Category Archives: Asian Canadian Cultural Events

Have an Asian Heritage Month Long Weekend – Check out these events around town and at the Children's Fesitval

There are many many things to do on a rainy wet Vancouver weekend…
including celebrating the rain at the Children's Festival by wearing
your “welly's” and carrying your “brella.”

Check out the many events at explorASIAN
festival celebrating Asian Heritage Month.

National Acrobats of Taiwan
Vancouver International Children's Festival
Sunday 12:00 pm

Monday 3:00 pm
Vanier Park, Vancouver

BC BUDS: A SPRING ARTS FAIR
Lots of FREE events all weekend!
THE FIREHALL ARTS CENTRE
280 East Cordova Street, Vancouver

SENSES
ongoing until June…
The Centre for Performing Arts, 777 Homer, Vancouver
see my opening night review

Past ExplorAsians, Present Explorations
Chinese Canadian Genealogy
Saturday
9:30 am to 4pm
Vancouver Public Library – Alma van Dusen Room

Harry Wong
Vancouver International Children's Festival
Saturday 11am
Sunday 3pm
Vanier Park, Vancouver
I met Harry last year when he did his 5 Elements show with Rick Scott – Wonderful performance!

Drookpa: A Celebration of Mongolian and Tibetan Culture
Saturday 1:00 pm
Roundhouse Community Centre (181 Mews, Vancouver)

explorWORD – Reading Series

Featuring Lydia
Kwa, Sook Kong, Fiona Lam, Chris Gatchalian, Rita Wong, Rupinder Sohal
Saturday 7:00 pm
Our Town Café (96 Kingsway, Vancouver)

One World Taiko
Saturday
8:00 pm
Vancouver East Cultural Centre

– featuring my friends Qiu Xia He and Andre Thibault from Silk Road Music

Vancouver International Children's Festival
Sunday 12 pm
Vanier Park, Vancouver

Kahurangi Maori Dance Theatre

Dazzling Maori dance from ambassadors of the South Pacific.
Vancouver International Children's Festival
Saturday 11am
Sunday 4pm
Monday 11am
Vanier Park, Vancouver

Joy Kogawa readings for May 24th and May 28th in Vancouver

Joy Kogawa at VPL May 24th

for One Book, One Vancouver premiere event

Here are details from the Vancouver Public Library website about the One Book One Vancouver program featuring Joy Kogawa.

Joy will also do a reading for Asian Canadian Writer's Workshop
May 28 7:00 pm

explorWORD – Reading Series

Our Town Café 96 Kingsway, Vancouver

Featuring Mishtu Banerjee, Joy Kogawa, Hanako Masutani, Alexis Kienlen, Glenn Deer

Obasan is a powerful and moving story of Japanese Canadians during the Second World War, told through the
eyes of a child, Naomi. Surrounded by hardship and pain, Naomi is protected by the resolute endurance of her aunt,
Obasan, and the silence of those around her. Only after Naomi grows up does she return to question that haunting silence.

Until
September, Vancouver Public Library is presenting a variety of special
events, author readings, and discussions to bring the book alive and to
explore its many ideas. Please see our One Book Upcoming Events page for details.

 

 

 

 

 

Premiere Author Reading with

Joy Kogawa

Tuesday, May 24

7:30 p.m.

Central Library (350 W. Georgia St.)

Alice MacKay Room (Lower Level)

(part of our special Library Square at 10 celebration!)

 

 

explorWORD: Red Silk Anthology – South Asian Women Poets

explorWORD – RED SILK POETRY – May 16, 17, 18 – 7:00pm

May 16, 17, 18
7:00 pm at all locations

explorWORD – RED SILK POETRY Reading Series

Program sponsored by CANADA POST CORPORATION

Featuring the launch of Red Silk: An Anthology of South Asian Women
Poets, with Rishma Dunlop and Priscila Uppal, (eds.) Hiro Boga, Kuldip
Gill, Sonnet LAbbé, Danielle Lagah, Sharanpal Ruprai,Sandeep Sanghera,
Shauna Singh Baldwin, Proma Tagore; and special guest Mani Rao. And
readings by South Asian Fiction Writers: Anar Ali, Jaspreet Singh,
Sikeena Karmali.

As rich and exuberant as its title, Red Silk, an anthology of poems
by women who identify as South Asian, is an important contribution to
the growing body of South Asian Canadian literature. Ably edited by
Rishma Dunlop and Priscila Uppal, with a superb “Introduction,” Red
Silk launches some powerful South Asian female, and feminist, voices on
the Canadian literary scene.

These poets explore the complexity, diversity and heterogeneity of
South Asian Canadian identity by examining their relationships, as
women, to the South Asian cultures that they live in their bones,
memory and daily lives. These poems enact how an ordinary household
object, a word, a smell, a gesture, can all trigger a cascade of
memories and responses soaked in cultural significance, and mark one as
South Asian. Drawing on the deep well of South Asian cultural memory
and its semiotic treasure house, these poets redefine and expand both
Canadian culture and Canadian literature.

Experience Red Silk Readings in Vancouver, Burnaby, and Richmond:

May 16 – Vancouver Public Library – Main Branch

May 17 – Simon Fraser University, Burnaby – WAC Bennett Library

May 18 – City of Richmond – City Hall Council Chambers

Sketchoff!#$%!!: Vancouver Asian Canadian Theatre- 3rd Anual Asian Sketch Comedy Competetion

Here's an press release from my
friends at Vancouver Asian Canadian Theatre re: upcoming 3rd Annual
Asian Sketch Comedy Competition.

This is a VERY funny event.  They make jokes about Asian culture
and stereotypes that all Asians can relate to… even if you are White,
it still relates to that little Asian voice inside of
everybody…  they even make jokes about White people and White
culture.  Is nothing sacred anymore?

Cheers, Todd
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

For Immediate Release
NEWS RELEASE

North America’s premier Asian Sketch Comedy Trophy up for grabs again in Vancouver
SKETCHOFF!#$%!! – 3rd Annual Asian Sketch Comedy Competition

VANCOUVER, BC (April 30, 2005) – The trophy? It’s the coveted VACT Rice
Bowl. The event? Sketchoff!#$%!!: Ha Ha HA! – the 3rd Annual Asian
Sketch Comedy Competition. When is the rumble? May 27th and 28th. And
the stadium where tears and laughter will be shed? The Roundhouse
Performance Centre in Yaletown.

Once again, 3 teams of North America’s finest “hyphenated-Asian” comedy
talents come to Vancouver to compete in the world’s only Asian sketch
comedy challenge. Hosted and produced annually by Vancouver Asian
Canadian Theatre (VACT) during the Asian Heritage Month celebrations,
this event has treated sold-out audiences to some of the most hilarious
and innovative sketch comedy routines, blending pure laughs with North
American ethnic diversity and cultural insight.

The two-time winner, LA OPM, from Los Angeles, took the Rice Bowl
trophy to the Oscars ceremonies, will be challenged this year by two
Canadian teams – Toronto’s The Kupps, made up of Second City veterans
and Vancouver’s own Assaulted Fish, freshly netted from their
performance at Sketchfest 2005.

Celebrity judges will jury the teams on Friday, May 27th, where the
winner will be awarded the coveted Rice Bowl trophy. On the following
evening, Saturday May 28th, the audience members themselves will choose
the winning team who will receive the People’s Choys Award. All teams
are allowed to replace or rework any of their sketches from the
previous evening. So expect the pandering to be shameless for this
award.

The host this year will be Tom Chin, with a special guest performance by stand-up comedian Jeffery Yu.

Also a part of this weekend of celebration, VACT will be hosting at the
Roundhouse a public demonstration and discussion workshop on sketch
comedy on Saturday May 28th at 4:00 PM. Billed as Meet The Mockers, the
3 teams will be available to take questions from the audience and
provide insights into their process and their careers. Admission is
free.

For more information on each team, please visit http://www.vact.ca

Event Details
Sketchoff!#$%!!: Ha Ha HA! – 3rd Annual Asian Sketch Comedy Competition
@ Roundhouse Performance Centre
Davie & Pacific Blvd., Vancouver

Dates and Showtimes
Friday May 27    8:00 PM (Rice Bowl trophy)
Saturday May 28    8:00 PM (People’s Choys Award)

Ticket prices
$17 advance at the Roundhouse (in person or by phone: 604-713-1800)
$20 at the door

Note:  14A; some coarse language and sexually suggestive material.

Free public workshop and Q & A session
Meet The Mockers
4:00 PM
@ Roundhouse Performance Centre
Davie & Pacific Blvd., Vancouver
Free admission (donation recommended)

Media passes available. Please RSVP to Joyce Lam at the e-mail address or phone number listed below, no later than May 17.

VACT (Vancouver Asian Canadian Theatre) aims to produce quality plays
in which Asian-Canadians take on culturally or artistically significant
roles. VACT works to dispel Asian stereotypes by producing leading
and/or supporting roles where Asian-Canadians are depicted
realistically in the performing arts.

-30-

For photos, interviews with the performers, and media passes, please contact:
Joyce Lam, President, Vancouver Asian Canadian Theatre
T:  778-885-1973    E:  joyla@shaw.ca

SENSES opening night photos at Centre in Vancouver for Performing Arts


Here are some reviews and FANTASTIC photos taken on
opening night for SENSES May 13th, 2005

Kris and Roland really captured the light, movement
and costumes in this incredible production.

Check out my opening night Also check out Kris Krug's short comments
and his FANTASTIC photos

Roland Tanglao's Review

Roland's photo's SENSES 1
& also at SENSES 2

REVIEW: Senses featuring Tang Jia Li – Dennis Law's new musical at the Centre in Vancouver for Performing Arts

I had never heard Puccini performed in Mandarin Chinese before. We saw
the opening show for SENSES at the Centre in Vancouver for Performing
Arts tonight. Very different – and yet strangely a fusion of Eastern
and Western culture but pushing the boundaries of what we have
generally accepted as traditional multiculturalism. Dr. Dennis Law is
again pushing the expectations of the audience's comfort zone, as he
has previously done with Heaven and Earth and Terracotta Warriors.

Cultural expectations and perceptions of Chinese art and Chinese women
clash and collide with Western sensibility and Asian sensibility.
Stereotypes are broken and reinforced. The familiar is made strange and
the strange is made familiar. Remarkable that all can be done within a
multi-arts presentation with high production values .
It was a combination of Chinese classical dance, Chinese folk dance,
Western and Chinese music. The costumes are almost always 
beautiful but sometimes exotically tacky. Many are influenced and
inspired by Chinese historical fashion, while others seem very
post-modern and fastasy-oriented.

The Western music is drawn from well-known  classical music by Puccini,
Massenet and others, and sung in Mandarin Chinese.  Of course when the
originals are sung in Italian, French or German, I never understood
them anyways.  But the singers conveyed the emotional content of the
songs, and the themes of love found and love lost, and so translated
the meaning through their presence and projection.

The show was divided into 4 separate parts with a single
intermission in the middle. Part One was inspired by the Tang Dynasty –
one of the cultural high points of Chinese history, followed by Part
Two which was inspired by the Modern Period. Part Three followed the
intermission and was inspired by the Ching Dynasty, which was the last
dynasty before it was overthrown by the Republican revolution in the
early 1900's. This was followed by Part Four, inspired by the future.


Throughout each “period”, the music featured a combination of Western
music with Chinese lyrics, chinese folk songs, and original Chinese
music, Chinese classical dance or contemporary choreography. Sometimes
the costumes and dancing seemed tackily inappropriate like a Roger
Vadim movie, sometimes they were beautifully breathtaking, as was the
dancing. Sometimes the music seemed overly sacharine like Muzak or
Andrew Lloyd Webber, but sometimes it was lyrically beautiful.


Senses is meant to be an impressionistic expression of Chinese
Womanhood, exploring different aspects but heavily on the sensual and
beautiful. There are an abundance of revealing costumes that show off
the female form. Some flow like beautiful silken clouds, while the
dancers' costumes for the Modern Age are garish, an imitation of
cut-out cowboy riding chaps in chiffon, revealing red panties. This
combined with the provative poses was very distracting, and while it
might seem to be more at home in a burlesque show, it brought to my
mind a comparison of the costumes and choreography of the recent Ballet
BC's production of Rite of Spring, which was itself extremely sexual.
It is my belief that costumes are used to accentuate and enhance the
performance, however this production is also using costume designs to
make statements.

It is a challenge to see beyond the cultural veils of expectations and
expression. Is what we are seeing truly based on Chinese song and
dance? Is this what is going on in contemporary China, Hong Kong or
Taiwan? Or is it pushed to the next level, mixed and fused with Western
conceptions and production values?

In Vancouver, we haven't really seen the top Chinese ballet dancers
yet, as China is probably wary of defections. When Max Wyman came to see Terracotta Warriors he told me that the
Russian Ballet Masters greatly influenced the Chinese schools in the
late 1800's and early 1900's. While at the same time the Chinese used
their grand history of acrobatics and traditional dance to also
influence their forms of classical ballet. What we saw in SENSES was a
combination as dancer Tang Jia Li, incorporates both acrobatic form
with Chinese classical dance into something very stunning and
beautiful.

The revealing costumes question whether Women's Liberation and issues
of male objectification of females has entered the Chinese sensibility,
or is it only now that the female body and its art is being liberated
from the bondage or male oppression dictated by bound feet, restrictive
clothing and patriarchy?

Altogether, SENSES is an very enjoyable show. It is an ambitious show that
at times is overwhelming by trying to include a bit too much of
everything. The dancers parading as chorus girls contrasted greatly
with the high quality of the pas de deux. The sacharine sweet orchestration
contrasted with the vituosity of the solo singing or instrumental solos.

In its larger-than-life moments, featured dancer Tang Jia Li flies
through the air in a harness, lifted by almost invisible wires. She
strikes poses that make it seem effortless with incredible muscular
control.

In the final scene, the onstage musicians play in the
background, while a pas de deux is performed, while above them, lifted
into the air – standing on platforms, two singers perform a duet. What
does it have to do with each other? Nothing, except it all adds up to
visual spectacle. It is a feast for the visual senses. And that is what
the show aspires to.
more reflections later….

 

Senses: featuring Tang Jia Li – The New Show at the Centre in Vancouver for Performing Arts

I had never heard Puccini performed in Mandarin Chinese before. We saw
the opening show for SENSES at the Centre in Vancouver for Performing
Arts tonight. Very different – and yet strangely a fusion of Eastern
and Western culture but pushing the boundaries of what we have
generally accepted as traditional multiculturalism. Dr. Dennis Law is
again pushing the expectations of the audience's comfort zone, as he
has previously done with Heaven and Earth and Terracotta Warriors.

Cultural expectations and perceptions of Chinese art and Chinese women
clash and collide with Western sensibility and Asian sensibility.
Stereotypes are broken and reinforced. The familiar is made strange and
the strange is made familiar. Remarkable that all can be done within a
multi-arts presentation with high production values .
It was a combination of Chinese classical dance, Chinese folk dance,
Western and Chinese music. The costumes are almost always 
beautiful but sometimes exotically tacky. Many are influenced and
inspired by Chinese historical fashion, while others seem very
post-modern and fastasy-oriented.

The show was divided into 4 separate parts with a single intermission
in the middle. Part One was inspired by the Tang Dynasty – one of the
cultural high points of Chinese history, followed by Part Two which was
inspired by the Modern Period. Part Three followed the intermission and
was inspired by the Ching Dynasty, which was the last dynasty before it
was overthrown by the Republican revolution in the early 1900's. This
was followed by Part Four, inspired by the future.


Throughout each “period”, the music featured a combination of Western
music with Chinese lyrics, chinese folk songs, and original Chinese
music, Chinese classical dance or contemporary choreography. Sometimes
the costumes and dancing seemed tackily inappropriate like a Roger
Vadim movie, sometimes they were beautifully breathtaking, as was the
dancing. Sometimes the music seemed overly sacharine like Muzak or
Andrew Lloyd Webber, but sometimes it was lyrically beautiful.


Senses is meant to be an impressionistic expression of Chinese
Womanhood, exploring different aspects but heavily on the sensual and
beautiful. There are an abundance of revealing costumes that show off
the female form. Some flow like beautiful silken clouds, while the
dancers' costumes for the Modern Age are garish, an imitation of
cut-out cowboy riding chaps in chiffon, revealing red panties. This
combined with the provative poses was very distracting, and while it
might seem to be more at home in a burlesque show, it brought to my
mind a comparison of the costumes and choreography of the recent Ballet
BC's production of Rite of Spring, which was itself extremely sexual.
It is my belief that costumes are used to accentuate and enhance the
performance, however this production is also using costume designs to
make statements.

It is a challenge to see beyond the cultural veils of expectations and
expression. Is what we are seeing truly based on Chinese song and
dance? Is this what is going on in contemporary China, Hong Kong or
Taiwan? Or is it pushed to the next level, mixed and fused with Western
conceptions and production values? In Vancouver, we haven't really seen
the top Chinese ballet dancers yet.


When Max Wyman came to see Terracotta Warriors he told me that the
Russian Ballet Masters greatly influenced the Chinese schools in the
late 1800's and early 1900's. While at the same time the Chinese used
their grand history of acrobatics and traditional dance to also
influence their forms of classical ballet. What we saw in SENSES was a
combination as dancer Tang Jia Li, incorporates both acrobatic form
with Chinese classical dance into something very stunning and
beautiful.


The revealing costumes question whether Women's Liberation and issues
of male objectification of females has entered the Chinese sensibility,
or is it only now that the female body and its art is being liberated
from the bondage or male oppression dictated by bound feet, restrictive
clothing and patriarchy?

Altogether, SENSES is an enjoyable show. It is an ambitious show that
at times is overwhelming by trying to include a bit too much of
everything. The dancers parading as chorus girls contrasted greatly
with the high quality of the pas de deux. The sappy orchestration
contrasted with the solo singing or instrumental solos.

In its larger-than-life moments, featured dancer Tang Jia Li flies
through the air in a harness, lifted by almost invisible wires. She
strikes poses that make it seem effortless with incredible muscular
control. In the final scene, the onstage musicians play in the
background, while a pas de deux is performed, while above them, lifted
into the air – standing on platforms, two singers perform a duet. What
does it have to do with each other? Nothing, except it all adds up to
visual spectacle. It is a feast for the visual senses. And that is what
the show aspires to.
more reflections later….
http://flickr.com/photos/kk/sets/334548/
see more of Kris Krug's
 incredible pictures

Obasan is the 2005 choice for One Book One Vancouver

The 2005 choice for One Book One Vancouver is Obasan written by Joy Kogawa. 

I am really happy because I sent a letter to the OBOV committee
outlining 20 reasons why Obasan was the best choice for One Book One
Vancouver

Below is the official press release from the Vancouver Public Library!  How fitting that this is announced during Asian Heritage Month.

Here are additional links related to Obasan

Official Vancouver Public Library announcement:
http://www.vpl.ca/MDC/news05/obovann.html

20 Reasons why Obasan should be the 2005 OBOV Choice
http://www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com/blog/_archives/2005/2/17/328717.html

Save the Kogawa Homestead Page
http://www.kogawa.homestead.com/index.html

 

For Immediate Release, May 10, 2005

Vancouver Public Library Chooses Joy Kogawa's Obasan as
2005 One Book, One Vancouver Selection

(Vancouver, British Columbia) — Vancouver Public Library (VPL) has selected Joy Kogawa's Obasan as its One Book, One Vancouver selection for 2005.

Obasan is one of the most powerful books about the
Japanese Canadian experience ever written,” said City Librarian Paul
Whitney. “The story and its message about the consequences of war and
prejudice are as relevant today as they were when this book was first
released in 1981. We're delighted to introduce Obasan to some readers for the first time, and give those who've read Obasan the opportunity to rediscover the novel again.”

Obasan is a powerful and moving story of Japanese Canadians
during the Second World War, told through the eyes of a child, Naomi.
Surrounded by hardship and pain, Naomi is protected by the resolute
endurance of her aunt, Obasan, and the silence of those around her.
Only after Naomi grows up does she return to question that haunting
silence.

Joy Kogawa was born in Vancouver in 1935. She is a recipient of
numerous honorary doctorates as well as national and international
awards for her writing. She was named a Member of the Order of Canada
in 1986. Her books include four volumes of poetry, one children's
book-Naomi's Road-and three novels: Obasan, Itsuka, and The Rain Ascends.

“I cannot begin to say what it means to me to have Obasan chosen for the One Book One Vancouver
project,” said Ms. Kogawa. “This honour belongs to the
Japanese-Canadian community. I wish with all my heart that every single
person who has ever known what it is to be cast out and despised, could
share in Obasan's happy return. Thank you for the welcome home.”

Joy Kogawa will make her first One Book, One Vancouver author appearance on Tuesday, May 24 at 7:30 p.m. in the Alice MacKay Room at the Central Library, 350 West Georgia Street, as part of the launch of Library Square at 10, the Central Library's 10th anniversary celebration. Between May and September 2005, One Book, One Vancouver
will feature a wide variety of programs created to encourage discussion
and bring the themes of the book to life. Watch for details at
www.vpl.ca.

One Book, One Vancouver is an award-winning book club for
the entire city, designed to create a culture of reading and discussion
in Vancouver by bringing people together around one great book. The
program aims to encourage people to read, create a common topic of
conversation and create opportunities to engage people in reading and
discussion about a variety of topics.

One Book, One Vancouver is presented by Vancouver Public
Library with support from Penguin Group (Canada), the Vancouver Opera,
32 Books, and media partners CBC Radio One, CBC Radio Two, Word on the
Street, and The Vancouver Sun.

– 30 –

For more information contact: Marya Gadison
Coordinator of Marketing & Communications
Vancouver Public Library
Phone: 604-331-3681

explorTHEATRE: Tiger of Malaya by Hiro Kanagawa @ Richmond Gateway Theatre

Tiger of Malaya

8:00 pm
Gateway Theatre, Richmond

Tiger Of Malaya

By Hiro Kanagawa
British Columbia Premiere

May 5 – 14, 2005

In
1945, General Tomoyuki Yamashita faces trial for war crimes. While
professing innocence, he requests the military privilege of death by
firing squad. Two reluctant Americans assigned to his defence insist
they can and must prove the charges unconstitutional.

Starring: Hiro Kanagawa, Donna Soares, William MacDonald, Alex Ferguson, Maiko Bae Yamamoto

Directed by: Rachel Ditor

Creative team: Barbara Tomasic, Samara Van Nostrand, Phillip Tidd, Rebekka Sorensen, Gillian Wolpert, Andy Horka,

Skye Fowler, Kaye Luym

Some shows are already sold out so book early! For tickets call the Gateway box office at: 604-270-1812

“…an impressive debut and the best new play at Factory in some time.” –Robert Cushman, The National Post

“…absorbing, thought-provoking…” –Stewart Brown, Toronto Sun

“…fascinating
as a play…sensitive to the density of the historical story and the
poetry of the personal…” –Tom McSorley, CBC Ottawa

“With
his skilled and stirring play, Kanagawa has demonstrated he is an
important new voice in Canadian theatre.” –Catherine Lawson, Ottawa
Citizen

Link: http://www.gatewaytheatre.com/

RETURN TO HOME PAGE

explorWORD: Scripting Aloud with Charlie Cho & Grace Chin

Here's an announcement from Charlie Cho –
one of the funny guy writers behind the Hot Sauce Posse + Grace Chin, a
very funny writer and e-mailer.

Enjoy – Todd

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

Thirtysomething, pseudo-single, and sorta
loving it – a twist brings Jessy and Ray together on a crowded downtown
Vancouver street corner, but how lucky does this chance encounter turn
out to be?


 
To find out, you're invited to SCRIPTING ALOUD:
an “intimate and interactive” evening of readings, performances
and Q&A featuring the first public reading of Twisting Fortunes, a
six-part comedic radio drama by Charlie Cho and Grace Chin on Saturday,
May 14, at O
ur Town Café (96 Kingsway @
Broadway).

Also featured are works by members of
the gut-busting, acerbic comedy group Hot Sauce Posse, and Kathy Leung,
writer of the Leo-nominated short film Lily's Crickets.

The evening is part of the explorWORD Reading Series for explorASIAN 2005
– celebrating Asian Heritage Month in Vancouver.

Hope to see you at Our Town on May 14, and at other venues throughout
Asian Heritage Month!

– Charlie Cho and Grace Chin
 
————————————
 
explorASIAN information:
http://www.explorasian.org/
 
All explorWORD Reading Series events:


explorWord – Reading Series – May 14 – 7pm

Location:  Our Town Café – 96 Kingsway, Vancouver
SCRIPTING ALOUD: An evening of dramatic and comedic readings and
performances
featuring works by Charlie Cho and Grace Chin; members of the Hot Sauce
Posse; Kathy Leung; and guests.


explorWord – Reading Series – May 14 – 1:30 – 5:00pm

Location: Strawberry Hill Library 7399 – 122 Street, Surrey 
SILK ROAD JUNCTION: The caravan of Silky Surrey Stanza has reached
“Korea – India Junction” Ashok Bhargava is your host and guide.
Come to experience through Indo-Korean dance, music and poetry, how a
sixteen year old Princess from India traveled to Korea two thousand years
ago to marry King Kim Suro. Featuring Bong Ja Ahn, Park Hae Jung, Regina
Choi, Mani Rao, Emily Chu, Manga Basi, and Chung Hye Seoung.