Category Archives: Multicultural events

Toddish McWong in Vancouver's Pride Parade

Toddish McWong in Vancouver's Pride Parade



Toddish McWong finds a fellow kilt wearer at the Vancouver Pride Parade – photo E. Harris/T. Wong collection


I had never ever before attended Vancouver's Pride Parade, let alone actually be in the parade. 

But I admit… I'd thought about it before. 

Each year Vancouver Library Workers union CUPE 391 participates in the Pride parade.  This year, I thought it would be good to go out and join fellow co-workers – especially during the strike.

While I am straight… I have supported Gay-Lesbian issues on a number of community fronts, especially in my past  roles with student newspapers, when I once was a regional human rights coordinator for Western Region, Canadian University Press.



CUPE 391 Pride parade participants… Janis (front), Ross, Catherine, Todd and Electra – photo T. Wong collection

It was good fun walking with fellow Vancouver library workers, some I have known for years and years, and some whom I met brand new.  One librarian had only worked four shifts with VPL, before we went on strike, and yet she still came out to join the CUPE 391 delegation for the Pride Parade.

We met on Robson Street, with other CUPE locals and other unions.  Our parade number was 31, just behind the official City of Vancouver delegation with the mayor and other city councillors at number 27.



CUPE 391: Ross with cowboy hat, Janis with child in stroller, Electra with tutu, Sophie with hand bag – photo T. Wong

While past library participants had created the now legendary “book buggy brigade” in which they took book trucks and wheeled them in formations similar to the RCMP musical ride… we simply walked along with the group flow.  Ross danced along waving the CUPE BC flag.  Electra held out bubbles for children to blow.  It was a parade.  It was a happy time.  And it was good to be able to participate.

Afterwards, somebody asked me if I was afraid that people who saw me in the parade might think that I was gay.  I said I wasn't.  The parade is about celebrating diversity… well more sexual diversity rather than ethnic or cultural diversity.  But is still about diversity, human rights and respect. 



Pride parade '07… Does this guy think he is supposed to be Chinese? He isn't short enough! photo T. Wong

Maybe next year will see an official Gung Haggis Fat Choy parade entry.  I have put a Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat float in the first three years of Vancouver's St. Patrick's parade, since the Celtic Fest Vancouver people originally asked me to be involved as a way of helping the parade be multicultural.  Hmmm… a dragon boat float in the Pride parade?  Since 1997, I have coached gay paddlers and lesbian paddlers on my teams.  Do you think Vancouver is ready to handle a parade entry full of “Dragon Boat Queens?”



Toddish McWong carrying a CUPE flag in the Pride Parade – photo E. Harris for T.Wong collection


see my Pride pictures at:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/53803790@N00/sets/72157601262211104/

Redress Express comes to Centre A – bringing art and examination about Canada's racist past

Redress Express comes to Centre A – bringing art and examination about Canada's racist past

What is the Redress Express, and what does it have to do with racism?

2007 is a significant year for anniversaries in Asian-Canadian history:

1907 – 100 year anniversary of the Chinatown riots by the Anti-Asiatic League

1947 – the end of the Chinese Exclusion Act and the beginning of franchise rights including voting for Canadians of Chinese ancestry.

1957 – Canada's first Chinese-Canadian MP elected to Parliament – Douglas Jung

1967 – Changes in immigration law, making it more fair and accessible for Chinese immigrants.

1997 – Hong Kong turnover to China

1996 – 1st year anniversary of federal apology and promise of redress payments for the Chinese Head Tax.

Centre A, brings together an exciting program working with community groups and artists.  Here is what Ron Mah had to say about the weekend's events.

Redress Express Symposium ( 01 & 02 August )

– Sid Chow Tan  is now an “Artist” after his brief 5 minute talk & 10 minute video presentatsion of the journey of Head Tax Redress;  Hank Bull (curator plus) stated that “If Sid's  video isn't art, then I don't know what is!”

– Victor Wong
had an excellent talk on Head Tax & Redress


  titled “True Grits, Kwan Gung and Luck:
The Inside Stories of the Head Tax Redress Campaign”

– Many excellent national speakers
of academia and the arts provided


  varied views from many perspectives providing an
interesting program.


– filming of the first day
was done by both ACCESS, FEARLESS TV


  and also by the Symposium.


-Henry Yu,
graciously, organized a delicious 10 course Retro period


 Chinese Canadian Restaurant Dinner.  Fortunately, I was sitting next to Henry
and Karin Tam who were also at the same table.  They had both researched and provided  the chefs with the specific customized dishes that is not normally on their menus.  It was fun, filling and informative.

-Centre A
is now transformed into a retro Chinese Canadian Restaurant for


 the next 5 weeks by Karen Tam but no food is served.  This is a must see


 free installation.


-Karin Lee's
Friday evening outdoor showing at the Chinese Night  Market was
just
starting and I saw myself for a brief second in the short produced by


 the women's dragon boat team Genesis.


-Sean & I
networked and partied till  2am and 3am until  Karen Tam had to


 catch her 6am flight back home to Montreal.  The Saturday night party was


 great: lots of fun and jamming and all round opportunity for future collaboration
with the whole group.

-Thanks to Alice Ming Wai Jim, Henry Yu and Victor Wong for making this happen for us.

from the Centre A website:

REDRESS EXPRESS

In conjunction with:
2007 Anniversaries of Change (http://www.anniversaries07.ca)
Powell Street Festival (August 4-5, 2007, http://powellstfestival.shinnova.com)
explorASIAN (Vancouver Asian Heritage Month, http://www.explorasian.org).

Patron: Anndraya T. Luui

EXHIBITION
Date: August 3 to September 1, 2007
Venue: Centre A, 2 West Hastings Street
Opening: Friday, August 3, 7pm, Centre A, 2 West Hastings Street

SYMPOSIUM
Date: August 2-3, 2007, 10am to 5pm
Location: Chinese Cultural Centre, 555 Columbia Street
Co-sponsors:
Gail & Stephen A. Jarislowsky Institute for Studies in Canadian Art
at the Department of Art History, Concordia University, the University
of British Columbia, and Emily Carr Institute for Art + Design + Media
(Click here to download the symposium program and abstracts)

Free admission

The
exhibition “REDRESS EXPRESS: Chinese Restaurants and the Head Tax Issue
in Canadian Art” features recent photography, video and installations
by five Chinese-Canadian artists: Gu Xiong (Vancouver), Shelly Low
(Montreal), Ho Tam (Victoria, BC), Karen Tam (Montreal), and Kira Wu
(Vancouver). It is held in conjunction with the two-day symposium
“REDRESS EXPRESS: Current Directions in Asian Canadian Art and Culture”
which brings together over twenty scholars, community activists,
cultural organizers, and artists from many disciplines to consider
current and future directions in Asian Canadian art and culture. The
REDRESS EXPRESS project is curated by Alice Ming Wai Jim and
accompanied by a colour catalogue with additional graphic illustrations
by Joanne Hui (Montreal).

As a whole, the REDRESS EXPRESS
project is an attempt to examine the current politics of
representation, redress and recognition in Canada as they relate to
art, activism, identity and geography. The call for redress has long
been the bookends for Asian Canadian critiques of Canada's racist past.
The recent victory of the redress campaign for surviving Chinese head
tax payers and their spouses and its inevitable effects on the current
politics of reparation and representation in this country, however,
presents another challenge: to ensure an ongoing, rigorous treatment
these issues demand in political, cultural and educational sectors.
With the host of 2007 anniversaries of historical dates significant to
Canadians and Asian Canadian communities in particular celebrated this
year, this provision of critical texts in contemporary discourse and
practice and the broadening of understanding to address cross-cultural
perspectives and realities remains imperative.

Dim Sum with Olivia Chow in Vancouver

Dim Sum with Olivia Chow in Vancouver


Olivia Chow and Todd Wong (center) with Barry Morley (left) and Mary-Woo Sims (right) – photo Todd Wong Collection

Olivia Chow came to Vancouver, ditched husband Jack Layton, and attended Meena Wong's monthly Dim Sum networking lunch at Rich Ocean Restaurant.  Actually, Jack Layton attended the Pride brunch, as Jack and Olivia attend Pride parades across Canada.  Meena has known Layton and Chow from her time living in Toronto, and is now continuing to handle communications and community building in Vancouver's Chinese language community for the NDP.  I've known Meena since 2002, when soon after arriving in Vancouver, she came to help volunteer for Asian Heritage Month events organized by explorASIAN.


Meena Wong and Olivia Chow addressing 40 people at Rich Ocean restaurant on Saturday- photo Todd Wong

The crowds came out to welcome Olivia to Vancouver.  Libby Davies MP for Vancouver East, dropped in to say hello.  COPE organizer Mel Lehan and his wife attended. Victor Wong, executive director of the Chinese Canadian National Council was in town.  Sid Tan, Sean Gunn and Ron Mah of the Chinese Head Tax Families Society attended.  Even Faye Leung dropped in.  In all there were about 40 people.

I had a nice chat with Olivia.  Meena had seated us at the same table.  I knew she would be interested in hearing about the CBC documentary Generations: The Chan Legacy.  And she was also very interested to learn more about Gung Haggis Fat Choy – which she would love to attend, if and when I bring my Robbie Burns Chinese New Year dinner to Toronto.


Olivia joins Vancouver's head tax descendants for a picture: standing: ??, Mary, Ron Mah, Olivia Chow, Sid Tan, Faye Leung, Todd Wong; sitting: Sid Wong, Sean Gunn, Victor Wong (executive director of Chinese Canadian National Council) + head tax redress supporter  Mary-Woo Sims.

The federal NDP was the first national party to recognize the
importance of redress for Chinese Canadian head tax issue.  Olivia
recognized that it was Margaret Mitchell who first brought the issue to
Canadian Parliament in 1984.  Olivia also supported the calls for Chinese Head Tax redress, as head tax became an issue in the 2006 federal election.  She also supports and inclusive redress that would honour every head tax equally, not just for the surviving head tax payers and their spouses, but also the head tax certificates that were left in the hands of the daughters, sons and grandchildren when the original head tax payers couldn't live to see the federal apology by Prime Minister Stephen Harper.

Powell Street Festival 2007

Powell St. Festival 2007 – Always lots to see and do!


Is this Todd Wong?  He's wearing a Gung Haggis Fat Choy shirt and he's
Chinese-looking…  I tlooks like he's hawking haggis won-ton…

Noooo!!!!  It's Todd's friend Walter Quan… and he is holding up his
famous sushi and won-ton cnadles that he sells at the Powell Street
Festival every year.

Lots to see and do at the Powell Street Festival
Great arts, entertainment, history and culture displays.  It integrates
traditional and contemporary Japanese-Canadian cultures with the
Downtown Eastside and the historic sites of Japantown.

Generations: 100 Years in Alberta – on CBC Newsworld

Generations: 100 Years in Alberta – on CBC Newsworld

  7:00 p.m PST. Generations: 100 Years in Alberta
– Marking the Alberta centennial through the story of a Lebanese immigrant family.
Generations: 100 Years in Alberta
  10:00 p.m.
PST
Generations: 100 Years in Alberta
– Marking the Alberta centennial through the story of a Lebanese immigrant family.
Generations: 100 Years in Alberta

It's Wednesday… and time to start another episode of CBC's new documentary series of Canadian history told through the experiences of a family's generations.  100 Years in Alberta is the 5th episode of this incredible series which started with my own family history – The Chan Legacy which began when Rev. Chan Yu Tan arrived in Canada in 1896.

You may have heard of CBC's hit show “Little Mosque on the Prairie,” a comedy about an inter-racial Muslim couple raising their inter-racial daughter in a small prairie town, where the new town doctor is a nice Muslim boy from Toronto.  That was fictional – Generations: 100 Years in Alberta is the real thing.

Check out the story from the www.cbc.ca/documentaries/generations website.

August 1, 10 pm ET/PT, August 5, 10 am ET, August 26, 7 pm ET

The Hamdon/Shaben family dates to the turn of the last century when
two Lebanese peddlers came to Alberta to seek a better life. Ali Hamdon
became a fur trader in Fort Chipewyan. Saleem Shaben opened a general
store in Endiang. Decades later, their two families became one through
a marriage, and a mosque.

The Hamdons
Hilwie and Ali Hamdon

Hilwie Hamdon, Ali Hamdon's wife, found it difficult to raise
her children as Muslims in small town where no others practiced their
faith. So, eventually, the family moved to Edmonton, and in the midst
of the Great Depression, Hilwie helped raise money from Muslims all
over Alberta and Saskatchewan, to build Canada's first mosque, in
Edmonton in 1938. The Shaben family, attracted by the mosque, also
moved to Edmonton, and when Saleem Shaben's granddaughter married Ali
Hamdon's son the families became relatives and business partners. Larry
Shaben, Saleem's grandson, developed an interest in politics and became
the first Muslim cabinet minister in Canada when he was sworn into the
government of Peter Lougheed.

Today, the great grandchildren of those Muslim pioneers are
contributing in their own way to building a better Alberta and a better
world.

Produced and narrated by Jim MacQuarrie.

True patriot Love: North Shore News article on Todd Wong, Betty Wong and Tracey Hinder re: The Chan Legacy

True patriot Love: North Shore News article on Todd Wong, Betty Wong and Tracey Hinder re: The Chan Legacy

http://www.canada.com/northshorenews/news/live/story.html?id=281951b4-4181-4c68-a39b-5e5855445271

True patriot love

Family proud of its Canadian heritage

Erin Mcphee,
North Shore News

Published: Sunday, July 29, 2007

– Generations: The Chan Legacy is re-scheduled for August 19, on CBC Newsworld at 4 p.m. PST / 7pm EST

Three generations of the Chan family: Tracey Hinder (left), Betty Wong and Todd Wong look over their family's impressive legacy.

Three generations of the Chan family: Tracey Hinder (left), Betty Wong and Todd Wong look over their family's impressive legacy.

NEWS photo Mike Wakefield

To say that Todd Wong, a 47-year-old North Vancouver resident, is proud of his roots would be an understatement.

Wong's
family is one that has greatly impacted Canada's history and as a
result its members continue to celebrate where they come from.

Wong's
ancestors arrived on the West Coast from China in 1896 and were able to
integrate into Canada despite the many barriers that existed. Inspired
by that impressive past, today, the Chan family, one of the oldest on
the West Coast, continues to thrive with its new generations working
hard to keep their legacy alive.

“We're just a Canadian family,”
says Wong, not downplaying his family's identity, but rather stating,
realistically, who they are.

Not only has the Chan family survived, its members are continuing to thrive, exemplifying what it means to truly be “Canadian.”

Wong's
family's unique story is being brought to life in Generations: The Chan
Legacy, a CBC documentary airing today on CBC Newsworld. It's part of a
series of documentaries called Generations and was produced by Halya
Kuchmij.

Filmmakers approached Wong, known in the Lower Mainland
for his unique interest in multiculturalism, community work and
activism. He's the founder of Gung Haggis Fat Choy, a website promoting
inter-cultural activities.

Wong is also behind a 10-year-old
Vancouver tradition, the Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner — a mix
of Chinese and Scottish traditions meant to play against racial
stereotypes — and he's a member of the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon
boat team that further promotes multiculturalism and community spirit.

Wong's
website site also details his adventures, told at times through his
alter ego, “Toddish McWong,” further celebrating what it is to be
Canadian, he says.

The documentary discusses Wong's great, great
grandfather Reverend Chan Yu Tan and how he and his wife came to the
West Coast in 1896 to “spread the gospel” throughout, he says.
Methodist church missionaries, they were tasked with “Westernizing” and
“Christianizing” the Chinese pioneers, the majority working in
labour-based jobs like the railroad.

Filming and interviews with Wong and his relatives, encompassing a number of generations, happened last fall.

“Before
the documentary, I didn't know a lot about my ancestry,” says Wong's
second generation cousin, West Vancouver resident Tracey Hinder, 15,
who's featured in the film. Hinder attends West Vancouver secondary.

“I
only knew that I was Chinese-Canadian, that my mother was Chinese and
that my father was British-Canadian. With the making of the
documentary, I found that my family history started to unfold and I
never knew that part of myself. It was absolutely fascinating,” Hinder
says.

Hinder is a member of her school's multiculturalism club,
which organizes activities for students to participate in. She's also
learning Mandarin.

Wong says he's proud of her as he believes
it's important to ensure the younger generations of his family come to
know and recognize their ancestral roots.

Read More:

Hip, Hapa and Happening: What to do in intercultural Vancouver this weekend.

Hip, Hapa and Happening:  What to do in intercultural Vancouver this weekend

My computer mother board tanked my computer time yesterday… so articles are down to a bare minimum this week, as I also head up to Vernon for the 3rd Annual Greater Vernon Dragon Boat Races.

Check out:

Enchanted Evenings summer concert series at the Dr. Sun Yat Sen Chinese Classical Gardens in Vancouver Chinatown.  This is a great way to spend a Friday evening with great musicians in an intimate setting.

Dr. Sun Yat Sen Chinese Classical Gardens.
578 Carrall St. between Pender and Keefer.

July 27

Vancouver Chinese Ensemble

The Ensemble presents to the public an eclectic repertoire that
embraces popular and traditional Chinese music as well as Western
classical and contemporary compositions.

Go see COWBOY VERSUS SAMURAI at the Firehall Arts Centre

July 20 – August 3, 2007
put on by Vancouver Asian Canadian Theatre.

I went on opening night with 15 members of the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team and we all really enjoyed it.

Cowboy Versus
Samaurai is a multicultural re-telling of the Cyrano de Bergerac story,
that was retold and reset in Nelson BC, in the Steve Martin movie
“Roxanne.”  This time prepare for a Western setting of Wyoming –
complete with cowboys and samaurais. I will be writing a review from
the opening night performance.  Check out the following press releases,
and check out the website
www.vact.ca

ALL OVER THE MAP

Outdoor dance and music series
Ron Basford Park, Granville Island
Sundays at 2pm
FREE
July 29th


Feel it!  
Tango Paradiso and dancers

http://www.newworks.ca/alloverthemap.html

Last week I ended up on stage learning Celtic dancing to Punjabi-Celtic fusion music.
Barbara Clausen of New Works has created a wonderful culturally interesting summer series of dance, music and fun.  Tango Paradiso is exciting… Wish I could be there…  I started learning to play tangos on my accordion when I was 12 years old.

Toddish McWong learns Irish Step Dancing on Granville Island

Toddish McWong learns Irish Step Dancing on Granville Island

I went paddling in a marathon canoe with Gung Haggis paddler Art
Calderwood. We heard celtic fiddle music as we paddled into Alder Bay
behind Granville Island. And of course I had to check it out.

Imagine our surprise to discover the Violet Moore Irish Dancers on stage with Delhi 2 Dublin – with Kytami fiddling away!  

I
had attended the first Delhi 2 Dublin event at the 2006 Celtic
Festival, and loved the energy that Kytami brought to the stage. Delhi
2 Dublin blends celtic fiddle tunes with bhangra beats, and they performed at the Alcan Dragon Boat Festival in 2006.  Here's my story about my first Kytami/Delhi 2 Dublin experience:
my first Kytami/Delhi 2 Dublin experience on St. Paddy's Eve.

When
they asked for audience volunteers to learn ceil dancing for Bridge of Athlone…. I was there! So was Gung Haggis paddlers Steven Wong who
had been sitting in the audience. It was great fun, learning to Irish
step dance. We shall have to organize a ceil dance party for Gung
Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team, food and social club.

After I stepped off the stage and outside the Performance Works building, I met the New Works producer Barbara Clausen, who had hired dancer/choreographer Andrea Nann to do some workshops in Vancouver last year.  I love Andrea…  She worked with author Michael Ondaatje and choreographed some dances based on his works for explorASIAN in 2003.  Andrea came and performed a dance for the Save Kogawa House Nov 12 Special Concert awareness event at the Vancouver Public Library in 2005.  I think it would be fun to work together with Barbara Clausen on a Gung Haggis Fat Choy type of project.

Barabra hasput together and incredible array of Sunday events at Ron Basford Park on Granville Island as part of New Works “All Over the Map” Dance and music series.  Two weeks ago our dragon boat team paddled by Granville Island and hear the Japanese Taiko drums of Uzume Taiko.

Next up for “All Over the Map”:

July 29th – Feel It!
– Tango Paradiso Ensemble with Dancers
August 12th – Shake it!
– Guinean Dance and Music with Kocassale Dioubate and friends
August 19th – Hit it!
– Traditional Indonesian Dance and Music in partnership with the Consulate General of the Republic of Indonesia.

Kilts and family history abound during two episodes of the 6-part Generations series on CBC Newsworld

Kilts and family history abound during two episodes of the 6-part Generations series on CBC Newsworld

Find
out what a 250 year old Anglophone family in Quebec City and a 120 year
old Chinese-Canadian family in Vancouver have in common.

Both have:
bagpipes and kilts
+ accordion music
+ canoe/dragon boat racing
+ immigration as a topic
+ Church music
+ archival photos/newsreels of an ex-premier
+ cultural/racial discrimination stories
+ prominent Canadian historical events to show how
   the families embraced them or were challenged by them
+ both featured saving a historical literary landmark.
+ younger generation learning the non-English language

Generations: The Chan Legacy features Todd Wong, founder of Gung Haggis Fat Choy, a quirky Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner, which inspired a CBC Vancouver television performance special.  Todd's involvements with Terry Fox Run, Joy Kogawa House campaign and dragon boat racing are also shown.

July 29th 4pm PST / July 30th 12am

4:00 p.m. Generations: The Chan Legacy
– Missionaries from China come to the West Coast help Westernize Chinese immigrant workers in the late 1800's.
Generations: The Chan Legacy

August 5th 4pm PST

4:00 p.m. Generations: The Blairs of Quebec
– An Anglophone family with 250 years of history in Quebec City struggles to maintain it's heritage.
Generations: The Blairs of Quebec


July 4, 10 pm ET/PT, July 8 10 am ET, July 29, 7 pm ET
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 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 and his wife Wong Chiu Lin 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. 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, Reverend Chan's granddaughter Helen Lee, grandson
Victor Wong, and great grandson Gary Lee recall being barred from
theaters, swimming pools 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.

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 Michelle Cheung.

July 11, 10 pm ET/PT, July 15, 10 am ET, August 5, 7 pm ET

For
250 years, the Blair family has been part of the Protestant Anglophone
community of Quebec City. The Anglophones were once the dominant
cultural and economic force in the city, but now they are a tiny
minority, and those who have chosen to stay have had to adapt to a very
different world. Louisa Blair guides us through the story of her
family, which is also the story of a community that had to change.
Ronnie Blair
Ronnie Blair

The
senior member of the family today is Ronnie Blair. He grew up in
Quebec, but like generations of Blairs before him, he worked his way up
the corporate ladder in the Price Company with the lumber barons of the
Saguenay. Ronnie Blair's great grandfather came to the Saguenay from
Scotland in 1842. Ronnie's mother was Jean Marsh. Her roots go back to
the first English families to make Quebec home after British troops
defeated the French on the Plains of Abraham in 1759. The Marsh family
amassed a fortune in the shoe industry in Quebec City.

The
Marshes and the Blairs were part of a privileged establishment that
lived separately from the Catholics and the Francophones, with their
own churches and institutions. The Garrison Club for instance, is a
social club that is still an inner sanctum for Quebec's Anglo
businessmen.

Blair family
The Blair family

Work took Ronnie Blair and his family to England in the 1960’s but his
children longed to return to Canada, and to Quebec City. Alison Blair
was the first to return, as a student, in 1972. Her brother David
followed in 1974. Both were excited by the political and social changes
that had taken place during the Quiet Revolution in Quebec and threw
themselves into everything Francophone. David learned to speak French,
married a French Canadian and settled into a law practice.

Then
came the Referendum of 1995, a painful moment in the history of the
Anglophone community, and for the passionate Blairs. But David decided
he was in Quebec to stay, and today his children are bilingual and
bicultural. More recently his sister Louisa also returned to Quebec
City and a desire to rediscover her past led her to write a book
called, The Anglos, the Hidden Face of Quebec. Her daughter is also is
growing up bilingual and bicultural, representing a new generation
comfortable in both worlds.

Produced by Jennifer Clibbon and Lynne Robson.

Stuart Mackinnon, Gung Haggis dragon boat paddler, off to China to do presentation on Norman Bethune

Stuart Mackinnon, Gung Haggis dragon boat paddler, off to China to do presentation on Norman Bethune


Stuart Mackinnon with musician Michelle Carlisle of the Halifax Wharf Rats, at Kilts Night event – 1st Thursday of each month at Doolin's Irish Pub – photo Todd Wong

Stuart Mackinnon joined the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team and social club in March this year.  He quickly became an enthusiastic convert to dragon boat culture, fitness and camaraderie.  “Mr. Mackinnon,” as he is known to his students at Killarney Secondary School in Vancouver, was so excited about dragon boats and seeing junior teams in the community that he decided to sponsor and manage  brand new dragon boat team for for Killarney students –  the Killarney Cougar Dragons even won 2nd place medals at the Alcan Dragon Boat Festival for the debut entry.
   
Back
row: Steven Wong (coxswain), Deborah Gee, Irene Peng, Linda Chen,
Michele Shi, Taylor Yee, Sally Chan, Dipa Barua, Eddie Ha, Cherry Chen,
Garry Ly, Wayne Li, and Garvin Pang.


Front row: Mr. Mackinnon (Manager/coach), Chi Hsi, Justin Yee, Christine Chin (den mother), Aleck Pham and Justin Chow.




Stuart has been a great asset to our team.  He embraces both the Chinese and Scottish sides of our personality… and is also fiercely Canadian.  Since joining the team he has bought a kilt, and will be featured in a ZDF television feature on the German public television documentary about multiculturalism in Vancouver featuring the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team. It will air in December 2007 across Europe. Stuart is also now a regular at our kilts night events at Doolin's Irish Pub.

Below is a Vancouver Sun story about Stuart's trip to China.  We are all very proud and supportive of Stuart.

Canadians pay homage to Bethune

http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/news/westcoastnews/story.html?id=87d5e5cd-7aa7-4069-80be-94b0a61c2bc9

Educators, teachers will fly to China today and follow in the footsteps of the revered doctor

Kelly Sinoski,
Vancouver Sun –
Published: Monday, July 16, 2007

More
than 200 Canadian educators will fly to China today to pay homage to
fellow countryman Dr. Norman Bethune, who is considered a national hero
and martyr.

The 222 educators, teachers and administrators will
follow in the footsteps of Bethune — all the way to his tomb in
Shijiazhuang, where a statue, museum and hospital are dedicated to him.

The
Canadian-born Bethune, who died from an infection in China in 1939,
aided the Chinese against the Japanese invasion in 1938 and became a
Communist.

He
was so revered in China that Chairman Mao Zedong made an essay
documenting the final months of the doctor's life required reading by
the Chinese population.

“I'm getting very excited,” said Stuart
Mackinnon, a teacher at Vancouver's Killarney secondary. “I like the
idea of a Canadian hero away from home; that really tickles me.

“Everyone in China knows Bethune. Even the lowest of the lowest peasants who aren't well educated say, 'Oh Canada — Bethune.'”

The
visit to the tomb is part of a 19-day trek to China, which starts with
the second annual Sino-Canada International Educational Exchange Forum
in Beijing.

Mackinnon, a speaker at the forum, said honouring
Bethune, a “selfless contributor to society,” fits well with the theme
of this year's forum: what role does civic and social responsibility
play in our education system?

“We're trying to tie in Norman
Bethune and other heroes; people who had a strong conscience and sense
of responsibility,” he said.

“I believe we can strengthen our ties with China by celebrating this historical figure, common to both of our histories.”

The
forum is aimed at bringing Canadian and Chinese educators together to
discuss issues in public education and sign friendship and exchange
agreements. Mackinnon said the Chinese are interested in modernizing
their education system and want to learn some techniques in place here
to churn out more critical thinkers.

The trip will include stops in Beijing, Shanghai, Xian and Lhasa, Tibet, along with visits to rural villages and schools.

“This is a way of meeting with the people and sharing with them,” Mackinnon said.

The educators are paying their own way, with Mackinnon paying about $5,000 for the trip.

The
Tianjiao International Education Group, a private Canadian-based
company specializing in travel for education and exchange between China
and Canada, is sponsoring the forum and has negotiated discounts for
hotels and flights.

Company spokesman James Zhan said Tianjiao
has spent about $10,000 on renting the forum space. The Chinese
Education Bureau is also spending $10,000 for the Chinese participants,
he said.

Zhan said Chinese choirs will sing in Beijing and at the
memorial in tribute to Bethune, who is “the great pride of friendship
between the two countries.”

“He is a Canadian who is so much respected in China,” he said. “His spirit is really good.”

ksinoski@png.canwest.com