Category Archives: Asian Canadian Cultural Events

Roy Mah, founder of Chinatown News dies. Saltwater City laments the passing of a true local Chinatown hero.

Roy Mah, founder of Chinatown News dies.  Saltwater City laments the passing of a true local Chinatown hero.

Chinese Canadian veterans: John Ko Bong, Roy Mah, Ed Lee – photo Todd Wong

It's a sad day in Vancouver Chinatown today.  Roy Mah died on
Friday. He was the WW2 veteran who joined a “suicide squad” to fight
for a country called Canada – that wouldn't even let him vote in the
land he was born in.  The Edmonton AB born son of a head tax payer
was founder and long time editor of Chinatown News, founder of the BC
Ethnic Press, 1st Chinese-Canadian admitted to the Canadian Club
Vancouver, and recipient of the Order of BC.

Just after noon I was contacted by a Georgia Straight reporter asking
about my thoughts and relationship with Roy Mah.  I told him that
Roy was one of my iconic role models.  I used to read Chinatown
News at my Great-Grandmother's house when I was a child.  I used
to see Roy in Chinatown during the 1970's and knew where his office
was.  During the 1980's I approached Roy, and submitted some arts
reviews for Rosie's Cafe, and Cats – including my developing social
commentary about Asian Canadian arts and history and racism.  Roy
even gave me a letter when I travelled to New York City, to request a
review pass for M. Butterfly on Broadway.

In 2002, with my involvement with Asian Canadian Writer's Workshop, we
honoured Roy with the inaugural Community Builder's
Award. Roy also enjoyed attending the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner.  He last
attended in 2005, and when I acknowledged him to the 570 strong
audience, he was given a spontaneous standing ovation.

In recent years, he would always wave hello to me when he
walked past me working at the Vancouver Public Library information
desk.  Roy always liked to come into the library to read the
newspapers.  It was harder for him because he was on kidney
dialysis.  But we usually managed to have some nice chats, and
occasionally some coffee together.

I last saw Roy on May 12th at the 60th Anniversary dinner for Canadian Citizenship, sponsored by Pacific Unit 280.  I was sorry I had to miss his “90th Birthday party” on Easter Weekend. This was the first time I had seen Roy in a wheelchair.  His health had taken a downturn a couple of years ago, and I had missed him hobbling into the library with a big smile on his face whenever he saw me.  At the dinner, the Chinese Canadian Military Museum gave out dvd's containing interviews with many of the veterans.  Claudia Ferris was the documentary producer.  Roy's niece Ramona Mar was one of the interviewers.  Gloria Leung is Claudia's sister-in-law, and also heloed out on the project.  And we all adore Roy Mah!
 

There will be a public Celebration of Life for Roy Mah on Thursday, July 12 at 2:00 pm
at the Chinese Cultural Centre in the David Lam Hall. 

Vancouver Sun published a story Monday on Roy with interviews with his nice Ramona Mar.
CBC Radio interviewed Ramona and Wesley Lowe on Monday, and Larry Wong was interviewed for Channel M.

Here are some links about Roy Mah:

O.B.C. Biography – Name

Roy Quock Quon MahVancouver. Click on image for full-size version Roy Mah was He sat on the board of the Vancouver Sun Yat-Sen Garden Society when it

GungHaggisFatChoy :: Vancouver Sun: Chinatown's 'quiet

It is always great to see a story about Roy Mah in the media. Roy Mah has left his imprint on almost every major event in Vancouver 's Chinese community

Chinatown Monument

When Chinese veterans like Roy Mah & Daniel Lee

Roy Mah's ACCW award dinner 29 Sep 02: Roy Mah receives his Community Builder Award from Asian Canadian Writers' Workshop President  Jim Wong-Chu on September 29, 2002
Roy Mah and Jim Wong-Chu at the 2002 ACWW dinner where we honoured Roy with the inaugural ACWW Community Builder's Award.

50 Years of Chinatown Stories Dinner Sept. 2002

Tonight's dinner honoured Roy Mah by presenting him with the first ever Asian Here's a picture of Roy Mah (on the left) receiving his award from ACWW

Welcome to the Vancouver Courier – On Line – News

Their faces, lit by the afternoon sun, bear the lines of years of hardship and sorrow. …. Roy

Roy Mah – Veterans Affairs Canada

Did you know that Roy Mah led an emotional debate arguing that Chinese-Canadians should go to war before they received the right to vote?

CBC Generations documentary series features BC's Rev. Chan family and descendants (including me!)

CBC Generations documentary series features BC's Rev. Chan family and descendants (including me!)
 
Generations

Chan family

Generations is a 6 part series and the lead installment is The Chan Legacy – which is about my great-great-grandfather Rev. Chan Yu Tan, and our family descendants who are committed to community service – like me!  The episodes of the series are:


Watch
The Chan Legacy on CBC Newsworld

July 4, 10 pm ET/PT,
July 8, 10 am ET/PT,
July 29, 7 pm ET


Producer Halya Kuchmij is very proud of her work, and that we are the first in the series.  It must be a very strong, emotional,
educational documentary.  I have been an adviser and witness to many of
the interviews, as well as some of the script.  I have to say it made
me very proud of our family, and the show is very emotionally
touching.  And I haven't even seen it yet!

Many family members were interviewed:

  • Victor Wong, grand-son, WW2 veteran and Victoria resident who visited his grandparents in Nanaimo BC.
  • Helen Lee, grand-daughter, who lived with Rev. & Mrs. Chan Yu Tan in Nanaimo.
  • Gary Lee, great-grandson who tells about some of the challenges overcome by the family.
  • Janice Wong, great-grand-daughter, and award winning author of CHOW: From China to Canada, memories of food and family.
  • Rhonda Larrabee, great-grand-daughter, and chief of the First Nations Qayqayt (New Westminster) Band, featured in the NFB film “Tribe of One.”
  • Todd Wong, great-great-grandson, community and cultural activist,
    creator of Gung Haggis Fat Choy: Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner.
  • Tracey Hinder, 5th generation high school student who was the inaugural Vancouver CanSpell champion and went on to compete in Ottawa and Washington DC.  Tracey is a member of her school's “multicultural club.”


Rev. Chan Yu Tan came to Canada in 1896, following his elder brother Rev. Chan Sing Kai who had earlier arrived in 1888 at the invitation of the Methodist Church of Canada.  These two brothers were later followed by sisters Phoebe in 1899, and Naomi who later moved to Chicago.  Throughout seven generations, the family has spread throughout Canada and the United States.  The Rev. Chan Yu Tan Family was featured in the photographic exhibition Three Early Chinese Canadian Pioneer Families


Read my blog entries about
Rev. Chan Legacy Project which includes stories during the making of the documentary and events for Janice Wong's award-winning book C H O W: From China to Canada memoris of food and family.

http://www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com/blog/RevChanLegacyProject
http://c-h-o-w.blogspot.com/

Please tell all your friends and relatives about this upcoming documentary, very informative about the history of Chinese-Canadians, and the legacy they have built in Canada.

the following is from the CBC Generations home page:
http://www.cbc.ca/documentaries/generations/


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Generations
Generations: The Chan Legacy
 

The
documentary begins with Todd Wong playing the accordion, wearing a
kilt. He promotes cultural fusion, and in doing so, he honours the
legacy of his great, great, grandfather The Reverend Chan Yu Tan. The
Chans go back seven generations in Canada and are one of the oldest
families on the West Coast.
 
Chan family
The Chan family
 
Reverend Chan left China for Victoria in 1896 at a time when most Chinese immigrants were simple labourers, houseboys and laundrymen who had come to British Columbia
to build the railroad or work in the mines. His wife Mrs. Chan Wong Shee followed him later in 1899.  The Chans were different.
They were educated and Westernized Methodist Church missionaries who
came to convert the Chinese already in Canada,
and teach them English. The Chans were a family with status and they
believed in integration. However even they could not escape the racism
that existed at the time, the notorious head tax and laws that excluded
the Chinese from citizenship.
 
In
the documentary, Reverand Chan's granddaughter Helen Lee, grandson
Victor Wong, and great grandson Gary Lee recall being barred from
theaters, bowling alleys and restaurants. The Chinese were not allowed
to become doctors or lawyers, pharmacists or teachers. Still, several
members of the Chan family served in World War II,
because they felt they were Canadian and wanted to contribute. Finally,
in 1947, Chinese born in Canada were granted citizenship and the right
to vote.
 
Todd Wong
Todd Wong
 
Today, Todd Wong,
represents a younger generation of successful professionals and entrepreneurs scattered across North America.
He promotes his own brand of cultural integration through an annual
event in Vancouver called Gung Haggis Fat Choy. It's a celebration that
joins Chinese New Year with Robbie Burns Day, and brings together the two cultures that once lived completely separately in the early days of British Columbia.

We also meet a member of the youngest generation, teenager Tracey
Hinder, who also cherishes the legacy of Reverend Chan, but in contrast
to his desire to promote English she is studying mandarin and longs to
visit the birthplace of her ancestors.

Produced by Halya Kuchmij, narrated by Michele Cheung.

Alcan Dragon Boat Festival Friday: Blessing Ceremony + we crash the VIP Party

Alcan Dragon Boat Festival Friday: Blessing Ceremony + we crash the VIP Party


The blessing ceremony for the 19th annual Alcan Dragon Boat Festival went well.. except for Todd being slowed by North
Shore traffic.  Channel M had just called me and was asking if our honourary drummer James Erlandsen, leukemia patient, would be on the boat…

“Nope” I said, “his white blood count is too depleted.” 
“But James' spirit will be with us when we are on the boat, and our spirit is with his, in his recovery back to health.” We are helping to find a matching Eurasian bone marrow for James.  3 of our paddlers are Eurasian, and we have 3 inter-racial couples on the team! Hapa is s-o-o-o in!

Hmmm…. I arrived late and the team was already on the dock.  I
brought down the kilts which paddler Stuart Mackinnon and Drummer Deb each quickly put on. Team Captain
Jim Blatherwick already had his kilt on.

We loaded up the boat, and Taoist priests were already chanting and
dotting the eyes of the dragons…   then we paddled away from the
Dragon Zone dock.  Usually it is this time that drummer Deb does her
introductions of new guest paddlers on the boat – but in the 1st seat –
the female priest was singing/chanting.  Hillary's mother Bev Wong (James Erlandsen's Aunt), and currently inactive paddlers Jeremy and Jen – took pictures of us and waved to us from the Dragon Zone deck.

We paddled over to a float set up on the North side of Dragon Zone –
within good viewing of the VIP lounge on the North West side of the
Science World deck.  We let off the priest + a VIP + Captain Jim… the priests did
blessings.  Captain Jim stood during the ceremonies, and chatted with
the captains of Concord dragon boat team – Fred Roman, and captain of Cathay Pacific –
May.   Jim says the priests gave him a “lucky coin”.  While we waited
the 20 minutes while the priests did their equipment takedown – We paddled some
figure 8's and Deb introduced our guest paddlers.  2 youngsters from
Kitsilano Water Demons junior team, and their coach Chek Tay – whom I
have known since 1999.

We paddled back to the Dragon Zone dock – We started saying our
goodbyes because Deb & Todd were heading off to the ADBF VIP
party, and our paddlers were deciding what to do next when they were
immediately asked to help carrying things down to the dock, as Water's
Edge was setting up the race course.  While our paddlers helped out, and Todd bumped into ADBF general manager Ann
Phelps who said that she had to go help out her volunteers at the VIP
party.  Todd asked if she needed more volunteers, and offered the GHFC
paddlers. So we all did get to go to the VIP party afterall…. but as
volunteers. 

It was easy… we served drinks, bused the used dishes, and Todd
helped out at the reception desk.  We were told that we could relieve the
current volunteer staff, switch off and enjoy the party.  We did…  
Free wine, beer, drinks and food, food, food. 

Steven Wong saw his brother Peter who is past-president for ADBF. 
Georgia and I talked with Marlene's very good friend Patrick Couling –
who is an ADBF race advisor.  Vancouver City Councillor George Chow asked me
to help out with the 100th anniversary dinner for the 1907 Chinatown
Riots.  I chatted up the Rogers VIP representatives we had paddled over
to the float – potential sponsorship maybe?  Deb even got her father
into the VIP party, by putting a GHFC shirt over his t-shirt.  We
schmoozed, we ate, we drank, and volunteered hard. 

Hillary, our rookie paddler is amazing… This is her first Alcan Dragon Boat Festival, and she is both a paddler and a volunteer. Tonight, she bused hard, following a previous night when she did a First
Aid course for ADBF volunteers.  Two weeks ago she volunteered at the ADBF regatta,
when Gung Haggis wasn't paddling.  And she will do so again during the
festival.  Thank You Hillary.

Gung Haggis really helped out the ADBF tonight – both during the
blessing ceremony and for the VIP party. ADBF Communications director
Anita Webster, also said I saved her bacon this morning when I
interviewed for 2 spots during the City TV Breakfast TV morning show-
and especially for coming up for a tour of the DZ clubhouse, when the
heavens let loose the rains at 9am this morning.

Thank You everybody.  This is a FANTASTIC team, because of the high
quality of the people on the team.  It is a group that I and its team
members really enjoy being around.

Slainte, Toddish

“Imagenes del Oriente” Mozaico Flamenco & Orchid Ensemble performance of Cafe de Chinitas at Edie's Hats on Granville Island

“Imagenes del
Oriente”

Mozaico Flamenco & Orchid
Ensemble performance of Cafe de Chinitas at Edie's Hats on Granville Island

Thursday June 14, 2007, www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com

By Todd Wong & Christine Chin

image
Kasandra La China dances Flamenco Tango for Cafe de Chinitas – photo Todd Wong

It's an incredible intimate affair with passionate flamenco music and dancing
performed by people who love what they are doing and share what they love with
the audience.   Imagine a small funky hat store in Granville
Island 's Net Loft turned
into an intimate cafe.  Fill the store with seats for a cafe setting, set
up tables of food and a bar.  Allow the Orchid Ensemble to let loose with
their incredible musicianship, set fire by the flamenco artistry of Mozaico Flamenco's Oscar and
Kasandra La China
with their troupe of hot smouldering dancers dressed in Chinese cheong sam
dresses.  Wow!

Cultural fusion has happened all around the world.  Not just in Canada ,
but also Spain , the
Mediterranean, the Silk Road … but this
event was on a richter scale!  The event by invitation only took place on
Friday, June 8th… but repeats for the public on June 15th, Friday.  Call
Edie's Hats for tickets.  Check
here for the event info: http://www.ediehats.com/events/index.html

image

Here's a review of the evening by Christine Chin:

From the moment of the first chords plucked and the last dance tapped,
I was dazzled and enchanted with it all!  Café de Chinitas is a
re-creation of 19th century Flamenco culture, as it originated from the
Gypsies, in the cafes of southern Spain . 
Flamenco style dramatically performed tonight incorporated Spanish guitar
playing, ancient erhu and zheng sounds, staccato clapping, singing, and dancing
in an intimate Van Gogh café-like richness, electrified many times over! 
The dancers moved with combined gracefulness and intensity, and those who were
not singing or dancing were clapping and shouting out words of
encouragement:  ole! baile! baile!–Dance! Dance!

image
Cafe de Chinitas: Shyiang Strong is flamenco dancing in motion- photo Todd Wong


For two days June 8 & 15 the Vancouver-based Mozaico Flamenco Dance Theatre
presents “Imagenes del Oriente”, the first of their Café de
Chinitas series, combining flamenco dance with the complementary sounds of
traditional Chinese harmonies.  A unique blend of culture, dance and
music, the founders of Mozaico Flamenco, Oscar Nieto and Kasandra (also known
as “La China ”),
are truly intercultural visionaries.  They bring together the ideas to
celebrate cultural diversity in the form of sound and performance, by
collaborating with The Orchid Ensemble to create a truly ethnic ambience and by
understanding and incorporating a cultural representation of performers,
respectively. 

Among her many titles as producer and choreographer, and Project Artist
Director for Café de Chinitas, Kasandra is known as one of the rising stars in
flamenco dance in the city.  The combination of passionate expression and
precise style draws the audience in to her world.  As Artistic Director of
Mozaico Flamenco, Oscar is an accomplished flamenco dancer, and is singer in
this project.  Their supporting dancers hail from diverse Asian and
Western nationalities and exhibit a high professionalism to the art of
Flamenco.  Peter Mole is the Flamenco Guitarist, and as a musician, plays
a large part in Vancouver ’s
Flamenco community.

The Juno-nominated Orchid Ensemble
added a distinct Asian sound to complement the dance vignettes.  The
multi-ethnic trio utilizes ancient musical instruments from China ,
such as the erhu, a long-neck 2-stringed (Lan Tung), the zheng, an elongated
wooden tube with bridges and many strings stretching over it (Gelina Jiang),
and the marimba wooden keyboard of African roots to create a harmonious dynamic
rhythm (Jonathan Bernard).


image
Cafe de Chinitas' sponsors, artistic and musical
creators: Edie Orenstein, Kasandra, Sayo Nickerson and Lan Tung – photo Todd
Wong


The Event Sponsor of the show, Edie Hats transformed its space to create an
exquisite café scene of intimacy, elegance, and warmth.  The owner Edie
Orenstein is producer of this series, “Imagenes del Oriente”,
explained that the even the particular wooden layering of the floor was just
appropriate for the dance show, and half-jokingly remarked that smoking was not
allowed in this café because she was worried about her hats!  Edie was a
spontaneous and charmed hostess, guiding us throughout the presentation.

Sitting back on our high stools, a painter and his companion a writer for the
local paper, had graciously allowed me to join them.  We were
mesmerized by the passionate display of emotion, movement and sound, that at
one point I closed my eyes to feel the show.  The interactive dimension of
the audience as patrons to the café, you were captivated by the
experience.  I and all the patrons of the café clapped resoundingly to the
inner and outer beauty of Flamenco.

image
Kevin, Leon, Christine, Edie and Todd enjoy some snacks and socializing during intermission – photo courtesy of Todd Wong

Cougar Dragons Race – Junior Dragon Boat Team for Killarney High School

Cougar Dragons Race – Junior Dragon Boat Team for Killarney High School

Killarney Secondary School in Vancouver now has a dragon boat team.  Teacher sponsor Stuart Mackinnon joined the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team earlier this year, and he fell in love with dragon boat racing…. big time!  When Stuart found out about the junior team races, he asked how to start a junior team, and we hatched a plan to gift Killarney with a dragon boat team.  How fitting that a dragon boat team, with Scottish inspirations that has put dragon boats into the St. Patrick's Day Parade, help to found and coach a junior dragon boat team for a high school with an Irish name

On June 3rd, Killarney raced its first dragon boat race. The first race was full of excitement and anxiety.  I told the team to expect to come last or second last as we were racing against better teams that would gradually end up in the A and B finals… while hopefully we would end up at the top of the C or D final.  Stuart has written up a wonderful summary of today's adventures on the Killarney Cougar Dragons website (which I am reprinting down below – but check out all the other glorious pictures and stories on it!)

But first I have to share with you that nobody before April 15th had ever been in a dragon boat before.  But on that day, 10 Killarney students came out to a Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat practice, and went back to school on Monday with the message to tell all their friends about how much fun they had had.  Then we had to wait until we had enough paddlers signed up (20) and whether or not the funding requests through the school would go through.  Finally everything was in place and the first official practice took place on Tuesday April 24th.

Every practice was a learning experience.  Many of the students had never before paddled a canoe, let alone a dragon boat.  The students had to learn how to hold a paddle, how to use it in the water, how to paddle in time, and how to paddle with power.  We had one very very challenging practice when the wind and the white capped waves threatened to push us around, but the students stayed focused and met the challenges with vigor.

Here are Stuart Mackinnon's pictures and his account of the Killarney Cougar Dragons' first race regatta!


We hit the Dragon Zone at 8:00 on Sunday morning. Everybody was excited
but just a bit apprehensive. What would the first race be like? Could
we paddle in time? Would we paddle deep and paddle hard?

With Justin Yee in the drummers seat and Coach Todd Wong steering, the Cougar Dragons hit the water for the first heat.

A
good effort, especially as the Cougar Dragons were racing against older
and more experienced teams. Re-grouping, captains Chi Hsi and Garvin
Pang, encouraged the team, while Coaches Todd Wong and Mr. Mackinnon
offered sage advice and refocused everyone.

Refocused and
re-energized the Cougar Dragons showed their metal and improved
tremendously in the second heat. Michele Shi had taken the drummers
chair and inspired the Cougar Dragons to stay focused and finish fast.
An
incredible effort in the second heat gave the team the incentive they
needed. After a very brief break it was on to the 'D' division final.

A
fabulously exciting race from start to finish, the Cougar Dragons
exceeded all of our wildest dreams, gaining 7 seconds on the previous
race and placing an unbelievably close second.

Well done
Killarney! We have shown what we are made of. We have practiced and
been successful. Can we improve? Sure, but we can now proudly bear the
honourable title of a Dragon Boat Racing team.

Congratulations
Aleck Pham, Caitlin Allum, Cherry Chen, Chi Hsi, Deborah Gee, Dipa
Barua, Eddy Ha, Garry Ly, Garvin Pang, Irene Peng, Jenny Tan, Jordan
Lee, Jordan Wong, Justin Chow, Justin Yee, Krystal Han, Michele Shi,
Sally Chan, Stanley Tsia, Taylor Yee, and Wayne Li. Thanks to Linda
Chen, and all the parents who came out to support us. An extra big THANK YOU to coach Todd Wong– without you, we wouldn't be here!

8th Annual Asian Comedy Night – May 18 & 19 – 8pm

8th Annual Asian Comedy Night – May 18 & 19 – 8pm


The Vancouver Asian Canadian
Theatre presents:

Etch-Your-Sketch SKETCHOFF!#$%!!
8th Annual Asian
Comedy Night

May 18 and May 19
8:00pm
Roundhouse Community Centre
Theatre, Vancouver

It's comedy night time again and this year, we have 6
new sketch groups competing for the coveted Vancouver Rice Bowl.
Etch-YOUR-Sketch SKETCHOFF!#$%!! – 8th Annual Asian Comedy Night is happening on
Friday, May 18th and Saturday, May 19th. The first night, the teams are judged
by people in the industry and on the 2nd night, the audience is the judge with
their applause and measured with a decibel reader. Teams have a chance to win up
to $350!

With names like Slant Eyed Peas, Sfuu Man Chu, Bananadrama,
Yangtzers, Lick the Wax Tadpole and Disoriental, it surely will be a night full
of laughs.

If you're not going away this long weekend, and you want
something that will make you laugh … check out the 8th annual Asian Comedy
Night. A guaranteed night of some pretty funny stuff. Help support Asian
Canadian Theatre in Vancouver.

SKETCHOFF!#$%!! has been a sold-out event
every year and the annual show has provided a rare showcase for various Asian
stand-up comedians and sketch groups
from all over Canada and the US. As a
developer of new talent, VACT had previously
incubated such successful local
Asian-Canadian sketch comedy troupes as HOT SAUCE POSSE and ASSAULTED FISH.

Come cheer the Etch-Your-Sketchers on! HA HA's are guaranteed a night
filled with HaHaHa's!

Tickets:
$12 in advance in person at the
Roundhouse Theatre,
by telephone 604.713.1800, or online on
www.vact.ca
$15 cash at the door
14+, some coarse language and sexually
suggestive content

 

Courier: Rally clebrates 60 years of rights – interviews with Gim Wong and Sid Tan

Courier: Rally clebrates 60 years of rights – interviews with Gim Wong and Sid Tan

Here's a Friday May 11th article in the Vancouver Courier that interviews both Gim Wong, WW2 veteran, and Sid Tan, head tax redress activist.  When Gim rode his motorcycle across Canada in 2005, I blogged the reports that I received from across Canada and from the CCNC. 

Gim Wong, 84, fought in the Second World
War but wasn't allowed to vote. Last year, he rode his motorcycle to
Ottawa to press then prime minister Paul Martin for redress.

Photo by Dan Toulgoet


Rally celebrates 60 years of rights

By Cheryl Rossi-Staff writer

When families who were
affected by the Chinese Head Tax celebrate 60 years of citizenship
Saturday, they'll be recognizing how far they've come in gaining rights
and respect for Chinese people in Canada.

But according to Sid Tan,
co-chair of the Head Tax Families Society of Canada, they'll also
highlight problems migrant workers face today as echoes of what their
families endured.

“The issues of guest
workers, the issues of seasonal and temporary employment, live-in
caregivers and domestics, all these issues are not that different from
what the early Chinese suffered,” said Tan. “These are people that are
good enough to come to Canada and do the dirty and menial work or the
work that a lot of Canadians won't or aren't willing to do, and they
have no rights. There's something wrong with the picture, and a hundred
years ago this is what happened to the Chinese.”

The Head Tax Families
Society is organizing a rally Saturday at the Chinatown Memorial to
Chinese Canadian War Veterans and Railway Workers at the northeast
corner of Keefer and Columbia. The society became a registered
non-profit last August after Prime Minister Stephen Harper apologized
to Chinese-Canadians. The apology included a symbolic payment of
$20,000 to those Chinese, or their surviving spouses, who had paid the
head tax.

When the Canadian Pacific
Railway was constructed between 1881 and 1885, more than 15,000 Chinese
came to Canada to help build the railway. But when the track was
completed, the federal government moved to restrict Chinese
immigration. Starting in 1885, people of Chinese origin entering the
country had to pay a $50 head tax, which increased to $100 in 1900. In
1903, it reached $500, the equivalent of two years wages of a Chinese
labourer at the time. Chinese people were denied Canadian citizenship
while the government collected millions.

On July 1, 1923,
Parliament passed the Chinese Immigration Act excluding all but a few
Chinese immigrants from entering Canada. It was repealed in 1947, and
Chinese-Canadians were allowed to vote 60 years ago this May.

Tan said the society formed to tell the federal government its settlement is incomplete.

“They are redressing just a
little under 600 families, that's 0.6 per cent of all the
families-82,000 families paid the tax,” he said. “But what about the
elderly sons and daughters who were separated from their fathers for
25, 30 years? What about elderly seniors who were born in Canada [and
had no rights until 1947]?”

Gim Wong, a Canadian-born
Second World War veteran who was barred from voting until after the
war, says he knows all too well how the head tax hurt families.

His father was 14 when he arrived in Canada in 1906. His mother arrived in 1919. Both of his parents paid the $500 head tax.

In 1937, when his parents
had seven children, they couldn't afford to buy the house they were
renting, which in those days cost $700.

In January last year, the
Burnaby resident road a motorcycle to Ottawa to appeal to former prime
minister Paul Martin for redress, but the RCMP intervened and he never
got to meet Martin.

Wong wants villages in China that contributed money to send young men to Canada compensated for the head tax.

Saturday's event begins at 9 a.m.

published on 05/11/2007

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Ruth Ozeki's “My Year of Meats” chosen for 2007 One Book One Vancouver

Ruth Ozeki's “My Year of Meats” – chosen for 2007 One Book One Vancouver

Wayson Choy's “The Jade Peony” was the first choice for the inaugural One Book One Vancouver program in 2003.  I was invited in January  2003 to be part of the organizing committee, but I had to promise not to say anything.  It was a revolutionary idea in libraries at the time.  Build a book club for the entire city… encourage every citizen to read the same book… and create a whole range of programs to explore its themes and related issues.

Check out the Vancouver Public Library website for information on this year's choice!

One Book One Vancouver – My Year of Meats

Ruth Ozeki's My Year of Meats Chosen the Book for 2007!

Get ready for another great summer of reading and exciting programs, and join the fun as VPL's award-winning One Book, One Vancouver presents our “meatiest” title yet! On April 23,
The Library announced Ruth Ozeki's
My Year of Meats

as the title for this year's program, and released 450 copies of the
book to library branches across Vancouver for people to read and enjoy.

Receiving critical acclaim around the world,
My Year of Meats
is a juicy cross-cultural tale that brings together the media, the global meat industry,
and two women from opposite ends of the earth with hilarious and haunting results.

From May to June, read
My Year of Meats
, and join us for some great events and book discussions created to explore the book's themes and bring
the book alive. One Book, One Vancouver related programming will also be held at Word on the Street in September.

 

For more info on these and other upcoming events, visit our events page.
For more One Book updates, highlights, and activities, visit our OBOV webpage from May to June.

Happy reading, Vancouver!

Upcoming events:

Ruth Ozeki, Inaugural Author Reading

Monday, May 7; 7:30 p.m.

Alice MacKay Room, Lower Level

Central Library (350 W. Georgia St.)

Book Discussions with special guest, Ruth Ozeki

Tuesday, May 8

3 p.m. – Oakridge Branch  (To register, call 604-665-3980.)

7:30 p.m. – Joe Fortes Branch  (To register, call 604-65-3972.)

Join our author for an lively and intimate discussion of this year's choice.

Media, Culture…What's Your Reality? Panel Discussion

Tuesday, May 22; 7:30 p.m.

Alice MacKay Room, Lower Level

Central Library (350 W. Georgia St.)

From reality TV to mainstream journalism, find out what is the media's influence on today's mainstream culture?
With special guests, Ruth Ozeki and Vancouver Sun Arts & Life Editor Dominic Patten.

May is Asian Heritage Month… all across the country

May is Asian Heritage Month… all across the country

From Halifax to Vancouver… and everywhere in-between… Asian Heritage Month will be celebrated.
Here are the websites for Asian Heritage celebrations in

Halifax: Asian Heritage Month

http://asianheritagemonth.halifax.chebucto.org/ 

Fredericton: Asian Heritage Month Committee

Montreal: Accès Asie


Ottawa: Ottawa
Asian Heritage Month Society

http://www.asianheritagemonth.net/

Toronto: Asian Heritage Month

http://asian-heritage-month.org/

Winnipeg: Asian Heritage
Manitoba

http://www.asianheritagemanitoba.ca/

Edmonton: Edmonton
Asian Heritage Month

Calgary: imaginAsian

http://www.asianheritagecalgary.ca/

Vancouver :
explorAsian

http://www.explorasian.org/

Vancouver Sun: Dancer's Search for Cultural Identity – features Alvin Erasga Tolentino

Vancouver Sun: Dancer's Search for Cultural Identity – features Alvin Erasga Tolentino

I first met
Alvin Erasga Tolentino about 6 years ago at the Vancouver Public Library.  Alvin was starting up his new dance company Co. Erasga Dance
and he would use the computers in the Central Branch computer lab where
I worked at the time.  We hit it off, and he invited me to some of
his shows… and over the years, I have both attended and reviewed some
of his works (see
Alvin Tolentino's “She Said” – featuring vibrant contemporary Dance
)

He is considered one of the top Asian-Canadian dance choreographers.

This weekend he is featured at the Telus Studio Theatre in the Chan
Centre for the Performing Arts at UBC, on both Saturday evening and
Sunday afternoon.


Check out the Vancouver Sun article written by Kevin Griffin about Alvin on Saturday:

Kevin Griffin,
Vancouver Sun

Published: Saturday, April 28, 2007

FIELD: LAND IS THE BELLY OF MAN

By Co. Erasga

Telus Studio Theatre in the Chan Centre for the Performing Arts at UBC

– – –

When
Alvin Erasga Tolentino was in the process of creating Field 1, eyebrows
were raised in the Philippines. Even the Filipino choreographer who
commissioned Tolentino was concerned about an outsider, who had lived
in North America for years, creating a dance work about rice, a food
staple utterly central to the way of life in the Philippines.

Tolentino,
however, was confident, trusting his intuition. On a trip home to the
country of his birth five years ago, he realized he had to find a way
to synthesize the years he spent learning ballet and modern dance in
Canada with the memories and feelings he had from growing up for the
first 12 years of his life in the Philippines.

“I had a huge, huge need to turn to my roots,” Tolentino said in an interview.

“I
was just beginning to understand who I was. So, I literally went back
to Asia to see where I came from and what was happening there.

“It
was an eye opener for me. I really began to formulate in the structure
of my creation and my choreography about what it is like to integrate
that background, those roots, into what I know and into what I have
been transformed into in the Western world.

“Field is the result.”

Tolentino
is performing his reworked version of Field: 1, called Field: Land is
the Belly of Man, at the Telus Studio Theatre in the Chan Centre for
the Performing Arts at the University of B.C. tonight and Sunday.
Tonight's performance is pay-what-you-can in honour of International
Dance Day; Sunday's performance is a gala benefit at $50 a ticket for
the Multicultural Helping House Society.

After this weekend's
performances, Tolentino takes Field: Land to Toronto, Quebec City,
Montreal and Winnipeg. In August, Tolentino will be performing Field:
Land in the Philippines as well as in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

The
multicultural and international journey of Field: Land started in
Tolentino's birthplace, Quezon City, part of sprawling metropolitan
Manila. As a youngster, he performed in traditional Filipino folk
dancing in elementary school but said one of his strongest memories of
dance was watching an aunt dance flamenco when he was five or six years
old.

The move from Asia to North America occurred because of his
mother, Zenaida, who arrived in Saskatoon to work as a seamstress. But
it took only one visit to Vancouver to convince her that West Coast
winters were preferable to the cold and snow of the Prairies.

In
Vancouver, Alvin, the eldest of three, attended Notre Dame high school.
Before graduation, he told his parents he wanted to leave the West
Coast to study dance at one of the country's centres of modern dance. On a
trip east, he visited Toronto and went to New York and Montreal, where
he immersed himself as much as possible in the world of modern dance.