manifest sources of the injustice, the underlying
    cause was the widespread racism of the day. To properly redress such
    wrongs, a broad interpretation of the extent of the injustice must be
    adopted.
  2. The focus must be
    on dignity, respect and vindication. The courts have ruled that redress is
    not an issue of legal rights but moral and equitable rights. A principled
    political decision should not be confined by legal restrictions and
    precedent but rather should serve the public good, in this case, by
    restoring dignity, according respect and vindication to the greatest reach
    of the injured community as realistically possible.


 
The Parameters of Restorative Justice 

A.     This
is a political and moral decision, not one of legal rights and precedents.

B.     The
impact of the injustice and legislated racism was felt by entire families.

C.     The
impact of restorative justice and repudiation of racist legislation will be
felt by generations to come.

D.     Ascertaining
who paid the Head Tax is a practical way of identifying the group of people to whom
redress should be rendered; it may be said that a moral debt is owed to these
people.

E.      There
is no reason, in the cause of moral justice and reconciliation, why such
redress may not be paid to the estate of the head tax payer who has predeceased
although it may be reasonable to limit such payment to the first generation
still living in Canada; but for the 20 years of resistance by successive
federal governments, the Head Tax payers and spouses themselves would have
received the payments directly. They should not be excluded simply because they
could not outlive government intransigence. The redress is due to the head tax
payer or spouse; payment to the estate is merely the method of implementation.

F.      Identifying
and including all those who were directly and unjustly affected must be
balanced against the interest in pressing ahead to achieve an already too long
delayed resolution. Consequently, some limits may be placed on the notion of
“one certificate, one payment”, including the date on which the
Head Tax payer or spouse must have been alive, and as above, limit payment to
the first generation.

G.     The
amount of redress must be substantive to have significance but it has always
been recognized as a symbolic amount, not an actuarial calculation of the debt
owed.

H.     Ceremony
and symbolism play a vital role hence the significance and gratitude accorded
to the steps already taken – the promises in the first Prime Ministerial news
conference, on Chinese New Year’s Eve, on the UN International Day for
the Elimination of Racism, inclusion in the Throne Speech, the target date of
July 1st. There are a number of other symbolic dates such as:

May 17th
the day the Exclusion Act was repealed in 1947; May is also Asian Heritage
Month

November 7th
– anniversary of the Last Spike Ceremony

Dec 10th
International Human Rights Day

I.       
The process of reconciliation cannot be
forced into a predetermined timetable. If the current consultations are
inadequate to ensure that all views have been represented, the first stage should
be allowed to proceed and meet the July 1st target while additional
work on stage two may continue.

While
there are different ideas as to what is the appropriate form and amount of
redress, we should be able to agree on the principles that underpin redress and
reconciliation.

These
suggestions are respectfully submitted.

Winnipeg Sun (April 27): “Stakes Raised on racist head tax”

Winnipeg Sun (April 27): “Stakes Raised on racist head tax”


Many of the original head tax payers and spouse have passed on, leaving
their head tax certificates to their children and grandchildren in the
hopes that there would be some tax refund or compensation to come in
the future.

We all know it was racially motivated.  Only the Chinese were targeted.

As a 5th Generation Chinese Canadian and a 3rd generation descendant, I
will not be eligible for any head tax redress compensation.  But
my 95 year old grandmother is a descendant and a widow.  My 81
year old father and his 2 surviving older sisters and 2 surviving older
brothers will be eligible.  They all lived through the head tax
years and the Chinese Exlcusion Act, as well as the institutional
racisim that followed. 

I believe that a one certificate – one payment redress is fair. 
There are many people such as my grandmother's husband's uncle who paid
the head tax, and whose only child died in China.  My great
granduncle “Tai Gung”, never ever saw his child, because he worked in
Canada to support them.

Here is an interesting article that outlines the issues of compensating the surving children of head tax payers.


image

 

 

image

  

April 27, 2006

Stakes raised on racist head tax

By JOHN GLEESON



The ground is shifting underfoot on the Harper
government as it tries to deliver closure on the thorny issue of the Chinese
head tax. And the political stakes couldn't be higher.

For a generation, Chinese-Canadians have been
lobbying the federal government for an apology and some form of restitution
to survivors of the blatantly racist head tax of the late 1800s and early
1900s. The Harper government signalled in its throne speech earlier this
month that a formal apology from Ottawa
was on the table. A compensation deal is in the works also — but that's
where the situation has become a little dicey.

With only an estimated 200 surviving head tax payers
and their spouses, the restitution element of redress was seen as largely
symbolic. Now, however, some Chinese-Canadians want compensation also paid to
the estates of head tax payers whose adult children are still alive.

That would bring the number to “4,500
tops,” says Susan Eng, co-chair
of the Ontario Coalition
of Chinese Head Tax Payers and Families.

Eng, in a phone interview from Toronto,
said the change in focus comes after last week's series of public
consultations between federal officials and affected Chinese-Canadians in major
cities (the Winnipeg
session is this Sunday).

The meetings attracted descendants of the head tax
payers “by the hundreds,” said Eng, who admitted she was skeptical
of the hastily arranged consultations at first but, much to her delight,
found them to be “a true exercise in direct democracy” for the
people who attended.

“Some of these people have waited 20 years
without any government ever listening to them before this. And they left very
heartened.”

Eng's reading of the Conservatives is that there is
finally a government in Ottawa
that “gets it.”

“Both Jason Kenney
(parliamentary secretary to Harper) and (Heritage Minister) Bev Oda described the head tax and Exclusion Act
as racist legislation. That was a real step forward from what we heard from
politicians in the past. It was always 'a stain on our history,' 'a dark
chapter of our past' — crap like that. But now they're calling it what it
was.

“Because it was sensitively handled, it really
did have an impact on these people.”

What the people told the politicians was that the
children of the head tax payers also paid a high price because of Canada's
racist policies — not only did their parents paying the $500 tax affect them
directly but many were themselves subject to the Chinese Exclusion Act, which
kept them separated from a parent in Canada who had ironically paid the head
tax to get here.

“The years of separation and the tragic stories
have been quite moving,” Eng said.

No specific amount of restitution has been
universally endorsed by Chinese-Canadians. Some have asked for $20,000 per
person — but that was when they were only looking at compensating the
handful of survivors. Eng said no one expects to get the full value of the
money back (at the turn of the last century, $500 would buy two building lots
in Vancouver)
and insisted that beyond the money, “it's the dignifying of the process
that's really important.”

Eng was gracious enough to ask my opinion as a
newspaper editor about the public
response to such an “upping of the ante.” I told her frankly it
would be a hard sell among some Canadians who have given up trying to keep
track of who's being compensated how much for what historic sin this time.

But I also told her that including the descendants
was the honourable thing to do and they should go for it. That generation did
pay dearly and they should get something back in return.

And my unsolicited advice to Stephen
Harper is to go for it, too. Not only will it be fair and
just, but it will potentially shift key ridings in Toronto
and Vancouver
from the Liberals and NDP to the Conservatives in the next election. A
million strong, Chinese-Canadians can potentially help hand the Conservatives
a majority government.

That's a nice fringe benefit from merely doing the
right thing.

image

 

 

 

Hip, Hapa, Happening and Interculturally Interesting April 28 to May 5

Hip, Hapa, Happening and Interculturally Interesting April 28 to May 5

There is
definitely lots of real cool stuff happening this week, especially with
the explorASIAN festival
celebrating Asian Heritage Month presenting
great stuff.  My weekend is packed.  I can't be down at
Centre A to help register head tax certificates on Saturday because I
am pulling a work shift at the Vancouver Public Library (proudly
wearing my 30 year service pin).  May 1st is Workers Day, and I
also can't be at the April 28th celebration at Capri Hall, which is
boasting lots of great multicultural and intercultural
performers.  And I can't  attend the Scottish stuff happening
on Saturday either.

Saturday
night I attend the
BC Book Prize Gala, where Bill Richardson will be
MC.  I will be at a table with Joy Kogawa, Bill Turner (The Land
Conservancy) and my fellow Save Kogawa House committee coordinator
Ann-Marie Metten, as we toast the saving and purchase of Kogawa House.

Gung Haggis dragon boat
practice on Sunday afternoon 1pm.  It is the last day of the ADBF
public paddling program

Come join us for a 30 minute paddle in a
dragon boat for $2. Ipm – meet at the Green Trailer building in
Creekside Park – just a few paces south of Science World. 
Consider it a waterfront tour of Vancouver's
False Creek – much more interactive than the mini-ferries.

Great plays coming up with Simon Johnston's “Rice Rockets and Yacht People” and “Finding Home” by Welly Yang and Dina Morishita

Liutenant Governor's BC Book Prize Gala
Saturday, April 29
5:30
pm,
Marriott Pinnacle Hotel, 1128 West Hastings Street.
For more information, call the BC Book Prizes at 604-687-2405
www.bcbookprizes.ca
Emceed by
Bill Richardson, this 22nd annual BC Book Prizes gala will recognize our
province’s finest literary achievements in seven categories, as well as celebrate the recipient of
the Lieutenant Governor’s Award for Literary Excellence.
Free post-gala reception at 9:30 pm.
Tickets
must be ordered by April 21.

Join
Broadway Performer/Playwright Welly Yang and Performer/Co-Producer Dina
Morishita from FINDING HOME for an intimate Artist Talk and Q&A
event at Centre A

Saturday - April 29
7pm - 9pm
Doors open at 6:30pm

Admission: FREE
Centre A - Vancouver International Centre for Contemporary Asian Art
2 WEST HASTINGS STREET, VANCOUVER
www.centrea.org
S.T.A.T.U.S. Coalition presents...
MAY DAY 2006**
"Long live International Workers' Day!"

Commemorating the International Workers' Struggle and Migrant Labour & Immigrant workers
Resistance...
SATURDAY APRIL 29 @ 7:30 PM- 1 AM
DINNER WILL BE SERVED. DJ’S AFTER 10 PM.
CAPRI HALL, 3925 Fraser (corner East 23rd Ave)
5-10$ suggested donation- includes dinner
Community performers, poets, and multimedia presentations:
Dhol Nation Academy, Hugo Rojas, Marcus Youssef, Mariam Durrani, Mexican Migrant Workers,
Ndidi Cascade, Michael Franti, Kelis, K-OS, & Kardinal Offishall, Oscar Villalobos, Sinag Bayan,
Filipino cultural collective, Wayde Compton, Yyadzehe Gatica with the Consejo Indigena Popular
de Oaxaca

SPIRIT OF SCOTLAND
April 29, Seaquam Secondary School (11584 Lyon Rd., Delta).
Tix and info 604-463-3421, www.sfupipeband.com/.
Afternoon concert with performances by Robert Malcolm Memorial Pipe
Bands, SFU Pipe Band,and the Heather Jolley Dancers (4 pm); evening
ceilidh and dinner featuring Blackthorn (6:30 pm)


SOUNDS OF SCOTLAND
April 29, 8 pm, Scottish Cultural Centre. Tix $25, info 604-929-1802.

Scottish fiddle champion Paul Anderson and singer-pianist George Donald perform on a program
with the Vancouver Scottish Country Dance Dem Team and local singer Wilma Paton.

RICE ROCKETS & YACHT PEOPLE

May 4-13, Gateway Theatre (6500 Gilbert Rd., Richmond). Tix $24/22,
 info www.gatewaytheatre.com/
The Gateway’s New Play Series presents Simon Johnston’s drama about the clash of values
between new Canadians and longtime Caucasian residents, focusing on a well-to-do couple from
Shanghai and their street-racing kids.

PALESTINE, ISRAEL, AND ME: A POWER PLAY

May 5 & 7, 7:30pm, Unitarian Church of Vancouver, 949 W. 49th

Forum
Theatre piece about the struggle for peace and justice in Palestine and
Israel,and the profound effects of that struggle on people and
communities in Canada. Facilitated by Headlines Theatre with the
participation of local Jewish and Palestinian
organizations.

explorYOUTH 2006: e-race

May 2, 7 pm, Vancouver East Cultural Centre (1895 Venables). Info www.explorasian.org/.

VECC Youth Week, explorASIAN, and MISCELLANEOUS Productions present a screening of clips 
from a DVD of the hip-hop musical e-race, plus a panel discussion featuring four young
writer-performers from Asian backgrounds, moderated by director and writer Elaine Carol.

JAPANESE FAIRYTALE

May 2, 10:30 am, Silk Purse Arts Centre (1570 Argyle Ave., West Van.). 
Tix $10, info 604-925-7292.

UBC Opera members Michael Mori and Teiya Kashahara perform folksongs and arias from
the opera Turandot.


TOMODACHI
May 2, 10:30 am, Silk Purse Arts Centre (1570 Argyle Ave., West Van.). 
Tix $10, info 604-925-7292.
VSO violinist Akira Nagai and his wife, violist Seri, perform Western classical and various
kinds of traditional Japanese music.

FINDING HOME –
Canadian Premiere & Opening Event for explorASIAN 2006
May 5 – 8:00pm
May 6 – 2:00pm & 8:00pm
The Stanley Industrial Alliance Stage 2750 Granville St., Vancouver, BC
Tickets $88, $58, $38

Join Broadway Performer/Playwright Welly Yang, Dina Morishita, and friends in a
Night of Musical Theatre!


In a musical journey about finding home, Yang explores three generations of
family history: stories of leaving home and finding home, of love lost and love
found, and of dreams deferred and dreams realized. The show artfully weaves
together seventeen Broadway classics and contemporary songs by Elton John, Tim
Rice, Dan Hill and Luther Vandross among others.

 

 

Media Watch for Joy Kogawa House news weekend of April 28 to 30.

Media Watch for Joy Kogawa House news weekend of April 28 to 30.


Busy Busy day for Joy Kogawa and the Save Kogawa House Committee and The Land Conservancy.

Joy Kogawa and Bill Turner took a 7am ferry from Victoria to Vancouver,
following the jam-packed reading at Chapters bookstore last
night.  They went over to CTV and CBC television studios for
interviews.

Kevin Griffin of the Vancouver Sun, phoned looking for Joy for a quick
comment.  He said the story will be running in Saturday's
Vancouver Sun.

Check out CBC Radio One 690AM in Vancouver. 
Sheryl Mackay, host of “North By Northwest” may have Joy Kogawa on air shortly after 7am.
Sheryl was one of our special guest readers at the April 25th “Joy of Canadian Words” at Christ Church Cathedral.

Joy will be attending the BC Book Prizes Gala on Saturday Night
http://www.bcbookprizes.ca/events06.htm

Joy sent me this message today:

“In haste – on this miraculous day – got to go
make supper for grandkids”


Heather Skydt of The Land Conservancy wrote:

Check out CBC Newsworld or
The National tonight…:)
CBC Radio also did a blurb about the kogawa
announcement on BC Almanac today.
On Sunday, check out Joy on Colour TV (City
TV) 6:30pm.
Metro also had an article today, too.
The Vancouver Sun will
hopefully have an article in tomorrow's paper.