
Lunch at Kogawa House was very nice – my pictures are here:




Lunch at Kogawa House was very nice – my pictures are here:



Special contribution from Allan Cho
On Saturday May 19, I attended the 10th annual Multicultural Festival “DiverCity”at New Westminster’s Fraser River Discovery Centre where I was treated to a slate of Asian Canadian films organized by ExplorASIAN. One of them was Montreal-based director Monica Mak’s “Tiara.” An impressive and insightful short film about Asian Canadian beauty pageants, Tiara reveals the complexities and tensions that young females must endure in a commercially and financially lucrative industry of beauty.
The experiences of five former beauty pageant contestants show just how divisive the industry can be: while winners can go on to wealth and fame – landing mega contracts and careers in Hong Kong and India, going onto to careers in law and medicine, others suffer the consequences of finishing poorly and vulnerability of being judged solely on their physical beauty (or lack of it). Tiara made me think differently about beauty pageants, it never occurred to me that ethnic pageantry had such a darker, seamier side of global commerce.
After the movie, we had a nice dinner at Wild Rice at the new River Market. This Wild Rice was spectacular as we watched with amazement as the chefs at Wild Rice performed their cooking magic to their audiences through the magic of a looking glass window. We were treated to a delicious evening of Asian fusion cuisine! (photos of Wildrice Restaurant & Monica Mak)

Sid Tan and Jan Wong wave for the camera… after a successful talk by the author of Red China Blues and former columnist/reporter for the Globe & Mail. – photo courtesy of Sid Tan
Jan Wong is coming to Kogawa House
Saturday May 26
12 noon to 2pm
“Lunch with Jan Wong”
$10 per ticket, including a light lunch
Reserve your place by e-mailing kogawahouse@yahoo.ca
Last night she did a dinner event with Asian Canadian Writers Workshop in Vancouver Chinatown… It was great! We introduced her to some of Vancouver’s Asian Canadian authors, publishers, journalists and community activists.
Jan talked about her new book “Out of the Blue, A Memoir of Workplace Depression, Recovery, Redemption and, Yes, Happiness”
She talked about the story she wrote for the Globe and Mail, which became an issue. She described how her editor did not support her, and the G&M did not support her sick leave. It gets worse… She was denied long term disability, after going into a depression caused by the workplace issues. And it gets further worse, after she discovered the insurance company Manulife, had hired investigators to take videos of her, to diagnose her “depression” and deny them. But there is a happy ending.
“Jan Wong is a wonderful writer and, as she tells her own story, she speaks for me and for many. Some say depression is a gift. Well, it’s not. But this book is.”
— Shelagh Rogers, O.C., Broadcast journalist and recipient of the Champion of Mental Health Award
On Tuesday, she was in Victoria giving a talk and reading for 200+ people for the Chinatown Lionesses in Victoria Chinatown.
http://www.janwong.ca


You’ve heard of Sing-a-longs to the Sound of Music by Rogers and Hammerstein?
Check out this event on Saturday evening…
a sing-a-long to Rogers and Hammerstein’s musical about Chinese-Americans.
from the website of Vancouver Asian Canadian Theatre
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– photo Anne Cecile
– photo T.Wong
– photo T. Wong
– photo T. Wong
– photo T. Wong
– photo T. Wong
– photo – Anne CecilePlease join us for two events this week at Historic Joy Kogawa House:
Thursday, May 24, 7:30 to 8:30pm
Admission is free. Books will be for sale with proceeds to our writer-in-residence program
Author Susan Aihoshi will read from her new book, Torn Apart: The Internment Diary of Mary Kobayashi, the latest title in the Dear Canada series published by Scholastic Canada.
Torn Apart is the fictional diary of a young girl growing up in Vancouver during the Second World War. Mary enjoys school, her family and friends, and going to Girl Guides. But Japan bombs Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, and life for Mary, her family, and the entire Japanese Canadian community in British Columbia changes dramatically.
Susan’s reading will be followed by a short presentation of related photographs. She will also answer questions and sign books.
Saturday, May 26, 12 to 2pm
Tickets are $10 and include a light lunch
Journalist Jan Wong worked for the Globe and Mail, serving as Beijing correspondent from 1988 to 1994, when she returned to write from Canada. In 1996, she published Red China Blues: My Long March from Mao to Now, which was promptly banned in China. After a return trip in the late nineties, she produced a second book entitled Jan Wong’s China, a somewhat less personal account of social life, the economy, and politics in modern-day China.
Subsequent books include Lunch with Jan Wong, Jan Wong (2001), Beijing Confidential: A Tale of Comrades Lost and Found Doubleday Canada, and her newest title Out of the Blues: A Memoir of Workplace Depression, Recovery, Redemption, and Yes Happiness. Ms. Wong will read from and discuss Out of the Blues over lunch at Historic Joy Kogawa House.
Please join us! Space is limited. To reserve a seat for either event, RSVP to kogawahouse@yahoo.ca.
Ann-Marie Metten
Executive Director
Historic Joy Kogawa House
1450 West 64th Avenue
Vancouver, B.C. V6P 2N4
Tel.: 604-263-6586
Please send mail to :
8107 Cartier Street
Vancouver, B.C. V6P 4T6
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401 Wellington Street West At the former home of McGregor Socks, Arlene Chan tells the story of the Chinese community’s connection with Toronto’s …




this is notable because it tells the story of black-American jazz musicians in the salons of Paris and the cabarets of Germany in the 1940’s of WW2.
this is notable because Gary Geddes traveled to Africa to explore the post-genocide, post-Somalia Affair and child soldier issues in Rwanda, Uganda, The Democratic Republic of Congo, Ethiopia and Somaliland. Gary won the Lt. Governor’s Award for Literary Achievement in 2008, and read at Historic Joy Kogawa House in 2009 with his friend and inaugural writer-in-residence at Kogawa House, John Asfour.
This is notable because JJ Lee tells the story of his Chinese immigrant father, and how he apprentices as a tailor at Vancouver Chinatown’s last tailor shop “Modernize Tailors”, run by my family friends Bill and Jack Wong. This book was also a finalist for Charles Taylor Prize for Literary Non-Fiction (2012) and Governor General’s Literary Award – Non-Fiction (2012).
This is notable because Carmen writes about her childhood growing up as a revolutionary in Pinochet’s dictatorship in Chile. She describes fleeing Chile to Canada as a child, then returning to Chile to become part of the resistance movement.
This is notable because it conjures up all the gods, goddesses and demi-gods of ancient Greece. And Susan used to teach Joy Kogawa’s book Obasan
This is notable because “With its continuous poetic dialogue of “discovery” and “recovery”, Discovery Passages sets out to recover the appropriated, stolen and scattered world of the author’s ancestral people, the Kwakwaka’wakw.”
This is notable because the history of Japanese, Chinese, First Nations and South Asians are all included in the history of Metropolitan Vancouver, as well as the history of Scots, Irish, Italians, Jewish and English immigrants and descendants.
Sheila A. Egoff Children’s Literature Prize Winner! Blood Red Road by Moira Young
Christie Harris Illustrated Children’s Literature Prize Winner! When I Was Small by Sara O’Leary – Illustrated by Julie Morstad
On May 14, 2012 (today), the federal Parties are expected to make
Statements in the House of Commons at 3pm after Question Period to recognize
this important anniversary.
CCNC pays tribute to the families and groups that lobbied over decades to repeal this racist legislation. The Chinese Exclusion Act separated families and some were never able to reunite. The community stagnated as few families were formed due to an unbalanced gender ratio, aging, and some Chinese leaving Canada.
Some Canadian-borns volunteered and fought overseas for a country that didn’t even recognize their basic rights. Here is the story of the late Sgt Louis King and Operation Oblivion (written by Gary Gee): http://ccnc.ca/entryContent/
Sgt. King fought two wars: the military conflict abroad and the war against racism at home. He and his generation won them both