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TLC TO PURCHASE HISTORIC JOY KOGAWA HOUSE


NEWS RELEASE                   

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:  April 28, 2006

TLC TO PURCHASE HISTORIC JOY KOGAWA HOUSE

VANCOUVER, BC – TLC
The Land Conservancy of British Columbia announced today that it is
moving forward with the purchase of the historic Joy Kogawa House and
will prevent its demolition.

“While we still need
to raise more funds to purchase and operate the house, our ‘option to
purchase’ expires this weekend,” explained
TLC Executive Director Bill Turner. “We are out of time. So TLC
has decided to step forward, and take out a mortgage if necessary, to
make sure that this important piece of our country’s heritage will not
be lost.”

Turner said that by exercising the option to purchase, it will put the future of Kogawa House under the control of TLC
and the community. This, in effect, will take away the threat of
imminent redevelopment.  The house had been the subject of a
development proposal, and a demolition permit had been requested.  The
City of Vancouver put that request on hold for three months in order to
allow
TLC and the Save Kogawa House Committee the time to raise funds to purchase the property.

To date $230,000 has been raised from over 500 donors. TLC
needs $700,000 specifically to purchase the house and is seeking a
total of $1.25 million which includes funds for restoration and for an
endowment to allow the house to be used both as an educational site
addressing the issue of the internment of Canadians of Japanese
heritage during the Second World War and as a site for a
‘Writers-in-Residence’ program.

“We are confident
that, given enough time, we will be able to raise the necessary funds
for this project.  We have requests in to the City of Vancouver and to
the Government of Canada, as well as to many other potential donors,
and we remain optimistic that their support for this important project
will be forthcoming. In the meantime,
TLC is prepared to take on the risk and protect the site.”

Noted Canadian
Author Joy Kogawa was overwhelmed when told the news that her childhood
home would not be demolished. “Words can’t express how much this means
to me,” she said. “This is definitely a miracle. What a wonderful new
day!”

Turner said that TLC
would be exercising the option to purchase (i.e. making the legal
commitment) this weekend, and that the purchase will close at the end
of May. During that time,
TLC
needs to call on everyone who wants to help protect this important part
of our heritage to make their donation as soon as possible. Donations
can be made to
TLC at (604) 733-2313 or online at
www.conservancy.bc.ca.

-30-

For further information:

TLC:    Bill Turner (250) 213-1090; bturner@conservancy.bc.ca

Heather Skydt (604) 733-2313; hskydt@conservancy.bc.ca

Save Kogawa House Committee:    Ann-Marie Metten (604) 263-6586; ametten@telus.net  

Todd Wong, (604) 987-7124; gunghaggis@yahoo.ca

KOGAWA HOUSE is being SAVED! It's REALLY happening! The Land Conservancy will purchase Kogawa House to create a Writing Centre.

KOGAWA
HOUSE is being SAVED!  It's REALLY happening!  The Land
Conservancy will purchase Kogawa House to create a Writing Centre.

It's TRUE!  It really is going to happen!

The Land Conservancy is moving forward to exercise their option to purchase Kogawa House from the owner.

Lots of happy people around the world… now to make it REALLY HAPPENING!

The Metro News called me yesterday for a comment
for a story.

Reporter Tia Able said that Bill Turner had just told her
“We're buying the house – no matter what.  It's going to happen.”

I asked her. “Did he really say that? 
Wow!!!

She
also asked why the purchase of the house was so important to me.

“Because
Obasan was the first Asian-Canadian book that made it okay for us to tell our
stories,” I explained that “as an 5th generation Chinese-Canadian, I know how
hard it was for my parents, my grand parents and my great-grandparents to find
acceptance in this country.  It was the same for the Japanese Canadians –
moreso because of the internment.

“Establishing Kogawa House as a
historical landmark for all Canadians means that we have gained acceptance and
are important.  Saving Joy Kogawa's childhoom home to share with all
Canadians is like Pierre Berton House, in the Yukon, or George Ryga's home in
the Okanagan or Emily Carr's home in Victoria.

“We can have a physical
place that says here was a home where Joy Kogawa lived as a child, until she was
interned.  It is a physical place like the Anne Frank House in Amsterdam,
or Anne of Green Gables Cottage in PEI, where people can say “This is where she
lived and played.” 

“Thousands of people visit Anne of Green Gables
Cottage, but she was fictional.  Joy Kogawa is real, Anne Frank was
real.  We need a place where we can say that racism can never do this
again.”

Bill Turner sent me an e-mail with the following:

“Yes I really said that.

“Heather and Joy will be doing a lot of media work this
morning.    They are taking the 7am ferry from Victoria to
Vancouver and going immediately to CTV where Joy will go on camera at
11am.

“Joy will then go to CBC TV for
an update filming to the segment they will show on the National
tonight.   I believe that around mid day the media release will go
out.

 
“Last night's event at Chapters in Victoria was
packed.  It was a small venue but there were a lot of people
standing.   It was an emotional and exciting event and well worth
doing.   At that event I said again that this is going to happen that
today (Friday) we will be announcing that we are moving ahead with the purchase
and will borrow whatever necessary to make it happen.  

“Of course we
have to work hard to raise the rest of the money and in particular to pay off
the mortgage.” 

So
far $230,000 has been raised in a short fundraising campaign.  A
total of $700,000 is needed to purchase the house outright.  Next
steps will be fundraising for restoration of the house, and to create
an endowment for the continued running of the Joy Kogawa Writing Centre.

Sing Tao (April 24): story about Gung Haggis dragon boat team and the ADBF public paddling program

Sing Tao (April 24): story about Gung Haggis dragon boat team and the ADBF public paddling program



The ADBF public paddling program is a wonderful, safe and easy way to try out dragon boat paddling.  Life jackets and instruction are provided for $2, and your signature on a waiver form.

The most frustrating thing would be to find yourself paddling with 19 other people, who have no idea what they are doing.  We pair every paddling neophyte up with an experienced paddler, as a paddle-buddy + have two boats paddle side by side, so you can see what is going on.  We also have a mini-race to give you a chance to taste the adrenaline from dragon boat racing.

Sing Tao newspaper came out to the ADBF public paddling session last week.  Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team assists with the program, providing instruction and experienced paddlers for the 30 to 40 minute paddle on False Creek from Dragon Zone, the ADBF club house.  Last week about 9 new paddlers came out to try dragon boat paddling for the first time in their lives, and they had a blast!

Some of the paddlers have enjoyed the paddling experience so much, they have asked to join the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team!

The Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team emphasizes a multicultural atmosphere, simultaneously with fitness and fun.  The team was the 2005 winner of the David Lam Award for best representing the multicultural spirit of the at the Alcan Dragon Boat Festival.

Coach Todd Wong (me), gives a short history of dragon boat racing from China to Vancouver, explaining some of the cultural and historical background of this 2000 year old activity that came to Vancouver in 1986.  Todd is an experienced coach, having won many medals coaching and racing on teams at races in Victoria, Seattle, Portland, San Francisco, Kelowna and Vancouver, since 1993.  He has served on the Alcan Dragon Boat Festival Race committee, as well as the CCC Dragon Boat Association Board – where he helped to found the Vancouver International Taiwanese Dragonboat Race.

I get my 30 year service pin at the Vancouver Public Library!

I get my 30 year service pin at the Vancouver Public Library!


Paul Whitney
(City Librarian), Todd Wong, and Joan Andersen (VPL Board Chair), after
the presentation of 25 year and 30 year service pins at a Vancouver
Public Library Board meeting.  You can see the gold pin with a
tiny diamond in my left lapel.  Cool! – photo Deb Martin.

25 and 30 year service pins were handed out tonight at the VPL board meeting tonight.

VPL Chair, Joan Andersen, invited each of the 20 library employees up,
while she read short biographies of each of them.  It was great to
listen to each biography, because they were personalized not only with
the locations of our work history, but also with our life interests and
community work.

There was my friend Bob Flesher, with whom I used to work on the
library delivery truck (Fridays were “hat day”); Susan Bridgman and Nanita Evans, with whom I
first worked at Joe Fortes Library 25 years ago.  Judi Walker and
Jane White are branch head librarians.  Susan Pendakur in Computer
Systems, Jennifer Haines at Kensington Branch.  And so many more
friends I have made over the years…Wow!

I can't believe that I have worked at the Vancouver Public Library for 30 years.

I like to say I started inutero, because my mother was working at the
Vancouver Public Library while she was pregnant with me.  I
actually started when I was still 15 years old while in highschool.

“Todd started part-time as an Library Assistant 1, and have risen to
become a Library Assistant III,” stated Library Board Chair Joan
Andersen.  “He is also known for much of my community work such as
working to help save the Joy Kogawa House, as well as Gung Haggis Fat
Choy, a combination Robbie Burns and Chinese New Year Dinner – which
now has served 600 people” (and which featured CBC Radio host Shelagh
Rogers as co-host at the 2005 dinner). 

“And has become an annual event at the library as the “Gung Haggis Fat Choy World Poetry Night,” I added.

“Thank you for your service to the library, and for what you do in the community,” concluded Joan.

I first met Joan Andersen, in her capacity as CBC Radio regional
director English Language, through some of my activities with CBC
Radio.  She is a wonderful chair for the library, and receives
many compliments.  She actually used to be a librarian, before she
did a graduate degree in Human Resources and worked for the CBC.

Paul Whitney is City Librarian, whom I first met back in the 1980's
through a mutual friend, Susan Bridgman, who also recieved her 30 year
pin tonight.  Paul was formerly director of the Burnaby Public
Library up until a few years ago.  He does amazing advocacy work
on behalf of libraries.  I am proud to know them both.

Joy of Canadian Words: April 25th fundraiser for Kogawa House – Actors read Canadian Literary works to Astound!

imageimageimage


Joy of Canadian Words: April 25th fundraiser for Kogawa House – Actors read Canadian Literary works to Astound!


7:30pm

April 25th, 2006

Christ Church Cathedral
Georgia and Burrard

image
A beaming Joy Kogawa stands between
the evening's co-hosts Todd Wong (Save Kogawa House committee) and Bill
Turner (The Land Conservancy), following a magical evening of reading
performances – photo Deb Martin

The
audience listened attentively to literary interpretations of how Coyote
played a role in the Japanese internment and confiscation of property,
as written through the comical lens of Thomas King.  The short
story “Coyote and the Enemy Aliens” was read by Chief Rhonda Larrabee
of the Qayqayt First Nations.  It is painted a funny but ugly
truth about how Canadians of Japanese descent were deprived of basic
citizenship rights, and had their property confiscated for no reason
other than possessing Japanese ancestry, even if they were 3rd
generation Canadian.  The trickster figure of Coyote is used to
create a metaphor for mischief, as the BC and Canadian government found
reasons based on racism, to move the Japanese out of Canada, and keep
them from reclaiming their wrongfully confiscated property, homes and
fishing boats.

This
event was to raise money and awareness about the house that author Joy
Kogawa grew up in.  When she was 6 years old, her family was
forced from the only home she had ever known and forced to live in what
she described as shacks for the next 30 years.  The family was
interned in Slocan, than sent to work beet farms in Alberta, “to work
for nothing and prove their loyalty to Canada,” as Coyote said in the
Thomas King story.

Actors
and cultural celebrities were invited to read some of
Canada's most important literary works. Obasan and some of the works
read such as Anne of Green Gables are listed on the recent Literary
Review of Canada's 100 Most Important Canadian Books Ever
Written.  Authors such as Thomas King and Leonard Cohen were also
presented, to create a short but incredibly rich and diverse samplng of
Canadian literary riches.

image

Bill Turner, co-host for the evening, executive director of The Land Conservancy – photo Deb Martin

Bill Turner,
executive director of The Land Conservancy of BC, opened up the evening
explaining how the Land Conservancy became involved  in 
leading the fundraising to turn Kogawa's child hood home into a
literary and historic land mark for Vancouver.  “It is much more
than a house,” stated Turner citing the importance and role of Kogawa
House in the literary works of Obasan and Naomi's Road, “It is a symbol
of what we can create for society, to ensure that such racism never
happens again.”
 

image

Sheryl Mackay, reads from Anne of Green Gables – photo Deb Martin

Sheryl Mackay, host of CBC Radio's weekend program “North By Northwest”
read from Anne of Green Gables, by Lucy Maud Montgomery.  McKay is
a native Prince Edward Islander, and told of many people who go to
visit “Anne of Green Gables House” telling themselves “This is where
she slept.”  McKay secretly commented to the audience “She isn't
real – she's just a work of fiction.”  McKay also pointed out that
Kogawa House is real, and that Joy Kogawa actually slept in the
bedrooms of Kogawa House, and it would be wonderful to save the house
for generations to visit.

image
Joy Coghill read from Emily Carr's “Klee Wyck” – photo Deb Martin

Joy Coghill, esteemed and legendary actor
read from Emily Carr’s “Klee Wyck,” a collection of sketches about
Carr's experience with First Nations peoples.  The book had won
the Governor General's prize for non-fiction
Joy
Coghill was amazing to watch.  The timing and
delivery was breathtaking as she read from Emily Carr's
“Klee-wyck.”  As I watched, I knew that we had really hit the
jackpot when we decided to ask actors to choose a book to read.



image
Doris Chilcott read poems by Alden Nowlan – photo Deb Martin

3rd up was actor Doris Chilcott, again amazing to watch as the actor's
craft of presentation and speaking unfolded.  Doris read three Alden
Nowlan poems, a gifted writer who served many writers in residence
programs across the country.

image
Leora Cashe lifts the musical mood with Leonard Cohen's “Dance Me to the End of Love” with Jay Krebs on piano – photo Deb Martin



Next up to hit a home run, was gospel jazz singer Leora Cashe.  How
could she not hit a home run while singing Leonard Cohen's song “Dance
Me to the End of Love.”  Definitely a winner.

image
Rhonda Larrabee, Chief of Qayqayt First Nations, reads “Coyote and the Enemy Aliens” by Thomas King – photo Deb Martin




Chief Rhonda
Larrabee hit another home run, with the insightful and wickedly ironic
and humourous Thomas King story titled “Coyote and the Enemy Aliens”? 
Imagine the trickster figure of Coyote behind the internment of
Japanese Canadians and the confiscation of their property.  It all
sounds like a bad dream, and King makes it so!

image
Bill Dow reads Aron Buchkowsky's “The Promised Land” – photo Deb Martin




I introduced
actor Bill Dow, as having recently performed in the play The Diary of
Anne Frank, relating how the House of Anne Frank is a major tourist
attraction in Amsterdam, and how Kogawa House could be that for
Vancouver. Tourist and people making pilgramages could say to each
other “This is the house that Joy was taken away from.”




Bill gave a dramatic reading of Aron Buchkowsky's “The
Promised Land.”



I pointed out that Buchowsky, Leora Cashe and Joy Kogawa all had
fathers who were ministers.  Rhonda Larrabee's great grandfather had
been a minister.

image
Maiko Yamamoto, Manami Hara, Bill Dow and Hiro Kanagawa read Dorothy Livesay's “Call My People Home” – photo Deb Martin.





Bill next invited to the stage actors, Hiro
Kanagawa, Maiko Yamamoto and Manami Hara to read Dorothy Livesay's
radio documentary poem “Call My People Home.” Written in 1949, it is
one of the first written pieces to criticize the internment of Japanese
Canadians.  It was a magical group reading, as the voices took
turns speaking alone or in unison, each giving voice to different
aspects of the internment and the dispersal of Japanese Canadians, away
from their homes on the BC West coast.



image
Marion Quednau spoke about the cultural importance for saving Kogawa House – photo Deb Martin

Marion Quednau of the Writer's Union of Canada,
gave a spirited explanation about why Kogawa House is an important
landmark for all Canadians, by telling the story of how she convinced
the city council of Mission to support Kogawa House, by explaining the
historical Japanese connections in the Fraser Valley.

image

Joy Kogawa was thrilled with both the audience and the evening's performances – photo Deb Martin

I was
privileged to introduce Joy Kogawa, and held up the program asking
everybody to look at the cover picture of Richmond school children with
a smiling white haired lady raising her arms in happiness.  “That's Joy
Kogawa…” and I shared some of Joy's accomplishments.




Joy stood at the podium, and stated simply, “This is wonderful…. how
could you ask for anything more.” She thanked members of The Land
Conservancy and the Save Kogawa House committee for helping bring a
dream closer to reality.  “I believe in miracles, and these people are
miracles,” she shared,




Joy then read from the prologue of
Obasan, then a section describing the house.  She then read from a
section she had never read from before.  It was about the process of
how the Canadian government had voted to keep the Japanese Canadians
interned up to 1947, and decided to continually exclude them from
resettling on the Pacific Coast.  It was all decidely heart-breaking
and apalling to learn that this was the Canadian government's doing.




Bill Turner came back and explained how the audience could help support the vision of Kogawa House. 




It was a wonderful evening.  An evening where there were friendly
smiles on everybody's faces.  Strangers greeted strangers.  And books
were bought and signed.  A six year old girl named Ashashi proudly
showed me the copy of Obasan that Joy had signed for her.





Then on the evening CTV news… we saw Bill Turner interviewed at our
event, as he made his plea for Canadians to support the Kogawa House
project.




Cheers, Todd




To donate for Save Kogawa House – check out www.conservancy.bc.ca

For more information – check www.kogawahouse.com

Highlights for “Joy of Canadian Words” – fundraiser event for “Save Kogawa House”

Highlights for

“Joy of Canadian Words”

– fundraiser event for

“Save Kogawa House”

image

7:30pm

April 25th, 2006

Christ Church Cathedral

Georgia and Burrard

We
have invited actors and cultural celebrities to help us read some of
Canada's most important literary works. We started with the Literary
Review of Canada's 100 Greatest Canadian Books Ever Written, which
included Obasan and we allowed the presenters to find what moved them.

Introduction by Bill Turner
The Land Conservancy of BC

Sheryl McKay, CBC Radio Host of “North By Northwest”
Anne of Green Gables, Lucy Maud Montgomery

Joy Coghill, actor

Emily Carr’s “Klee
Wyck” and P. K. Page’s “Planet Earth”

Doris Chilcott, actor

Alden Nowlan poems

Leora Cashe, jazz gospel singer
songs by Leonard Cohen

Rhonda Larrabee, chief of the Qayqayt
First Nations


“Coyote and the Enemy Aliens” by Thomas King:

Bill Dow, actor
“The
Promised Land”
by Aron Buchkowsky,

Bill Dow, Manami Hara, Hiro Katagawa,
Maiko Yamamoto (actors)
“Call My People Home”by Dorothy Livesay (radio documentary poem)

Marion Quednau of the Writers’
Union of
Canada
    The significance of Kogawa House

Joy Kogawa
“Obasan”


This
promises to be an incredible event.  All the pieces just fell into
place.  The actors have found some incredible moving literary
works.

Sheryl McKay starts things off with “Ann of Green
Gables” a beloved Canadian institution with contemporary parallels to
Joy Kogawa's “Naomi's Road” in that an opera has now been written and
performed, and like Anne's House in PEI, people are now making
pilgramages to Kogawa House.

Joy Coghill is a treasured actor
and arts advocate.  By choosing to read Emily Carr's Klee-wyck,
Joy has found a parallel in that Emily Carr's childhood home has been
turned into a heritage site.  Hopefully Kogawa House will be the
same.

Doris Chilcott has chosen to read some poems by Alden
Nowlan, who had been a writer-in-residence at many places throughout
Canada.  We hope to create a Writers-in-Residence program for Kogawa House.

Dorothy Livesay wrote “Call My People Home”, for a CBC radio documentary that critized the internment and dispersal of Japanese Canadians in 1949.  This will be read by actors Bill Dow, Manami Hara, Hiro Katagawa,
Maiko Yamamoto


Thomas
King wrote an incredible short story about the mythical Coyote playing
havoc with the internment of Japanese Canadians and the confiscation of
their property in “Coyote and the Enemy Aliens.”

Leore Cashe is
an incredibly gifted jazz and gospel singer. She has picked two songs
by Leonard Cohen to perform.  “Hallelujah” and “Dance Me to the
End of Love”

And then there is Joy….

Gung Haggis dragon boat team practice moved to Friday April 28

Tuesday practice MOVED to Friday April 28th
for this week only.

So… 
Friday April 28th.
Dragon Zone @ Creekside Park
– just south of Science World

6pm – If you will be arriving later – please let me know.
We should be on the water by 6:15 and hopefully we can go 90 minutes.

After the practice, I propose going to dinner at:
The Clubhouse – great Japanese food and cheap too!
then a movie… (right – can we have 20 people agree on the same movie?)

Good
practice on Sunday – we continue to push the team on technique, timing
and conditioning.  Still lots of happy smiling faces – this is a good
sign.

Please continue to invite friends out to join the team.  We are close to having a viable 2nd team.

Cheers, Todd
604-240-7090

Cric Crac features bi-lingual stories from Taiwan + more for Asian Heritage Month

Cric Crac features bi-lingual stories from Taiwan + more for Asian Heritage Month


Pauline Wenn shows some of her
family's Indonesian shadow puppets.  She shared that her
son-in-law is Indonesian, when she asked the audience “You may wonder
how a Scottish born storyteller would come to tell and Indonesian folk
tale?”  photo Todd Wong

Storytellers spoke in both Mandarin Chinese and English, as they
shared storyteller duties at the April 23 Cric Crac, organized by the
Vancouver Story Tellers Association.  This was a collaborative
effort with the Taiwanese Cultural Society.  It was a great
experience to listen to each language expressed so eloquently and
expressively by each storyteller.

As well, Leilani also told a Paul Yee story, from his book, Tales from Gold Mountain. 

Peace Forum Concert featuing Shari Ulrich

Peace Forum Concert featuing Shari Ulrich
 
Meena Wong, Deb Martin, Shari Ulrich,
Ellen Woodsworth, and Shari's daughter Julia – all enjoy some moments
together after the concert – photo Todd Wong

The World Peace Forum featured performer Shari Ulrich who brought with
her the Note Bene Choir, whom she is a member of.  The No Shit
Shirleys also performed, but we missed them because we were still at
the BC Book Prize soiree.  

Shari performed a fabulous concert accompanied by her 15 year old
daughter Julia on violin + friend on piano.  Next she brought up
the Note Bene Choir, and performed a few songs as a choir member. 
Then… it was time for more Shari Ulrich.  She told stories about
her songs, one of which was about her premature separation anxiety
about her daughter growing up and leaving home (which she hasn't
yet). 

Shari  grew up in San Francisco, and shared that after the student
deaths at Kent State due to protests against the Vietnam War and civil
unrest,  she decided she couldn't handle it and decided to come to
Canada.  In Canada she performed music with Rick Scott (another
ex-American)  and Joe Mok, as the musical trio Pied Pumkin. 
She also performed with Valdy and the Hometown Band.

Shari's final song was “Wherever You Go”, as the choir came back to
join her.  It is my favorite Shari Ulrich song – the one that when
I hear it, I always say “I really like this song.”

BC Book Prize Soiree: Another wonderful party with great authors and prizes

BC Book Prize Soiree: Another wonderful party with great authors and prizes


Saturday night, April 22, at the Crush Champagne Lounge, the BC Book
Prizes held their annual soiree with lots of guest authors and silent
auction prizes.  Many of this year's nominated authors were in
attendance and the winners will be announced next week at the Marriot
Pinnacle Hotel on April 29th.  This soiree party helped to kick
off BC Book and Magazine Week in Vancouver.

Click here for the Finalists for the BC Book Prizes:
http://www.bcbookprizes.ca/finalists06.htm


Stan Perskey is a finalist for the Hubert Evans non-fiction prize for
his book, “The Short Version: An ABC Book.”  I first met Stan
while I was taking courses in Political Studies at Capilano College in
the 1980's.  He was an amazing instructor, and I learned a lot
about critical thinking and writing from him, as well as political
activism (photo Deb Martin).


Roxanne has written an interesting book about a gay man who is Filipino
and a dancer.  She is now looking for a publisher.  I told
her I would introduce her to the Asian Canadian Writers' Workshop
(photo Deb Martin).


The BC Book Prize soiree is a great place to meet lots of interesting
people.  Tini and Roxanne are a daughter-mother creative
team.  Tini is a visual artist, while Roxanne writes.  Annie
and Amanda are also writers who are now interested in dragon boats,
since I told them about the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat
team.  I think I have to write a book about dragon boats now.
(photo Deb Martin).