Category Archives: Multicultural events

Donna Yoshitake Wuest book launch: Coldstream: the ranch where it all began

Donna Yoshitake Wuest book launch:  Coldstream: the ranch where it all began



I have actually walked through
the old Coldstream Ranch lands, because my girlfriend's parents' house
in Coldstream is on the edge of Kalamalka Lake Park, and we often walk
in the park.




She tells me that the NDP government
turned the old ranch into parkland in the late 1970's, saving it from
becoming a resort complex located at Cousins Bay, on Kalamalka Lake.


Here is a message from the Japanese Canadian National Museum:

We invite you to attend the upcoming book launch for “Coldstream: The
Ranch Where It All Began”, and to share this information with any
friends or colleagues who might be interested.

———-

The Japanese Canadian National Museum Speakers Series presents:



Coldstream: The Ranch Where It All Began

by Donna Yoshitake Wuest

Book Launch

Thursday, October 20, 2005 7:00 PM
National Nikkei Museum & Heritage Centre
6688 Southoaks Crescent (Kingsway & Sperling), Burnaby

The Japanese Canadian National Museum is proud to present the launch of
the new publication, “Coldstream: The Ranch Where It All
Began”   ($28.95. ISBN 1-55017-343-X).

Author Donna Yoshitake Wuest will share her experiences chronicling the fascinating history of Coldstream Ranch,
located on the outskirts of Vernon, BC. Wuest grew up on the ranch,
which was home to a tight-knit Japanese Canadian community at the time.

In addition to stories of Japanese Canadians at Coldstream Ranch, Wuest
explores the role of the ranch in the history of the British Columbia
orchard and cattle industries. Join us for exciting tales of life at
one of the oldest continually operating ranches in Canada.

Admission is free.

Japanese Canadian National Museum
Tel: 604-777-7000 Fax: 604-777-7001
120 – 6688 Southoaks Crescent, Burnaby, BC, V5E 4M7
E-mail: jcnm@nikkeiplace.org Web: www.jcnm.ca

Scripting Aloud Monday Oct 17

Scripting Aloud

Monday Oct 17,
6:30pm
243 West Broadway



Animated reading of scripts – photo courtesy of Kathy Leung

Who: Scriptwriters,
performers, creative media
         industry types

When: Writer/Performer
participant sign-up/lineup @
6 pm

            Event/Audience admission @
6:30
pm

What: Event runs no later than
9 pm.

            No registration/admission
charge.

            Café stays open; participants are
encouraged
            to support our co-sponsors by purchasing
            refreshments.

            Basic audio/video equipment (if
needed)
            available.


Joyce Lam, Charlie Cho, and others reading scripts – photo courtesy of Kathy Leung
 

Scripting Aloud
is a monthly scriptreading and networking event for scriptwriters and
actors that began a limited twelve-month run August 15, 2005 at “Behind
the Scenes” (www.performingartsbooks.ca) performing arts bookstore and
coffee shop in Vancouver. The next reading is Monday, October 17, 2005.

The event generates production-ready film, television, stage and radio
scripts by or about pan-Asian Canadians. Whether you have a
script-in-hand you want to hear read; want to exercise your
interpretive performance skills through reading scripts; or have a
motivated interest in being part of a creative vibe, Scripting Aloud is
a forum for you.
 
Scripting Aloud is an initiative of Sparked, a Vancouver-based,
non-affiliated networking group of pan-Asian Canadian performing
artists and creative professionals. The current event venue is
co-sponsored by the Vancouver Asian Canadian Theatre (VACT;
www.vact.ca) group and “Behind the Scenes.” VACT is interested in producing suitable scripts workshopped through this series for its 2006 lineup.

More information and submission
guidelines below, and at

http://www.vact.ca/scriptingAloud.asp


 

Contacts

Script submissions: scriptingaloud@gmail.com

Kathy
Leung: kathy.leung@gmail.com

Grace
Chin:
intelligentlotus@gmail.com

 

Grace Chin – organizer of Scripting Aloud – photo courtesy of Kathy Leung

Below are scripts for the Oct 17th readings….


“A Matter of Truth” by Matt Yoshikazu Gates (approx. 25 p)
2 males (1 late twenties; 1 late teens/early twenties)
2 females (mid twenties)

———————————-


“Baggage”
by Jim Tallman (pp. 27-60 of 120p)
4 males (1 early thirties; 1 late thirties; 1 early forties; 1 late fifties)
5 females (1 early thirties; 2 mid thirties; 1 late thirties; 1 late fifties)

———————————–

“Blue” by Adam Mars and Azumi Ohara (11 p) * CASTING IN NOVEMBER
1 male (mid forties-mid fifties)
3 females (1 mid teens; 1 mid forties; 1 sixties-mid seventies)

———————————–


“Cheque Please”
by Kathy Leung (approx. 15 p)
3 males (thirties)
2 females (1 mid thirties; 1 fifties upward)

———————————–

“That Subtle Knot” by Mario Sasso (approx. pp. 1-25 of 50p)
4 males (1 thirties; 2 forties; 1 mid fifties)
6 females (twenties-thirties)

———————————–


“Twisting Fortunes”
by Grace Chin & Charlie Cho (approx. pp. 85-100 of 100 p)
1 male (late twenties-early thirties)
1 female (late twenties-early thirties)


CHOW: Janice Wong book launch at Sylvia Hotel

CHOW: Janice Wong has successful book launch at Sylvia Hotel

Janice Wong
wrote some stories about her father and his Chinese restaurant a few years ago as a gift for her family, and  paired them with his recipes that she had found.   Before she knew it, she had created a new genre of cookbooks.

“Janice knows a lot of people,” smiled Alicia Schlagg, Marketing coordinator for Whitecap Books. She was very pleased as author Janice Wong signed autographs and posed for pictures with family and friends.  It was a busy crowd at the Sylvia Hotel on Wednesday evening, Oct 12th.  Whitecap Books had taken over the restaurant, wine was served along with mandarin oranges, and many bouquets of unique flowers had been brought by admirers to mark this special
occasion.

I walked in and quickly spotted my grandmother, and her younger brother Dan Lee.  I greeted her cousin Josie (Janice Wong’s aunt), and Janice’s cousin Rick Lum.  These are all relatives that I had known and grown up with since I was a little boy.  At the same table sat Janice’s mother
Mary, who had flown in from Saskatoon.  I find it hard to believe that I only met Janice two months ago, when she e-mailed me looking for an e-mail list for the Rev. Chan family  descendants.

Who else did I see?  Larry Wong, now president of the Chinese Canadian Historical Association of BC.  Larry has arranged to have Janice present her book, along with Paul Yee at the Vancouver Museum on ???.  Larry will also be part of a panel discussion on growing up with chinese restaurants at the West Vancouver Memorial Library on Oct 18, where Janice Wong will present a slide show.  I will also be part of the presentation sharing my experiences of Chinese Restaurants, and the importance of Chinese food, as I have developed haggis wun-tun
and the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinners.

Janice’s book, CHOW, really is amazing.  It is filled with pictures and stories about her father, her family, the restaurant where she grew up in Prince Albert Saskatchewan.  Recipes alternate with
pictures and stories, giving a context to how and when certain dishes would be created and served, as well as eaten.  The recipes come alive, as you can read the stories and imagine all the family members sitting around you, or her father Dennis Wong in the kitchen.

I opened the book and found stories about Great-grand uncle Luke who went to Hollywood and became an actor, starring and supporting in movies with Clark Gable and Gary Cooper.  A story about Rev. Chan Yu Tan, reveals the name of his wife Wong Chiu Lin, whom nobody in my
family could remember except as “Tai-poh” (great-grandmother) or as Mrs. Chan.

Harvey Lowe the Yo-Yo King, is a friend of Dennis Wong, inviting Janice’s father to go to England with him, but Dennis’s parents forbade him, never imagining that Harvey Lowe will go on to tour the world and perform yo-yo tricks on the Smothers Brothers TV show, for Nat King
Cole, and for royalty.

At the end of the evening, Janice is still beaming widely.  She is still signing autographs when I pull her away to take a family picture, because Aunt Josie and my grandmother – both in the 90’s have to leave. 

“Have you met Toddish McWong, yet?” Janice asks a friend.  She introduces me to her friends and says, “My friend Robin has wanted to meet you for years.”  She adds later, “We will have to get a table and attend the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner this time.” 

I think to myself, that there will be ways to feature CHOW at the dinner – maybe as a raffle prize or silent auction prize.  Imagine winning a private Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner in your home with chefs Toddish McWong and Janice Wong, along with a copy of CHOW.

CHOW is an accessible recipe book, that is sure to be a Christmas gift for many people as it will be at home on the coffee table, next to the photo albums, or the kitchen.

pictures from the book launch and book review of chow to come….

Jeff Chiba Stearns: Kelowna Filmmaker Wins Best Animation Award at International Film Festival

Jeff Chiba Stearns: Kelowna Filmmaker Wins Best Animation Award at International Film Festival

Growing up between two cultures can be a challenge.  Whether I
was in elementary school, high school or college, I often got asked:
“What's your nationality?” or “Where did you come from?” or “What's
your ethnic background?”

“I'm a CBC,” I would sometimes say, “that's Canadian Born
Chinese.”  Or sometimes I would reply simply, “Canadian,” or
“What's it to you?”  But moreoften I inform people, “I'm fifth
generation Chinese-Canadian.”  I say this because I am proud of my
family and ethnic heritage that has a presence in three Canadian
centuries from 1888 to 2005.

Jeff Chiba Stearns grew up in Kelowna
with Japanese and European/British heritage.  He created a
wonderful animation film titled “What Are You Really?” that captures
the struggles of dealing with racial identities, looks and cultural
heritage.  He does this in a very fun way.  I recommend
watching the film, and I hope to have Jeff and his film as a featured
guest at the next Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner – January 22, 2006.

Below are excerpts from Jeff's press release.

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


October 12, 2005

Kelowna
Filmmaker wins the Best Animation Award at the 2005 Los Angeles ARPA
International Film Festival for his animated film, “What Are You
Anways?” about life growing up in Kelowna being half-Japanese.

Jeff Chiba Stearns was in Hollywood
last week attending the 2005 8th Annual Los Angeles ARPA International
Film Festival where his short animated film, “What Are You Anyways?”
screened.  The festival took place at the prestigious Arclight Theatre
on Sunset Blvd from October 3rd to the 6th with an Awards Gala on
October 7th.  The Awards Gala was held at the legendary Hollywood Hotel
Roosevelt on
Hollywood Blvd. 
Jeff was nominated as part of a competition with five other animated
films and the jury awarded Jeff the Best Animation Award at the Awards
Gala Event. 

“I'm thrilled and
honored to have received the Best Animation Award at this year's Los
Angeles ARPA International Film Festival.  It is a great opportunity to
receive such international recognition of my work.  I can only hope
that this will only be the start of the success my film will encounter
on a world stage,” Jeff said after receiving the award.  He also
mentioned, “It was also pretty cool getting to sit with Danica
Mckellar, 'Winnie Cooper' from the hit TV show the Wonder Years, who
also had a film up for nomination during the awards ceremony.  I grew
up with that show and she was really happy to see me win the award.”
 

“What Are You Anyways?” has been having incredible success on the film
festival circuit having screened at over 15 international film
festivals so far after less than a year of release.  Some notable
international film festivals include the
Maui, San Diego Asian, Chicago Children's International, Toronto Reel Asian, Vancouver Asian, Newport Beach, Delray Beach,
and Dallas Asian Film Festivals.  After winning the award at the ARPA
Film Festival, Jeff was approached with an offer from Norooz
Productions, an LA based animation studio, to possibly develop and have
Jeff direct a half hour big budget animation special based on Jeff's
film, “What Are You Anyways?” 

“What Are You
Anyways?”
has broadcast nationally on the CBC twice so far and Jeff has
also secured distribution of his film with the National Film Board of
Canada to distribute it across
Canada and beyond.  Kelowna
residents and anyone else who is interested on how they can obtain DVD
copies of “What Are You Anyways?”  can order them by emailing Jeff at meditatingbunny@hotmail.com  Info and a trailer for the film are available
at www.meditatingbunny.com   Jeff is currently the classical animation instructor at the Centre for Arts and Technology in
Kelowna

INFO ON THE ARPA INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL – http://www.affma.org

FILM COMMISION HQ wrote this about the ARPA International Film Festival:

“The Arpa
International Film Festival is one of the most dynamic and, in a world
increasingly dependent upon cultural understanding, perhaps the most
important niche festivals of our time.

The Arpa International
Film Festival is dedicated to cultivating cultural understanding and
global empathy, creating a dynamic forum for international cinema with
a special focus on the work of filmmakers who explore the issues of
Diaspora, exile, and cross- and multi-culturalism. And it celebrates
the ideals of independent thought, artistic vision, cultural diversity
and social understanding.”             

http://www.filmcommissionhq.com/event.jsp?id=670

To watch “What Are You Anyways?” online please go to:

http://zed.cbc.ca/go?POS=2&CONTENT_ID=163999&c=contentPage&FILTER_KEY=395526

Jeff can be contacted at:
stearnsjeff@hotmail.com Website. www.meditatingbunny.com

ZeD profile:

“What Are You Anyways?” Synopsis

Follow the
adventures of the Super Nip as filmmaker Jeff Chiba Stearns explores
his cultural backgrounds growing up a mix of Japanese and Caucasian in
a small white-bred Canadian city. This short classically animated film
looks at particular periods in Jeff’s life where he battled with
finding an identity being a half minority – from his childhood origins
to the epic showdown against the monster truck drivin’ redneck crew.
“What Are You Anyways?” is a humorous yet serious story of struggle and
love and finding one’s identity through the trials and tribulations of
growing up.

National Post: Scotland wants to recruit Scottish-Canadians to “Come Ye Back” not matter how ancient the link

Scotland wants to recruit Scottish-Canadians  to “Come Ye Back” not matter how ancient the link

I found the following article in today's issue of the National Post.
The paper featured a front-page picture of nine prominent Canadians
with Scottish connections, such as musicians Natalie McMaster,
Asheley McIssac, actress Neve Campbell, Prime Miniser Paul Martin, and deputy Conservative Party leader Peter McKay.

TOUR WILL TARGET SCOTS LIVING IN CANADA

RECRUITMENT DRIVE
By RANDY BOSWELL

Scotland's top politician will use a tour of Canada this month to
target millions of Canadians of Scottish ancestry with an invitation to
“return home” and reverse the centuries-old, westward flow of wealth
and talent across the North Atlantic.

The recruitment drive by Scottish First Minister Jack McConnell, not
yet officially announced but revealed in British news reports,
coincides with the inauguration of a Scottish investment office in
Toronto and an aggressive effort by the semi-autonomous state to end a
crippling brain drain and bolster its economic fortunes.

“Scotland is an ideal place to live, learn and work,” said Lorna Jack,
head of the Americas branch of Scottish Development International. “We
are bringing this message to interested parties and expats across North
America and beyond.”

The campaign, to “win back” Scottish expatriates, as well as Canadians
with more distant links to the “auld” country, includes an
Edinburgh-backed research project at B.C.'s Simon Fraser University,
which is compiling a detailed profile of this country’s
Scottish-Canadian population.

“It is not just about the locations and incomes of Scottish-Canadians,
but about the history and culture of the Scots in Canada,” Harry
McGrath, the Glasgow-born co-ordinator of Simon Fraser's Centre for
Scottish Studies, told CanWest News Service by e-mail. “It is part of a
general effort to link modern Scotland to, and inform it about, its
diaspora which, in my opinion, is long overdue.”

Part of McConnell's sales pitch in Canada, according to the Sunday
Herald, will be that Scotland is a dynamic modern nation and “no longer
a land of tartan, haggis and Braveheart.”

And The Sunday Times reported that famous Scots such as actor Sir Sean
Connery and singer Annie Lennox might be called upon to promote
investment and tourism among the children of Scotland's diaspora, all
part of the strategy to “lure descendants of Scottish- emigrants” back
home from Canada.

McGrath noted that before Britain devolved self-governing powers to
Scotland, “there was very little effort being made in this area and
when people left the country, as so many did, they were gone and
forgotten except by those closest to them.”

Last year, in a high-profile convocation address at Nova Scotia’s St.
Francis Xavier University, Scotland's top Catholic cleric, Keith
Patrick Cardinal O'Brien, made an impassioned plea to young
Scottish-Canadians to go back “to the home of your ancestors” –
presumably countering efforts by Nova Scotia to stanch its own brain
drain by convincing graduates to stay in the province.

More than four million Canadians claim some degree of Scottish ethnic
heritage. Canada – which traditionally counted the Scottish among its
four founding “races” along with the French, Irish and English – has a
history filled with influential Scots, including 18th-century explorer
Alexander Mackenzie, Confederation-era Prime Minister Sir John A.
Macdonald and telephone inventor, Alexander Graham Bell.

Among other places, McConnell is taking his “come home” message to the
University of Guelph, in the Ontario city founded by the 19th-century
Scottish industrialist John Galt.

On Oct. 28, McConnell is scheduled to visit the university’s collection
of Scottish archival material, the largest in the world outside of
Scotland.

Graeme Morton, the University of Guelph’s chair of Scottish Studies,
said McConnell's campaign to attract Canadian immigrants “puts the boot
on the other foot” after centuries of  Scottish emigration to
Canada.  But he said both Canada and Scotland would ultimately
gain from increased movement of workers between the two countries.

“I am sure” echoed McGrath, “that the young people going from here to
there will tell others about the place that they came from. I can only
see benefit for both countries in this kind of exchange.”

Naomi's Road: Pulls the heart in all the right places and directions – Vancouver Opera's first Opera in the Schools Commission exceeds itself


Naomi's Road: Pulls the heart in all the right places and directions

Vancouver Opera's first Opera in the Schools Commission is superb!

Two
children are left in the care of an aunt, when their father is sent
away from them, after their mother leaves the country to look after her
sick grandmother.  And the “holiday” they are told they have just
boarded a train for is actually going to be a re-location camp for the
next 3 years of their life.  They will be called “enemy aliens,”
called racial slurs, and they may never see their real home
again. 




This is all
great stuff for school children to learn about bullying, Canadian
history, the importance of family, and how to make friends.  Oh…
and it has been turned into an opera.




Vancouver Opera has turned to the children's version of the award winning novel Obasan by Joy Kogawa for it's second-ever original commission, designed for their Vancouver Opera in Schools program
Naomi's Road revolves around the upheaval of a 9 year old girl's life,
as she and her older brother are removed from their home in Vancouver,
and sent to a re-location camp in Slocan, located in BC's Interior.




Limited by a
45-minute time frame, the creative team of composer Ramona Leungen with
librettist Ann Hodges were challenged to bring alive a dark time in
Canada's history, but make it palatable and relatable for 21st century
school children.  They have succeeded in spades!  Naomi's
Road conveys the story without oversimplifying it.  The music is
acessible and emotional, with soaring melodies and lovely ensemble work.




I attended the
Saturday afternoon performance following the previous evening's World
Premiere.  A question period followed the short but lively
performance during which adults in the audience wanted the opera
extended by an hour, and children wanted to know how the actors could
change costumes so fast playing multiple roles.




Young soprano
Jessica Cheung stands out.  Her projection portraying a 9 year old
is amazing.  She is completely believable, with little nuances
that enhance her character.  When I remarked to Jessica after the
performance about “another costume change” into very chic and hip
street clothes, she remarked “So people don't think I really am a
little girl.




Composer Ramona
Luengen, says of Jessica, “We were so thrilled to find her.  She
brings so much vitality and spark.  We just wanted to keep
her.  Where else are you going to find a twenty year old that can
play a 10 year old… and sing?!?!”




Sam Chung does a
good turn as Stephen, Naomi's older brother.  He initially plays a
shy reserved child who becomes emotionally volatile as he discovers
that the “holiday” really isn't a holiday and becomes cynical about
many things related to the internment.  Sam does a good job
evolving Stephen's emotional maturity compressing three years into 45
minutes.




Gina Oh and Sung
Taek Chung both take on multiple roles, playing Mother, Obasan &
Mitzi and Father, Rough Lock Bill, Trainmaster and Bully,
respectively.  They create characters complete and separate from
the roles they shed with a change of clothes.  Seeing Gina go from
loving mother to reserved aunt to childish Mitzi within 30 minutes is
remarkable.  I particularly liked how Sung played doting father,
then later reappeared as Rough Lock Bill – a First Nations Character in
Slocan who befriends the children, gives Stephen a flute and helps
demonstrate racial acceptance and unconditional friendship.




During the
Q&A, a question was asked about the role played by Joy Kogawa,
author of Naomi's Road children's book.  Luengen described
attending a reading by Kogawa 2 years ago, in the Kogawa childhood home
(now threatened by demolition – see
www.kogawa.homestead.com),
which she describes as magical.  Anne Hodges said that Joy gave
them complete reign over the story and never said to take or leave
anything out, nor questioned what they did.  “She was like a
benevolent and peaceful spirit that permeated what we did, and always
seemed to be in town whenever we needed her.”




When I told
music director Leslie Uyeda that I had tears in my eyes when the
children were in the train scene, she replied, “You're the third person
who has said that… that scene is so emotionally charged, especially
when they are separated from their father.  It is so
iconographic.  It's in all the pictures,” she commented about the
photographs showing Japanese-Canadians at the train station waving to
family members being sent to different camps, and used on the cover of
the book
Obasan.



If this is only
the 2nd-ever commission by the Vancouver Opera (the first was 1994's
The Architect), I can only eagerly anticipate the next one, and hope
that it will be soon.  Maybe they will pick another
Vancouver-based story such as the Komagata Maru incident that affected
the South Asian community, or an issue from Chinese-Canadian history,
similar to the opera
Iron Road, that is yet to show in Vancouver.



Kudos for the
Vancouver Opera's Naomi's Road.  I foresee a long life for it,
touring BC's schools and beyond.  Glad I wasn't sitting on a
gymnasium floor for 45 minutes… but I think the kids will definitely
enjoy it!




Please sign the petition to preserve the Kogawa Homestead. Click on the white banner – this will forward you to an on-line petition.
Donations can be made in care of the Vancouver Heritage Foundation





Saving Vancouver's Chinatown: Vancouver Magazine (Oct) features Joe Wai – my cousin

Vancouver architect Joe Wai is featured in
Vancouver Magazine's October Issue.  The article is titled
Chinatown Calculations and details the questions in saving Vancouver
Chinatown's past and defining its future.  I can proudly say
cousin Joe was one of my early role models growing up.  Because of
the activities of Joe and his brother Hayne, I was able to witness
their involvements and love for Vancouver's Chinatown.  It
definitely sparked my own interests to understand our shared history as
our grandfather Wong Wah had come to Canada at the age of 16, in the
1880's.

The magazine also features interviews with Fred Mah, Henry Yu and
Jessica Chen-Adams.  Fred is a community leader and director of
the Chinese
Cultural Centre, Henry is a professor of History at UBC, and Jessica is
the City of Vancouver liason for the Vancouver Chinatown Revitalization
Committee.

The artical also mentions the Chinese Canadian Historical Society of BC
's study of the five buildings in Chinatown.  The article also
poses the interesting question, Who Will Define Our Chinatown? with
some interesting answers.

Joy Kogawa story in Vancouver Sun's “Raise a Reader” supplement

Joy Kogawa story in Vancouver Sun's “Raise a Reader” supplement

Rebecca Wigod wrote a short story about Joy Kogawa in Thursday's
Septemeber 29th, Vancouve Sun, page A23c.  with a small picture.

On the road of learning with Joy Kogawa
by Rebecca Wigod

Joy Kogawa, the 70-year-old author of Obasan, is a
venerable Canadian writer – so venerable that in Vancouver, Nov. 6 is
Joy Kogawa Day.

She's a Member of the Order of Canad, but she's not
able helping children in southeast Vancouver with their reading.

In fact, she's only too happy to help.

On a sunny summer afternnon, Kogawa went to the
Fraserview branch of the Vancouver public library and shared her
children's book Naomi's Road, with the young folk in its Readalong
program.

Many of them had South or East Asian backgrounds.

A diminuitive gifure in a long blue denim jumper,
she gathered the kids around her and asked: “Sixty years ago in August,
a terrible , terrible thing happend.  I was 10 years old. 
Does anybody know what happened?”

“A war?” asked one of the children.

Happy to recieve such an answer from children too
young to know anything of the Secod World War, she nodded
vigorously.  Then she told them something of her own history.

At one point, she produced a figurine and showed it
to the Readalong group.  It depicted Ninomiya Kinjiro, a great
19th-century Japanese landowner who began life in a poor peasant family.

He is seen as a symbol of hard work, and perseverence.

“His special road was the road of learning.  He
taught himself to read because he was too poor to go to school and he
beacme the greatest teacher in all of Japan.  When I was young, my
parents said, 'Be like Ninomiya Kinjiro.'”

Children in the Readalong program visit the library
twice a week during the summer for stories and help with their
reading.  Kogawa made the task palatable by handing out origami
paper and teaching them songs.

Her classic novel, Obasan, is the centrepiece of the library's One Book One Vancouver program this year.
   

Please sign the petition to preserve the Kogawa Homestead. Click on the white banner – this will forward you to an on-line petition.

Donations can be made in care of the Vancouver Heritage Foundation

Naomi's Road: Vancouver Opera premiere of Joy Kogawa's children's book based on novel Obasan

Naomi's Road: Vancouver Opera premiere of Joy Kogawa's children's book based on nove Obasan

Click here for the Review of the Oct 1, Saturday Matinee performance.


   
Vancouver Opera
September
30, October 1 & 2 , 2005


Evening performance 7:30 pm, Matinees 3:00
pm


Norman Rothstein Theatre

Naomi's Road
is a
new opera for young audiences. It is composed by Ramona Luengen, with libretto by Ann Hodges. It is based on Joy
Kogawa's
novel Naomi's Road
which tells the story of a young girl named Naomi and her brother
Stephen as they meet the challenges created by the internment of
Japanese-Canadians during World War 2.

Check out the Vancouver Opera Naomi's Road press release

I have seen performances of highlights from the Opera both at the Chan
Centre for Roy Miki's June 27th lecture for the Laurier Institution titled, Redress: Dealing with Past Injustices, and also at the Vancouver Arts Awards
last week.  Both times, the performances were captivating and
featured singer Jessica Cheung in the role of Naomi.

This is a milestone for Asian Canadian art and literature for a
successful children's story to be turned into an opera, that will be
touring schools throughout BC, as part of the Vancouver Opera in the Schools program
It is important to share the story about an ugly chapter in Canada's
history – yet teaching children how to move beyond racism and hatred.

Kogawa Homestead Committee meeting: Friday Sept 29th 4pm

The “Save the Kogawa Homestead” Committee is meeting:

Friday, September 30th, 4pm
Sylvia Hotel
1154 Gilford @ Beach Avenue
Vancouver, BC

This will be the first meeting in person of the reconstituted
committee.  It is important for us to meet in person and
strategize how to best save the house where author Joy Kogawa had so
many happy childhood memories and was raised until the internment of
Japanese-Canadians forced the Kogawa family to Slocan BC.

For the history of the committee: see www.kogawa.homestead.com

Several strategies will be discussed, and we will also discuss key
meetings with movers and shakers in our literary community + political
community.

Worst case scenario:  Kogawa House is demolished.
Best case scenario:  Kogawa House is saved and preserved on original site.
Alternative scenario: Kogawa House is saved but moved to another
site.  But this could be similar to the displacement faced by the
Japanese Canadians who were interned!

Good people are needed for this committee!
Please step forward and make yourself known.

Please sign the petition to preserve the Kogawa Homestead. Click on the white banner – this will forward you to an on-line petition.

Donations can be made in care of the Vancouver Heritage Foundation