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Terry Fox featured on brand new $1 Canadian coin.

Terry Fox featured on brand new $1 Canadian coin.

On Monday March 14th the Royal Canadian Mint celebrated the legacy of Terry Fox by honouring him as the first Canadian to be featured on a commemorative circulation coin. 

It was on April 12th, 1980 that Terry Fox began his Marathon of
Hope, a personal goal to run across Canada, and a personal goal to
raise the equivalent of $1 for every Canadian, $25 Million
dollars.  The coin will begin circulating on April 4th, just in
time for the 25th anniversary of the Marathon of Hope.

“We are
hopeful 30 million Canadians will pay tribute to Terry in this
anniversary year by raising the equivalent of one “Terry” dollar from
each and every citizen.” said Darrell Fox, Terry's brother and National
Director of the Terry Fox Foundation.


Todd
Wong and Darrell Fox, Terry's brother and Terry Fox Foundation National
Director, standing beside a cardboard display of the $1 “Terry” coin. –
photo Deb Martin.

The coin unveiling was a wonderful
ceremony in the SFU Theatre.  There were performances by Vancouver
Children's Choir.  The platform party included Honourabel John
McCallum M.P., as Minister of Revenue and Minister Responsible for the
Royal Canadian Mint; President David C. Dinwall for the Royal Canadian
Mint, and Terry's parents – Betty and Rolly Fox.

The best
speeches were made by Betty Fox and engraver Stan Witten.  Betty
said that for all the money spent on creating the coin, Terry would
have preferred that it all went instead to finding a cure for
cancer.  Stan commented about how inspired he had been by Terry's
Marathon of Hope, and tried to capture the emotion and Terry's courage
with the windswept trees in the engraving.

After the ceremony, a
coin exchange was held.  People were encouraged to exhange a
dollar for the Terry Fox coin, and then donate a second dollar for the
Terry Fox Foundation.  These were the first time coins were being
made available for the public, as circulation of the coin will not go
into effect until April 4th, 2005.

Vikram,
Betty Fox, and me – Todd Wong:  Vikram and I are both Terry's Team
members.  I first met Vikram at a Terry Fox Run in North Delta,
and when he told me was too was a cancer survivor I invited him to
become a Terry's Team member. – photo Deb MartinI was fortunate to be
invited to the coin unveiling, held at Simon Fraser University,
where Terry attended Kinesiology classes.  It was while he played
basketball on the Varsity team that his cancer was discovered. 
Even after Terry's leg was amputated due to the bone cancer, he
continued to be a manager for the Jr Varsity team.  Terry loved
SFU.  He was determined to make the basketball team, displacing
atheletes on scholarship.  He trained for the Marathon of Hope at
SFU, by going up the long uphill road both by running, and in
wheelchair.  He organized fundraiser dances in the
gymnasium.  It's ironic that in 1989, while I was similarly
attending classes at SFU, that's when my own life-threatening cancer
was discovered..

My personal connection with the Terry Fox Run
began in 1993, when Darrell Fox, then director of the BC Yukon Division
called me on the telephone after hearing me speak about Terry Fox on
the Rafe Mair show on CKNW Radio.  Simon Fraser University had
just awarded me the SFU Terry Fox Gold Medal given “in recognition of courage in adversity and dedication to society.” 

Darrell
invited me to become a Terry's Team member, cancer survivors who serve
as living examples that cancer research has helped to make a
difference.  Darrell also encouraged me to start a Terry Fox Run
at SFU in 1993, sharing with me the family's disappointment that there
was currently no Terry Fox Run at SFU.

“It just takes one
person,” he said to me, “look at what Terry accomplished.” 
Inspired by Darrell's pep talk,  I went to talk to Lorne Davies,
then SFU Director of Athletics, then came back with the news. 

“Sorry
Darrell, there isn't going to be a Terry Fox Run at SFU in 1993, but
there will be in 1994,” I reported to Darrell. “Plus there will be a
very special inaugural Terry Fox Day,” and I suggested to him that we create a trophy case for the SFU t-shirt that he still had of Terry's.

Since
1993, I have spoken each year at elementary schools and run sites
throughout the Greater Vancouver, Kelowna BC in 2001, and 2002, and
Beijing, China in 1993. 

Here is a story that I wrote in the SFU student Newspaper The PEAK,
about my experiences of surviving the near-fatal cancer tumor and
helping to create the t SFU, which was resurrected in 2001 with the
unveiling of a 9 1/2 foot stature by scuptor Steven Harman.  SFU Terry Fox Day
is now an annual event to both honour one of Canada's greatest heroes,
inspire SFU students, and bring the SFU community together to honour
one of their own.

It has truly been a blessing to meet both the
Fox family, and the friends that Terry made, and to hear their stories
about how Terry Fox made a difference to their lives.  To help
celebrate the 25th anniversary of Terry's Marathon of Hope, I will be
writing about my experiences as a Terry's Team member.  If you
would like to share your memories of Terry that could be selected for
broadcast on CBC Radio and/or Television or for publication in
“Memories of Terry: Canada's National Scrapbook” by Canadian author
Douglas Coupland – then please contact www.cbc.ca/terryfox.


Rick
Hansen and me. Rick was the guy who first invited Terry Fox to play
wheelchair basketball and they became fast friends, even wheelchairing
up the long steep roads to SFU to shoot baskets in the gym.  I
first met Rick at a press conference for the Terry Fox Run in 1993,
Rick is also a recipient of the Terry Fox Gold Medal from SFU. -photo
Deb Martin.


This
statue of Terry Fox, by sculptor Stephen Harman, was unveiled in 2001
and is placed in the inner courtyard of the Academic Quadrangle. I
helped to start the very first Terry Fox Day at SFU in 1994.  A
trophy case containing bronzed photos and an SFU “1000 Mile Club”
t-shirt that Terry loved are featured – photo Deb Martin

“Here Be Dragons”: a meeting of bagpipes and a Cree Indian in Peter C. Newman's new book

Did bagpipes, the Hudson's Bay Company and Cree Indians ever meet? 

Here's a story sent to me by Heather Pawsey – that gorgeous blonde opera soprano who sings in French, Italian, German, Gaelic and Mandarin.  Also featured in the Gung Haggis Fat Choy: Toddish McWong's Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner.


"In Peter C. Newman's latest boook, Here be Dragons, the following
descriptive passage might interest Scottish types.  Newman describes a
Hudson's Bay Company executive (from Scotland, of course) who toured
the North with his personal piper.  A Cree Indian, on hearing the
bagpipes for the first time, described the occasion to his Chief:
 
"One white man was dressed like a woman, in a skirt of many colours. 
He had whiskers growing from his belt and fancy leggings.  He carried a
black swan which had many legs with ribbons tied to them.  The swan's
body he put under his arm upside down then put its head in his mouth
and bit it.  At the same time, he pinched its neck with his fingers and
squeezed the body under his arm until it made a terrible noise."

Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat a favorite in Vancouver's St. Patrick's Day parade

St. Paddy's Day Parade in Vancouver, on a Sunday afternoon. Where elese
can you see a dragon boat dressed up as a float with a kilted Chinese
Lion twirling a dragon boat paddle?


Trev Sue-A-Quan, Todd Wong & Dave Samis pose with the decorated dragon boat – photo Adrianna Ermie

The 2nd Annual St. Patrick's Day Parade is the crown jewel of Celtic Fest Vancouver
– celebrating all things celtic.  Gung Haggis Fat Choy was asked
last year to be a part of it, and so a dragon boat float was created by
GHFC founder Todd Wong, aka “Toddish McWong.”   While McWong
is more known for combining Robbie Burns Day and Chinese New Year into
a potpouri of cultural fusion, he brought his playfulness to St.
Patrick's Day with great enthusism and new surprises for the 2005
parade.

Celebrity paddlers were Vancouver city councillor Ellen Woodworth,
loudly banging the drum at the head of the boat.  CBC Radio
reporter/host Margaret “Maggie” Gallagher looked exquisite in a gold
and green Chinese jacket, holding a green paddle.  Trev
Sue-A-Quan, from Dragon Boat Association, swayed to the music while
holding the steering oar at the back of the boat.  Team paddler
Dave Samis waved to the crowd while Deb Martin held a yellow chinese
dragon puppet to the delight of all the children lining Granville
Street.


Vancouver
City Councillor Ellen Woodsworth bangs the drum as dancer Adrianna
Ermie and CBC Radio broadcaster Margaret Gallagher and team paddler
Dave Samis smile for the camera
– photo Todd Wong

And preceding this dragon boat on a trailer concoction was Highland
Dancer Adrian Elmie wearing her green and white Irish Jig costume,
closely followed by a kilted character wearing a traditional Chinese
lion head mask.  Of course inside the mask was Todd Wong,
reprising his “Gung Haggis” character, now transforming this strange
sight into an interactive crowd pleaser.


Trev Sue-A-Quan waves to the crowd while “steering the dragon boat” for the St. Patrick's Day parade – photo Nick Lum

more later…

My cousin… Tracey Hinder wins CanSpell regional spelling bee in Vacouver

Here's a
story about my 2nd cousin Tracey Hinder, my mom's cousin's
daughter.  Tracey is an amazing youngster with an extraordinary
aptitude for learning and meeting challenges…

L-E-T-T-E-R P-E-R-F-E-C-T

West Vancouver Grade 8 student wins regional spelling bee
 
Doug Ward
Vancouver Sun

1 | 2 | NEXT >>
CREDIT: Ian Smith, Vancouver Sun
COULD YOU SPELL APOTHEOSIS?: Winner Tracey Hinder will compete in a national bee next month in Ottawa.

West Vancouver student Tracey Hinder emerged as the apotheosis of
cool under pressure Sunday, winning the CanWest CanSpell regional
spelling bee, after the capitulation of Delta student Nicaela Weigel in
the event's closing spell-off.

Hinder, a 13-year-old Grade 8
student at West Vancouver Secondary, spelled 'capitulation' correctly
and then won by nailing the word apotheosis at the Vancouver Sun
provincial final held at the Stanley Theatre.

“I studied so many
words, but I think I did study 'apotheosis' once,” Hinder said
afterwards. “I also studied 'capitulation' on Saturday.”

Hinder's
victory was a dramatic ending to four hours of extreme spelling that
began with 50 competitors from schools around B.C., except for
Vancouver Island.

The words given by pronouncer Kirk LaPointe,
managing editor of The Vancouver Sun, became progressively more
difficult during the contest as the number of competitors dwindled to
the final two.

Some of the students held the microphone
confidently, and easily recalled the right letters. Others spelled the
words slowly and with trepidation, clearly hoping that their letters
would match the pronunciation of a word they couldn't totally remember.
Some looked at the three-member panel of judges with surprise when the
bell that signals a mistake did not ring.

Both Hinder and
runner-up Weigel will be competing in the CanWest CanSpell National
Spelling Bee in Ottawa on April 16 for the first-place prize of a
$10,000 educational fund and their name etched on the CanWest CanSpell
Cup.

And Hinder will be one of 11 regional winners across Canada
who will compete later in the Scripps National Spelling Bee in
Washington, D.C.

Tristan Brett, from Eugene Reimer middle school
in Abbotsford, looked strong throughout the event, but finished third
after being hit with the arcane word prosody, which means the study of
the metrical structure of verse.

Runner-up Weigel said she was
happy to have finished second against a field of mostly older
competitors. She had studied the fatal word capitulation, but her
memory failed her.

“Nicaela never spelled that word
[capitulation] wrong before,” said her mother, Marie Weigel. “But
that's all right. Ottawa is good.

“When it got down to the two
competitors, I could see her nerves getting to her. But good for her,
she's 11. She can compete in this for two more years.”

Nicaela
Weigel is no stranger to success. Last year, Nicaela and her twin
sister, Shelbie, played the same character in a TV movie The Five
People You Meet In Heaven, based on the novel of the same name by Mitch
Albom.

Todd Weigel said he thought his daughter would do well:
“What can I say: I'm an extremely proud father. I'm holding back the
tears.

“But she's an overachiever. I thought she would get pretty far. But all the sisters, they really drive each other.”

While
memory and hard work were the key factors, luck played a role too. As
in any spelling bee, some words were tougher than others.

The young spellers also had to keep their composure while four TV cameras moved around covering every moment.

<< PREVIOUS | 1 | 2
CREDIT: Ian Smith, Vancouver Sun
Tracey Hinder, (right) placed first in the CanSpell contest on Sunday. Nicaela Weigel was second.

“You have to sort of pretend there is no camera there. It makes it
easier for you to spell,” said Rachel Davidson of Collingwood School in
West Vancouver, who fell out in the third round.

A few of the
participants were visibly crestfallen when they mis-spelled a word and
found themselves walking off the stage. They were quickly ushered
downstairs into a makeshift comfort room where they were offered
solace, along with drinks and snacks.

“Oh, I'm so stupid. I don't
know how I missed that,” lamented Oliver Telfor to a volunteer
comforter, who assured the West Sechelt Elementary student that he
wasn't stupid.

As Telfor explained how he knew he had erred even
before completing his word, another one of the fallen, Tori Caswell of
Pacific Academy in Surrey, arrived and shouted: “I screwed up on jerkin
— jerkin!

“But this is just for fun. And I like reading, so I got extra reading privileges.”

Christopher
Dodds, of Vancouver, was angry with his abrupt exit late in the
competition. “I'm disappointed and surprised. I'm feeling mad at
myself.”

Tears welled in the eyes of Brandon Sanderson, a
precocious 10-year-old from Our Lady of Perpetual Help in Vancouver who
had a smile all afternoon until after his last word.

Sanderson
admitted later that he had guessed his way through at least one other
word, so he was pleased to have made it to round five.

“Hopefully, I'll get this far again next year,” he said.

CHALLENGING…:

Sunday's winning word:

Apotheosis

Some other tough ones from the competition:

Centurion

Diverticulum

Corpuscle

Xylograph

Arthurian

Affidavit

Ran with fact box “Challenging…”, which has been appended
to the end of the story.

© The Vancouver Sun 2005

Join the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat float – for the 2nd Annual Vancouver St. Patrick's Day Parade

Join the St. Patrick's Day Parade and be part of Gung Haggis Fat Choy's dragon boat float.

Last year, Gung Haggis Fat Choy was asked to take part in the inaugural St. Patrick's Day Parade for 
Celtic Fest Vancouver
celebrating all things celtic in Vancouver BC.  The parade
organizers wanted something multicultural, and they loved the way Gung
Haggis Fat Choy fused together Chinese and Scottish cultures in a fun
inclusive way.

Gung Haggis Fat Choy, up to this point, had been a dinner, a dragon
boat team, and a CBC television performance special.  How could it
be a parade entry?  Cultural fusion musicians? 

“How about a dragon boat float,” I suggested.  And they LOVED
it!  We created one of the better float entries according to Grand
Parade Marshall Steve McVittie and Festival Organizer Warren
Purchase.  And thus was born, the concept of dragon boats for
parade entries in Vancouver.

For 2005, we will have special guests Vancouver City Counsellor Ellen Woodsworth who will be wearing “something outrageously Irish” she promises. 

Also joining us will be our favourite Chi-rish person, Margaret Gallager from CBC Radio's Early Edition, referring to her Chinese Malaysian and Irish American parentage.

This parade entry is a partnership with Dragon Boat Association. organizers of the Vancouver International Taiwanese Dragon Boat Race.

We will also try to create the world's first dragon boat paddle marching drill team.

We are parade entry #83, and will meet from 10:00am on Richards St.
between Davie St. and Drake St.  The parade starts at 11am and
goes on until 1pm. 

Join us by calling Todd Wong at 604-987-7124

See pictures of the 2004 St. Patrick's Day Parade pictures for Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat float.

Tales of an Urban Indian – great play at the FIRE HALL Arts Centre

Go see the play Tales of an Urban Indian at the Firehall Arts Centre.

Tales of an Urban IndianWritten by and starring
Darrell Dennis

March 2 – 12, 2005Insightful! Hilarious! Powerful! Tales of an Urban Indian is created by and starring the well known Second City performer and zany host of APTN’s Bingo and a Movie, Darrell Dennis.

I saw the play last week on opening night and I thought that actor
Darrell Dennis was extremely funny and serious in his one person
play.  He definitely touches on all the positive and negative
experiences of what it is like being an urban indian, drawing on
personal and shared/communal experiences.

The opening features a slide show of traditional and stereotypical
depictions of First Nations people, that slides into cartoons and
playboy charicatures. 

“Now that we've got that out of the way…” says Dennis, he tells
what it was like growing up on a Reserve, moving to the city as a
child, then moving back to the Reserve.

“Tell us again, what are White people like,” they beg the new story
teller, as all the other kids have only seen White people on tv
before. 

Comedy turns to achievement, then tragedy, and finally
redemption.  It's a great story, and gives you a wonderful way to
experience what it is like walking in the shoes of an urban indian.

Tickets are $14 – $22 and are available at the Firehall Box Office,
604-689-0926 or online at
www.firehallartscentre.ca

Barb Lee and Vancouver Asian Film Festival in Vancouver Sun today

Asian Film festival faces annual struggle: Founder Barb Lee still runs the event as a volunteer, though it now has some sponsors

-by Lynn McNamara – Vancouver Sun

Check out page D1 and D2 of Today's Vancouver Sun for Monday March
7th.  It's a story about the struggles of the VAFF, in a setting
where we should have more support for a Film Festival that shows
positive roles for Asian actors, and especially shows North American
made films made by North American Asian actors (yes – there are such
things… My great grand Uncle Luke was an actor in old
Hollywood in movies with Gary Cooper and Katherine Hepburn, Clark Gable
and Bela Lugosi.) 

Hopefully the VAFF can access some of BC Renaissance grant money
coming to the BC Arts Council to create and endowment fund for the
VAFF.  Barb Lee points out that while the Toronto Film
Festival recieves $20,000 to $30,000 from the Canada Council every
year, Vancouver recieves only $3,000 to $5,000.

Barb Lee is an amazing person – truly!  She has a vision to
create a film festival that highlights Asians in film – in
English.  And to show films made by and featuring Canadians and
Americans of Asian ancestry – not just imported films from Asia. 
Barb has an energy and a presence that betrays her tenacity and resolve
to create her dream.  We were both paid a high compliment last
year, by Jane Chalmers, Director of CBC Radio English Language
Programming at a CBC breakfast meeting for leaders in the Asian
community.  Jane said that we had both caught CBC's attention, and
that they were watching us.  Now the next step is to create some
story proposals for CBC and help further integrate the history and
issues of Canadians who just happen to be of Asian ancestry.

When I was a teenager the only Asians I saw on television were Hop
Sing, the Chinese cook on Bonanza and the housekeeper/Nanny on The
Courtship of Eddie's Father.  Once on Bewitched, a siamese cat was
turned into a human which I think was played by Nancy Kwan.  And
then there was always Kung Fu, or The King and I, where Asians were all
in the supporting roles.  So… domestics, villans, dragon ladies
and china dolls… until Bruce Lee came along, and changed Asian cinema
forever!

There are so many Chinese-CANADIAN organizations now in Vancouver
that promote and explore Canadian-born artists of Asian ancestry, such
as Asian Canadian Writers' Workshop, and the Vancouver Asian Canadian
Theatre, ExplorASIAN festival by the Vancouver Asian History Month
Society and many others… that it really may be time for us to
create a Asian Canadian Arts Alliance, and help to develop each other's
audience and share ideas and resources.  We have been doing
precisely this, with Rice Paper Magazine, ACWW, Asian Heritage Month
and Gung Haggis Fat Choy.  By working together and piggybacking
our events and marketing, we find we are able to accomplish more while
sharing resources.

 

Look for a Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat float in the Vancouver St. Patrick's Day Parade – March 13,2005

I just picked up the St.Patrick's Day Parade package for Vancouver's Celtic Fest 2005, to be held Sunday, March 13th 2005. 
Steve McVittie is Grand Parade Marshall and a pretty cool guy.  He
is proprietor of Celtic Treasures on Dunbar St. 

Steve loved that I put a dragon boat as a float in the 2004 parade, and
kept after me to make sure the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat float
returned for 2005.  “It was one of the better floats that people
talked about.  It's important to be multicultural and to have
these elements in the parade, ” Steve told me.  This parade is
about being Canadian.  We leave all the politics behind and
celebrate what this country has to offer.  Where else can you do
that?  Vancouver is one of the most non-Irish cities – but
everybody celebrates St. Patrick's Day!”

For 2004, Bob Brinson helped me put a Taiwanese dragon boat on a
trailer, which I towed in a rented pick up truck.  For the parade,
Joe McDonald and his Brave Waves
band mate Andrew Kim sat in the dragon boat playing bagpipes and
electric guitar from start at Drake Street to the finish at Hastings
Street.  Along the way dragon boat team members Tracy Wong and Jen
Yeung waved the flag and the paddles.  We were also accompanied by
Highland dancers taught by  Angus MacKenzie.  For the full
story and photos that featured a flat tire see 2004 St.Patrick's Day Parade.

For 2005, the Gung Haggis Fat Choy float will again feature a Taiwanese
dragon boat.  Vancouver city counsellor Ellen Woodsworth will be a
guest and wave to people from the front of the boat.  Maybe we
will give her a flag to wave or a drum to beat, or teach her how to climb onto the dragon head.  Musicians will again be featured on the boat.  It might be Brave Waves, or it might be Dragon River
I am also looking forward to creating the first ever Dragon Boat
Paddler Marching Drill Team, as I plan to lead team members and
volunteers through paddle drills holding green paddles!

Chinese Head Tax Redress: Recent letters to the Editors for Vancouver Courier and Shared Vision articles

Here are recent letters to the editor that have appeared in the Vancouver Sun, Vancouver Courier and Shared Vision magazine regarding their recent articles on Redress for the Chinese Head Tax and Chinese Exclusion Act (1897 to 1947).

Vancouver Sun, March 2, 2005
 
Letters: Liberals float a red herring on redress 
 
There are still seniors alive who paid the racist head tax and targeted by legislation separating families. They and their descendants should be the focus of any redress settlement and also dictate the terms of community compensation. 
 
Given that the Japanese Canadian redress did not incur any liability with individual pay-outs and community compensation, why would it be different for Chinese Canadians?
 
The obvious conclusion is Conservative Brian Mulroney's justice depatment lawyers for the Japanese Canadian redress are smarter
than Liberal Paul Martin's for a Chinese Canadian redress. Or is the liability issue cited by Multicultural Minister Raymond Chan a poor excuse?
 
Sid Chow Tan, director

———————————-
Original article, Settling the Score February 2005

Shared Vision, March 2005 
Letters: Head Tax Not Just a Chinese Issue 

I am a fifth-generation Vancouverite. My grandfather paid the head tax, my great-grandfather paid the head tax. I had the pleasure to talk with filmmaker Karen Cho ( In the Shadow of Gold Mountain ), and I was amazed when she told me that the British/white side of the family was more angry about the head tax than the Chinese side of the family.

 
My cousins have all been marrying non-Chinese people, mostly of Scottish, Irish, or English ancestry.
We have fifth-, sixth- and seventh- generation descendents who are only one-quarter Chinese.
We have First Nations children whose great-great-grandfather had to pay a Chinese head tax.
 
This is no longer a Chinese issue—it is a
Canadian issue. When the Canadian government finally realizes there are non-Chinese Canadians demanding head-tax redress for their grandfathers and great grandfathers, maybe then they will wake up.
How many generations will it take to inter-marry into the families of Canadian politicians?

Todd Wong, Vancouver

——————————

original article: Chinese Says Apology Long Overdue
02/09/2005


Vancouver Courier, February 13,
2005                                                                                                          

Letters: Canada owes Chinese justice

Happy Lunar New Year and many thanks for your story on Daniel  Lee's
efforts to seek an apology for the racist head tax on
Chinese immigrants from 1885 to 1923 (“Chinese senior says apology
long  overdue,” Feb. 17).

It enriches our country when elders such as Daniel
Lee speak up  for a redress that tests Canadian laws and
conscience. All Canadians should be inspired by this.

Since 1984, over 4,500 head tax payers, spouses and
descendants, each representing a head tax certificate, have asked
the Chinese Canadian National Council to represent them in seeking
not only an apology, but a symbolic return of a portion of the
head tax money collected.

Where possible, the money should be returned to
individuals and families who paid it. The present day valuation of
the head tax collected would exceed a billion dollars. In the early
1900's, the $500 could buy two houses in Chinatown. Keep in mind
the CCNC seeks a refund of head taxes paid, not compensation for their
application.

The Canadian government unjustly enriched itself by
$23-million with a law to initially deter and then profit from
Chinese immigration. That was close to the cost of building the
Canadian Pacific Railway, which tied together a coast to coast
confederation called Canada. So not only did Lo Wah Kiu (old
overseas Chinese) forbears build the most difficult and dangerous
last 300 miles of the railway, they paid for all of it!

The few living head-tax payers are in their 90s so
redress is urgent if  they are to see it. We hope Prime
Minister Paul Martin will finish his father's work to redress this
racist chapter of Canadian history. In 1947, the elder Paul
Martin, as Secretary of State, brought forth in the Commons the
Canadian Citizenship Act, which allowed the Chinese, then with 
“domestic aliens” status even if born here, to become citizens.

No amount of money can take away the hurt, angst and
oppression of Lo Wah Kiu heroes and heroines who endured and
prevailed over 62 years of targeted racist legislation. However, a
redress which commemorates them and their achievements is a start.
Along with an apology, we are  asking for what any Canadian
would want- refund of an unjust tax and   amends for the
racist family-separating exclusion. Where there are no claimants, the
money could start a foundation for education and research to end
racism.

Justice now. It's only fair.

Sid Chow Tan, director
Chinese Canadian National Council
Vancouver

Opera Nights at the Pan Pacific Hotel with Heather Pawsey

Heather Pawsey – noted Canadian soprano has performed at Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner events for 2004 and 2005.

She will be Just at the Pan Pacific Hotel
(Cafe Pacifica)

Sat. March 5 and next Friday night, March 11, starting at 7:15 p.m. 

The buffet is $42/person and includes a huge cold buffet, four hot
main courses, a made-to-order pasta bar, a dessert buffet and, of
course, live opera arias and duets!