Category Archives: Multicultural events

imaginASIAN” Bedtime Stories Collection 2007 – Part 2

imaginASIAN” Bedtime Stories Collection 2007 – Part 2


From the explorASIAN website:



Due
to popular response, we have extended the imaginASIAN program to the
end of May in celebration of Asian Heritage Month in Canada.

We
invite Canadians of all ages and ethnic backgrounds for their original
bedtime stories that weave together both Asian and Canadian culture.

“imaginASIAN”
seeks to generate a new legacy collection of fun, witty, and
imaginative bedtime stories for all Canadian children and in particular
those of Asian background.

Created as part of the 2010 Arts
Now program, the goal of the “imaginASIAN” Bedtime Stories Collection
is to celebrate the unique experience of Canadians of Asian descent.

We
hope these new bedtime stories will help to strengthen family bonds,
instill pride in young people’s cultural identity, and help to further
greater understanding between the ethnic communities. In addition,
Ricepaper Magazine seeks to revitalize the storytelling tradition and
to stimulate creative writing in children and adults as part of an
overall desire to improve literacy and reading skills in these
communities.

The story criteria are as follows:
– Language: English
– Subject matter: must be suitable for children aged 5 and under
– Must feature at least one prominent Asian character
– Story should be between 300 to 1000 words in length (no images or graphics)
– Submissions should be created in electronic form in TEXT or MS WORD format
– Submissions should be sent by email to: imaginasian@ricepaperonline.com

The submission deadline for imaginASIAN is May 31, 2007 (Part 2)

A
selection of qualified stories will be posted on these websites:
Ricepaperonline.com, CBC.ca, and explorASIAN.org. Some of the stories
will also be selected to be featured and read on CBC Radio One and at
the explorASIAN festival celebrating Asian Heritage Month in May 2007.
A selection of the best stories will be published in 2007.

Presented by the Asian Canadian Writers’ Workshop and Ricepaper Magazine.

Sponsored by CBC Radio One, explorASIAN, and Vancouver Public Library.

The imaginASIAN Bedtime Stories Collection is made possible with the financial support of Arts Now.

For more details, please visit our website at http://www.ricepaperonline.com/imaginasian

Richard Rodriquez, author of Brown: “The Last Discovery of America” speaks at UBC

Richard Rodriquez, author of Brown: “The Last Discovery of America” speaks at UBC

The
following announcement has been sent to me from Glenn Deer, Assistant
Professor of English, University of British Columbia. 

It's
funny how I just read about Richard Rodriquez, and wished that I could
have attended a talk that he just gave in town…. Well, thanks to
Glenn Deer sending me this announcment of upcoming talks by
Rodriquez… I guess I can!

Glenn has been teaching Asian
Canadian literature in his courses.  He is a head tax descendant,
and knows of my interests in interculturalism and racial
identies.  Glenn is also a supporter of my Gung Haggis Fat Choy
Robbie Burns Chinese New Year dinners.

Richard Rodriguez,
author of Hunger of Memory (1982), Days of Obligation (1992), and
Brown: The Last Discovery of America (2002) will give two presentations
at UBC on April 25th. These talks are free and open to the
public.  (Please distribute this notice to others who might
be interested in attending.)

“On Being Brown: Identity and Impurity in North America”

Wednesday,
April 25th, 3:30 p.m.
at the Buchanan Penthouse,
University of British Columbia.
 
“Writing the World: The Essayist Within the Americas”

Wednesday, April 25th, 7:30 p.m. at UBC Robson Square (Campus Level),
HSBC Hall.
 

Richard Rodriguez (B.A. Stanford, PH.D., Berkeley)
is the author of an acclaimed autobiography — Hunger of Memory (1982)
— along with two other books that explore Mexican American identity,
multiculturalism, family life, language, and literature, including Days of Obligation:
An Argument with My Mexican Father (1992) and Brown: The Last Discovery
of America (2002). He has written regularly for publications like
Harper's and The Los Angeles Times, and his works have been honoured with
many awards, including the Frankel Medal from the National Endowment for
the Humanities and the International Journalism Award from the World
Affairs Council of California.

Richard Rodriguez's visit has been made possible through the
generous support of the American Consulate General in Vancouver and, in
particular, the support of Indran Amirthanayagam, Public Affairs Officer
for the Consulate. This visit is also sponsored by the UBC Department
of English.

Bilingual book launch: Finding Memories Tracing Routs, Chinese Canadian Family Stories

Bilingual book launch: Finding Memories Tracing Routes, Chinese Canadian Family Stories


Author
Dan Seto holds a copy of the original Finding Memories Tracing Routes,
Chinese Canadian Family Stories anthology collection.  In the
picture on the right, he is signing copies at the book launch. 
Dan is also a member of the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team.

Tuesday, April 17, 7:30 PM, the bilingual edition of Finding Memories,
Tracing Routes, Chinese Canadian Family Stories will be launched at the
Vancouver Public Library.  Please come meet the authors and translators
of this very unique contribution to Chinese Canadian history. Copies of
this bilingual edition will be available for sale that evening. http://www.vpl.vancouver.bc.ca/cgi-bin/Calendar/calendar.cgi?isodate=2007-04-17 .

See my pictures and stories from the original english language book launch

“Finding Memories, Tracing Routes:” CCHSBC book launch BIG SUCCESS for Chinese Canadian Family Stories

Pictures from Tartan Day Eve – at Doolin's Irish Pub

Pictures from Tartan Day Eve – at Doolin's Irish Pub

The Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team joined the Tartan Day Eve ceremonies at Doolin's Irish Pub on April 5th.  It was a special kind of kilts night.  The team also took part in a kilt fashion show, and scotch tasting.  We also watched the Vancouver Canucks lose to Colorado. 


Todd Wong in Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team shirt, Fraser Hunting tartan with Raphael Fang wearing a black leather kilt.


Christine Van, promotions manager of Doolin's grabs the dragon boat paddle and joins the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team. (l-r) Wendy, Deb, Todd, Tzhe, Keng (front), Gerard (back) and Stuart.

http://www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com/blog/GungHaggisdragonboatteaminformation2007
photos/_archives/2007/4/13/2879250.html
Our Gung Haggis kilt wearers: Keng, Gerard, Tzhe, Stuart and Todd – photo Deb

Piper Rob Macdonald with mini-kilted ladies with bunny tails for Easter – photo Deb Martin

Hip, Hapa and Happening – check out Uzume Taiko and First Nations Magic Flute

Hip, Hapa and Happening for April 6/7
– check out Uzume Taiko and First Nations Magic Flute: Quest for the Box of Shadows

If I was in Vancouver this weekend.  I would have been at the Paco Pena flamenco concert last night.  I seen Paco twice in concert when he presented Misa Flamenco – a musical mass written for flamenco.  Last night was the North American premiere of  Requiem Flamenco: In Praise of the Earth.  See  In praise of Paco PenaGlobe and Mail – 6 Apr 2007

For this weekend – two key intercultual performances to see – Uzume Taiko and Vancouver Opera's Touring ensemble Magic Flute.
    

Uzume Taiko is a Vancouver based musical group that performs Japanese Taiko drums but also makes contemporary Canadian music, sometimes with bagpipes!  Always a staple at the Powell Street Festival, Uzume Taiko never fails to delight.  They perform this weekend on April 6 and 7 at the Norman Rothstein Theatre in Vancouver.   Uzume Taiko is preparing for an upcoming tour to Germany.  check out this article about Uzume Taiko in Pacific Rim Magazine Online.

Earlier this year, Vancouver Opera opened their most expensive endeavor, a First Nations themed The Magic Flute performance of Mozart's masterpiece.  But last fall, the Vancouver Opera Touring Emsemble had already been taking a 45 minute adaptation to schools throughout BC.  Both productions successfully interwove First Nations stories and mythology into the story that was already heavily themed with magic and spiritual discovery, based on Free Mason philosophy which Mozart had learned.  Read my review GungHaggisFatChoy :: Vancouver Opera's Magic Flute: A journey …

“Two young people search for meaning in their
world and discover the value of family and community. Tamino, wanting
to prove his worthiness to his father, goes on a quest to recover a box
of shadows from the Wild Woman of the Woods. He meets the beautiful
Pamina who is on her own quest to find her family. Along the way,
they're helped by Gak the Raven, Gibuu the Wolf, and of course, one
magical flute.”

Magic Flute: Quest for the Box of Shadows performs at Firehall Arts Centre, 2pm,  Saturday April 7 & Sunday April 8. 
It is FREE – but you must reserve tickets by phoning Firehall Arts Centre 604-689-0926
280 East Cordova St.

Deadlines for explorASIAN Festival – May is Asian Heritage Month

Deadlines for explorASIAN Festival
– May is Asian Heritage Month

Following is a community announcement for explorASIAN

explorASIAN 2007 Festival Website Event Listings –
deadline April 13

If you are conducting a relevant workshop, lecture,
seminar, discussion,

forum, or exhibiting or performing during the month of
May 2007, we can list

your event on our festival website giving your event
significant exposure.

All we ask in return is that you place our
“explorASIAN” web banner on your

website with a link back to www.explorasian.org to help promote
our

community festival.

Please email the event details as
follows:

1. Your contact information, e.g. name, mailing address, phone,
fax, email,

website
2. Name of the event, location, date and time, ticket
info, admission fee

3. Indicate if the event is for “FAMILY” or “YOUTH (16+)
or “ADULT (19+)”

audiences
4. Artist biography and/or project
description

5. Any supporting photo and/or graphic image in JPG file
format

Due to space limitations, we reserve the right to edit your
submission

without additional notice to you. As this is a free service, we
reserve the

right to refuse any listing which does not meet our festival
programming

qualifications. A paid web advertisment option is
available.

Download our logos and banners at http://www.explorasian.org/downloads.html

Email your event submission to: info@explorasian.org
DEADLINE:
April 13, 2007

Tartan Day clebebration at Doolin's for Kilts Night

Tartan Day clebebration at Doolin's for Kilts Night

Bill
C-402 in parliament is an independant private member's bill wants to
proclaim April 6th – National Tartan Day in Canada – to celebrate
Scottish-Canadian's contributions to Canada.

Every 1st Thursday we celebrate Kilts Night at Doolin's Irish Pub in
Vancouver, at Granville & Nelson.  So… we will be having a
grand celebration this Thursday. 

And sometime in the evening… look for Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon
boat team members wearing kilts for a “Dressed to Kilt” fashion show!

The following message is from Christine Van – the Vietnamese-Canadian promotions manager at Doolin's.


Hope to see you here on Thursday, April 5th for the National Tartan Day and Kilt Night.
It
will be tons of fun this year Scotch tasting, Beer tasting Highland
dancers, Pipers, and the last regular season home game Canucks vs
Colorado. 

Party kick off at 5pm

Halifax Wharf Rats usually play from 9pm -1am

 image

Harper and Conservatives say “No Apology” for First Nations residential schools.

Harper and Conservatives say “No Apology” for First Nations residential schools

The New Government of Canada is breaking a promise that
was made to First Nations peoples by the former Liberal government of
Canada.  Gee…. I would hate to say that the Canadian government
speaks with a forked tongue, or that the Canadian government is an
indian giver.”  But aside from falling into ironic derogatory stereotypes, I
think it's a mistake if Harper and the Conservatives must really think
that it isn't worth wooing First Nations votes for the next election,
at the cost of losing votes from all Canadians who actually believe in
truth, honour and good government.

After giving an apology for the racially motivated Chinese Head Tax
that was designed to deter Chinese immigrants from coming to Canada
after Chinese helped to build the Canadian transcontinental railway
that helped to bring European settlers to BC, thus displacing Chinese
workers already in BC – but not apologizing for the even worse Chinese Exclusion Act
that banned Chinese immigration and separated families from 1923 to
1947, Harper and the Conservative government agreed to give ex-gratia
payments to surviving head tax payers and spouses – but not
descendants, even though 99.9% of the original head tax payers and
99.7% of the original spouses had already died.

After handing Maher Arar over to the US government who gave him to the Syrian government to be tortured, and after the resignation of the top RCMP commissioner Giuliano Zaccardelli,
the government gave Arar an apology and a $12 million settlement
because they said that's the appropriate amount if the case went to
court.

Even 19 years after the Mulroney Conservative government gave an
apology and redress to the Japanese Canadians who were interned and had
their property confiscated during WW2… only after the US government
first compensated Japanese-Americans were only interned (no property confiscation) – and allowed
to return to their homes following the war (Japanese Canadians were not).

Why is the Canadian government refusing to give an apology and compensation to First Nations residential school survivors?

The residential schools forcibly broke up families, and refused to
allow them to speak their native language to each other.  Twenty
years ago, I listened to Chief Joe Matias of the Capilano Band speak
about being sent to residential school, and not be allowed to go home
at any time – even though home was just down the street.  They
used to speak to family members by yelling from windows, and then they
would be punished for doing that.  The residential schools
destroyed First Nations culture and families, in a manner similar to
the Potlatch Act which forbade First Nations peoples from attending
potlatch ceremonies in BC – a cultural and social institution. 
These laws paved the way to forced assimilation into Canadian culture,
or was it actually the road to cultural genocide? 

This is why so many First Nations peoples developed a negative
self-identity in the early to mid 20th Century, similar to Asian-Canadians.  If
you practiced non-British cultures in Canada, it was
non-Canadian.  Okay, in a British colony, maybe practicing German,
Ukrainian, Jewish, French or Italian traditions wasn't cool.  But
it was looked upon as worse if your culture was South Asian, Chinese or
Japanese.  But isn't it even far more cruel to impose rules on a
culture that lived here for a hundred generations before British
invaders even arrived in a land yet to be called Canada?

These are the kinds of incidents that make you embarrassed to be a
Canadian… especially with the 140th Anniversary of Confederation to
be celebrated in 2007.  It's bad enough that PQ leader André Boisclair
was still making “slanting eyes” comments during the Quebec provincial
election.  I guess he isn't a “real Canadian” who believes in
mutual respect, Canadian history, multiculturalism and inclusiveness.

There are many articles and editorials from mainstream newspapers and
magazines calling on the government to make an apology and more. 
Here are links to some of them, plus an editorial from the Toronto Star.

globeandmail.com: No residential school apology, Tories say

Macleans.ca – Canada – National | No residential schools apology
 

Toronto Star
March 28, 2007

This country and its governments wronged early Chinese immigrants
with an odious head tax, for which the government of Prime Minister
Stephen Harper has now apologized and paid compensation.

This country and its government wronged Canadian citizen Maher Arar by aiding the U.S. government, which sent him to Syria to be imprisoned and tortured. For that, the Harper government apologized and paid compensation.

This country and its government also wronged native Canadians for
more than two decades, starting in 1874, when it forcibly removed
native children from their homes and placed them in residential
schools, where they were not allowed to speak their own language and
where many of them suffered sexual and physical abuse.

While the Harper government is ready to pay compensation, it won't
apologize on behalf of Canadians. Indeed, Indian Affairs Minister Jim
Prentice said this week the government has nothing to apologize for.

In adopting this position, Harper and Prentice have broken a
commitment made in 2005 by the previous Liberal government to apologize
to the victims.

Honouring such moral commitments ought to be just as important after
a change in government as the obligation is to honour previous
government's accumulated debt.

More fundamental, however, is the glaring flaw in Prentice's argument for why no apology is necessary.

Because “the underlying objective (of residential schools) had been
to try and provide an education to aboriginal children,” Prentice
claims, “the circumstances are completely different from Maher Arar or
also from the Chinese head tax.”

That is like saying the ends justify the means, an unpersuasive
argument when the means involved tearing apart native families, as well
as widespread abuse.

The Harper government should apologize for this stain on Canada's
history which, in the pain and suffering it created, is every bit as
shameful as the treatment of the Chinese migrants and Maher Arar.

http://www.thestar.com/printArticle/196609

Seattle Gung Haggis Fat Choy Seattle: Scots-Americans enjoy a big success for a first initiative south of the border!

Gung Haggis Fat Choy Seattle: Scots-Americans enjoy a big success for a first initiative south of the border



Toddish McWong meets
Seattle “Gung Haggis” couple Rory Denovan and Becca Fong.  Rory is
Scottish-American and Becca is Chinese-American… and they are a
lovely couple! – photo courtesy of Becca Fong.

Tiny pieces of red firecracker paper
litter the entrances of Chinese restaurants, as I walk down the streets
of Seattle's International District.  Darn!  I had just
missed the local Lion Dances, part of the Chinese New Year
celebrations, meant to bring good luck to the restaurants.  There
were pieces of lettuce scattered on the sidewalk too.  If the Lion
accepts the restaurant's gift of lettuce, good luck will come to the
restaurant.

I see a man in a kilt walk accross the street and enter the Ocean City
restaurant at 609 S. Weller St.  A kilt in Chinatown? 
Definitely a strange site.  It bemuses me. 
I look at the all four story building. 
There are two stories capable of holding banquets + parking levels
below.  Tonight, the top floor will host the first annual Gung
Haggis Fat Choy Seattle event.

Inside I quickly find Bill McFadden, organizer of this event.  Two
months ago, Bill phoned me and said he would like to co-create a Gung
Haggis Fat Choy event in Seattle.  He wanted to recognize my
creation and bring me down to Seattle to create a benefit dinner for
the Caledonian and St. Andrew's Society of Seattle – funds raised to go
to the North West Jr. Pipe & Drums, in their quest to attend the
World Championships in Scotland.

My musician friends Harry Aoki and Max Ngai are already inside setting
up.  Harry is an octogenarian survivor of the Japanese Canadian
internment camps who plays harmonica, Chinese shung-like instrument,
and double bass (which we left in Vancouver because it wouldn't fit in
my car).  Max is an Australian born Chinese who moved to Canada at
age one, who loves to play Celtic violin.  While I have played
with Harry on occasions since 2003, and Max has played many times with
Harry – the three of us, have never played together before.

People were filing into the restaurant in anticipation of the
event.  I meet Don Scobie and Jesse Bishop, of the duo Bag 'N'
Pipe Hoppers – this duo busks in Seattle with contemporary hip hop
sounds.  Jesse wonders if the many elderly looking people dressed
in traditional Scots kilts and skirts know what they are in for tonight.
Meanwhile, the drone of bagpipes could be heard in the distance.



Max Ngai on violin, Harry Aoki on harmonica and Todd Wong on accordion. -photo Becca Fong

The event started with a performance by the North West Junior Pipes and Drums.

more later

Kyoto Journal: Multicultural Webfinds – a story about Gung Haggis Fat Choy!

Kyoto Journal: Multicultural Webfinds
– a story about Gung Haggis Fat Choy!



Kyoto Journal
is a non-profit quarterly magazine based in Kyoto, it's objective is to
present throught-provoking perspectives from Asia.

Author/moderator Jean Miyake Downey has written: 


GUNG
HAGGIS FAT CHOY: Asian-Celtic Robbie Burns New Year with Toddish McWong
in Vancouver – Turning the “East-West Dichotomy” Inside
Out

http://www.kyotojournal.org/10,000things/098.html

Jean moderates the feature called 10,000 Things which is a Buddhist expression representing the dynamic
interconnection and simultaneous unity and diversity of everything in
the universe.


Somehow she thinks Gung Haggis Fat Choy fits into this
perspective.  Jean and I have exchanged e-mails, and she wrote the
following piece based on our conversations and what she found on www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com

GUNG
HAGGIS FAT CHOY: Asian-Celtic Robbie Burns New Year with Toddish McWong
in Vancouver – Turning the “East-West Dichotomy” Inside
Out


When Asian Eyes are Smiling
Sure, 'tis like the morn in Spring.
In the lilt of Asian laughter
You can hear the angels sing.
When Asian hearts are happy,
All the world seems bright and gay.
And when Asian eyes are smiling,
Sure, they steal your heart away…

This
song, especially when sung by a Chinese- or an Irish- or a Japanese-
or a Scottish- or a Korean- or a First Nations- or a Filipino- or African-
or Arab or Mexican- or Ukrainian-Canadian tenor, or all of the before-mentioned
hyphenalities in one person, always brings tears to my eyes. A twist
on the musical tribute to Ireland, “When Asian Eyes are Smiling”
has become one of Vancouver's anthems hailing the intercultural fusion.

A groundbreaking leader in this global movement, Canadian activist and
bon vivant Todd Wong does more than mix food, song, and fun from Scottish,
Chinese, and many more cultures in his annual celebration of Vancouver's
intercultural fusion — the annual Gung
Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese New Year
, now in its
tenth anniversary. With acute wit and humanity, he challenges essentialist
descriptions of culture, subverts the usual ways of thinking about differences,
and consciously creates a space that embraces everyone:

“Gung Haggis Fat Choy does more than mix East and West. It blends
them together and turns them upside down and shakes them out sideways.
It highlights Canada's Scottish and Chinese heritage and pioneers. It
breaks down barriers and is an impressive forum for the emerging intercultural
Canada where everybody can claim and celebrate Chinese and Scottish
culture and everything in-between.

Expect great cultural fusion music between East and West, as Scots musicians
play Chinese music and Chinese musicians play Scottish music… and
everything in between and beyond!”

Scheduled between the Gregorian calendar New Year's and the Chinese
lunar New Year, and incorporating the birthday of Scottish poet Robert
Burns, this hybrid New Year's celebration is a valentine to Vancouver's
intercultural community, and proudly serves the “world's first
haggis shrimp dumplings, haggis spring rolls, haggis-stuffed tofu???
in addition to the now famous haggis won ton! For all the non-haggis
lovers there will be: lots of vegetarian food…tofu appetizers, deep-fried
tofu, tofu with vegetables, tofu hot pot, tofu with taro, tofu-stuffed
haggis, and tofu pudding…”

The Gung Haggis Fat Choy has morphed into an ever-increasing series
of creative events — a GHFC festival at Simon Fraser University, a
GHFC World Poetry Night, featuring Robbie Burns' fierce poetic manifesto
on human equality, “A Man's a Man For All That,” and a Dream
Dragon Dance.

A fifth-generation descendant of the Reverent Chan Yu Tan, a Christian
minister who emigrated from China to Canada in 1896, Wong celebrates
his extended family's mix of Scottish, French and other European cultures,
and First Nations, as well as Chinese.

A documentary,
A TRIBE OF ONE
chronicled his cousin Chief Rhonda Larabee's
discovery of her previously obscured
First Nation heritage
and subsequent resurrection of the
Qayqayt band, long considered a vanquished tribe, until she insisted
the Canadian government recognize her status as a surviving member.

Ann-Marie Metten describes Wong's road
to intercultural awakening and activism
:

It all started in 1993, when Todd attended Simon
Fraser University, home to a World Champion pipe band. When organizers
asked him to help out with the University’s annual Robbie Burns
celebrations, Todd says: “I was befuddled with the idea of a Chinese
guy (me) wearing a Scottish kilt and having to show my bare knees out
in the snow. But I quickly realized that this was my epiphany—a
true multicultural moment.”

Todd's sharp humor and energetic humanity resounds on his blog,
one of the most insightful sites for diversity commentary on the web,
and a smart, lively mix of news and activism.

A friend of fellow Vancouver resident, Japanese-Canadian novelist and
activist Joy Kogawa, he has kept an up-to-date account of the activist
movement to memorialize the Joy
Kogawa House
, which the Kogawa family lost when they were
incarcerated during the Japanese-Canadian internment. In another entry,
he reports efforts to name a park in Vancouver after globally renowned
environmentalist David Suzuki, who was also forcibly removed from Vancouver,
with his family, to a camp in the central Canadian wilderness. A story
on poet-activist Roy Miki notes that the author was awarded three prestigious
university awards (Gandhi Peace Award, Thakore Visiting Scholar, Sterling
Prize) for his 2004 book REDRESS: INSIDE THE JAPANESE CANADIANS CALL
FOR JUSTICE, and his work in the movement and commitment to the ideals
of truth, justice, human rights, and non-violence.

Paying tribute to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., who saw the connections
between the African-American movement for equal rights with worldwide
anti-colonial resistance, and continuing post-colonial movements, Todd
adds commentary about the continuing struggle by Chinese Canadians and
their supporters to rectify the damage that the Canadian government's
Chinese
Head Tax
perpetrated. The government imposed this intentional
economic barrier on Chinese immigrants to Canada, during the “White
Canada” historical period, that lasted from the mid-nineteenth
to the mid-twentieth century. During the exclusion era, early Chinese
pioneers were not allowed to bring their families, including their wives,
to Canada. As a result, the Chinese Canadian community became a “bachelor
society”. The Head Tax and Exclusion Act resulted in long periods
of separation and many Chinese families did not reunite until years
after their initial marriage, and in some cases they were never reunited.
While their husbands were struggling abroad, many wives in China were
left to raise their children by themselves, experiencing severe economic
hardship and deprivation.

Besides bringing the power of humor, food, music, poetry, storytelling
and dragon boat racing to his part in co-creating an all-embracing intercultural
society, confronting the hard issues of historical racism and contemporary
injustice, and persistent essentialist stereotyping head on, Todd blows
apart all the boring and predictable takes on multiculturalism, hybridity,
and assimilation. He asks fresh questions, reflecting wide inclusionary
views of all cultures, and deep angles into both the past and the future:

“Canada's multiculturalism has become like a display of pretty
little ethnic boxes for display. That was fine for the 1970's and 1980's.
We had to grow into it, out of our colonial past, into post-colonialism.
But what is next? Hapa-ism?

“Canada is a nation of immigrants. Some old – who think they
own the place. Some new – who think they own the place. Some brand
spanking new – who think they own the place. Where are the common threads?

“I went to see the movie “My Big Fat Greek Wedding” with
a friend who was born in Hong Kong, and came to Canada as a teen. She
sees something in the movie that is a typically Greek-Canadian immigrant
thing, such as the Greek father wanting his daughter to NOT date a non-Greek,
or spoil his son, or the Greek aunties trying to set up their un-married
niece… and my friend exclaims 'Ai-yah! Just like Chinese people.'

“The truth is that there is universality amongst all immigrants.
They want to retain their traditional practices and behaviors, as well
as a sense of identity. This is the comfort zone. If they lose it –
what do they become? Non-Greek? Non-Chinese? Non-Scottish? Do they become
American? or Canadian? What is that?

“How do we address an “evolving culture” that adjusts
with each new boat load, plane load, refugee wave?

“What is a traditional Canadian culture? What happens when the
families become culturally blended? What happens when a Chinese-Italian
marries a Persian-Quebecois or a Scottish-English-Welsh-German-Finnish-Japanese?

“And in the end… we eat… we laugh… we sing… we make love…
we make babies… and another generation begins.”