Chinese Canadian veterans: John Ko Bong, Roy Mah, Ed Lee – photo Tod
Monthly Archives: June 2007
Vancouver Sun: Chinatown's 'quiet revolutionary'' – story about Roy Mah
Vancouver Sun: Chinatown's 'quiet revolutionary'' – story about Roy Mah
The Roy Mah (sitting) fan club: Todd Wong, Gloria Leung, Claudia Ferris, Ramona Mah, and Lynn – attending the Chinese Canadian veterans dinner for the 60th anniversary of Canadian Citizenzhip – photo Todd Wong
It is always great to see a story about Roy Mah in the media. Somehow I missed posting this story earlier. While I was out of town to help celebrate Roy's “90th Birthday Party” on Easter weekend, I did get to see him at the May 12th Chinese Canadian veterans dinner to celebrate the 60th anniversary of Canadian Citizenship.
Roy played an important role for Canadian born Chinese to gain full franchise rights, and no longer be called “foreign residents” – even if they were born in Canada. After serving in WW2, he helped lead the campaign to overturn the Chinese “Exclusion” Act, gaining the vote for Chinese-Canadians in 1947.
The founder of Chinatown News, Roy was also a creator of the Canadian Multi-cultural Press, and he was invited by Prime Minister Trudeau to join the canadian press corps on Trudeau's first-ever historic trip to China in 1974. Mah organized the first public celebration of Chinese New Year in 1963. He sat on the board of the Vancouver Sun Yat-Sen Garden Society when it planned and built the park in Chinatown.
I remember looking at the Chinatown News, when I would find it at my great-grandma's house. In the 1980's, I submitted theatre reviews that were published in the Chinatown News. And in 1993, my picture was on the cover after I received the SFU Terry Fox gold medal.
In 2002, the Asian Canadian Writer's Workshop honoured Roy with it's inaugural Community Builder's Award. I was on the ACWW board, and one of the event organizers. It was great to get a story about Roy into the Vancouver Sun that same weekend.
Over the past few years, Roy has been on kidney dialysis. Part of his regular routine was to walk over to the Vancouver Public Library to read the newspapers. He would always wave to me whenever he would pass by the information desk where I worked. Often times we always chatted, and sometimes we would go for coffee. Hunched over when he walked, he always had a big smile for me. He always enjoyed attending the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinners when he could, and at the 2005 dinner I asked Roy to stand up and I introduced him to our 570 strong audience. Roy received a standing ovation. Roy Mah is definitely one of my heroes!
Chinatown's 'quiet revolutionary'
Roy Mah has left his imprint on almost every major event
in Vancouver 's
Chinese community over the past 80 years
|
Jenny Lee |
Vancouver Sun |
Saturday, May 12, 2007
He gives every impression of being gentle, unassuming — harmless, even.
But Roy Mah, union organizer, soldier, publisher and civil rights crusader, conceals a lifetime of community activism behind a deceptively mild exterior.
A long list of firsts is associated with his name.
He was Canada 's first full-time Chinese-Canadian union organizer back in the 1940s. During the Second World War, he was among the first Chinese-Canadians to volunteer for service, and he persuaded others to join him. Prove your loyalty first, he argued, and the right to vote will follow.
As publisher of Canada 's first English-language news magazine for Chinese Canadians, from 1953 to 1995 Mah doggedly used his Chinatown News to connect and encourage Canadian-born Chinese as they began to explore broadening social and economic boundaries.
“He mobilized Chinese Canadians to become active participants in mainstream society,” says Paul Yee, historian and Governor General's Award winning author.
Look carefully at almost any significant event in Vancouver 's Chinese-Canadian community over the past 70 or 80 years, and you'll find that the ever-pleasant, ever-unobtrusive Mah was somehow intimately involved. When the government of B.C. and cities of Burnaby , Richmond and Vancouver declare Chinese Canadian Citizenship Week on Monday, Mah will likely nod with satisfaction.
Mah was campaigning for multiculturalism long before most us had heard of the word, says his niece, former CBC journalist Ramona Mar.
Born in Edmonton in 1918, Mah came of age at a difficult time in Chinese-Canadian history.
Up until 1947, people with Chinese ancestry were not allowed to vote and faced restrictions on practising professions such as law, medicine and pharmacy. The Chinese Exclusion Act restricted immigration, and it was not illegal for employers to refuse to hire workers on the basis of ancestry alone.
Canadian-born Mah was ineligible for citizenship until after he returned from military service, at which time he was denied a $20-a-month basement suite in Vancouver because he was Chinese.
No one is sure what originally spurred the young Mah to become socially active and Mah himself is not telling, but at age 11 he was already campaigning against Canadian scrap iron being sent to Japan to be turned into munitions. By 1943, he was the key union organizer of Chinese sawmill workers in Victoria for the former International Woodworkers of America.
“The white people were getting up to a dollar and the Chinese were getting 30 or 40 cents an hour,” Mah says. “The difference was so great. I would go and offer them equal pay for equal work.”
He remembers tension with the Chinese labour boss and being “a little bit scared,” but his response was to just keep quietly plugging on.
It's a style Mah, now 89, has retained throughout his life.
Graham Johnson, a retired University of B.C. sociology professor who studies Chinese immigrant communities, calls Mah “a quiet revolutionary.” Jan Walls, the high-profile, retired Simon Fraser University humanities professor, calls him a “master of diplomatic yet pragmatic rhetoric,” who used “patient, persistent, prodding” to achieve his aims.
“I think he's very good at using the popular cultural expectations to get your attention, then he subtly changes the agenda to his agenda,” Walls says. “What caught your eye [in the Chinatown News] was the typical Chinatown imagery based on the prototype from San Francisco [ Chinatown banquets and beauty queens]. If you read beyond that, he would insert his more serious social agendas.”
Mah's one, overriding lifetime goal has been to help transform Canada into a multilingual and multicultural society from one that was bilingual and bicultural.
Looking back, “society was so divided, not only among Chinese and English Canadians, but among the Chinese themselves,” Mah says.
He used the Chinatown News to celebrate the achievements of people such as Vancouver Sun columnist Der Hoi Yin, and to protest the portrayal of Chinese students on the now infamous 1979 Campus Giveaway episode of CTV's W5, in which all students with Asian faces were portrayed as “foreign” and stealing university spots from “Canadians.”
In its heyday, the Chinatown News had a circulation of 12,000, and in the 1970s was considered essential reading in Canadian political circles for being the only eye into the Chinese community.
Mah encouraged generations of young Chinese Canadians to take an active interest in their community. Hayne Wai, one-time Chinatown News photographer, became a longstanding Vancouver community leader in his own right and president of the Chinese Canadian Historical Society of B.C.
Mar also got a start at Chinatown News and became B.C.'s first full-time Chinese-Canadian female radio newscaster.
“During my childhood I had no idea how much of an impact Roy had on Chinese-Canadian life,” Mar says. “In my naivete he was merely my Dad's cousin who posted too many photos of Asian beauty queens on the cover of his seemingly quaint news magazine. It wasn't until the early '80s, when I found my own way to Chinatown, that I began to appreciate what Roy had done.”
Mah's campaigning days are now over and he lives in a Yaletown condo with his second wife, Lynn. He's on hemodialysis and has been in and out of hospital more times than he'd care to admit.
But 2007 marks the anniversaries of Chinese Canadians receiving the franchise; the repeal of the Chinese Immigration Act of 1923 (Exclusion Act); the formation of Army, Navy and Air Force Veterans in Canada, Pacific Unit 280; and the 50th anniversary of the election of Douglas Jung as the first Chinese Canadian member of Parliament. And Roy Mah can look back on his life with satisfaction over a job well done.
“Before, we were second-class citizens,” Mah says. “Now we're equal.”
jennylee@png.canwest.com
Jenny Lee got her start in journalism at the Chinatown News.
– – –
MUSEUM TO MARK SPECIAL WEEK
The Chinese Canadian Military Museum , which lobbied for the newly named Chinese Canadian Citizenship Week to be proclaimed by the B.C. government and the cities of Burnaby , Richmond and Vancouver , will mark the event with several celebrations.
These include a launch today of several museum projects celebrating Chinese Canadian veterans' contribution to Canadian history; and a dinner with a veterans' re-affirmation of citizenship ceremony and proclamations by the B.C. government and the cities of Vancouver, Burnaby, and Richmond.
In addition, the mayor of Vancouver will hold a formal proclamation ceremony for Chinese Canadian Citizenship Week at Vancouver City Hall on Monday at 10:30 a.m.
For more information on any of the above events, contact Lt.-Col. (retired) Howe Lee at Howe_lee@justice.com, or 604-299-6775.
ROY MAH'S PRODIGIOUS LEGACY
The prodigiously active Roy Mah was also a founding member of the Chinese Cultural Centre; the B.C. Ethnic Press Association; the Sun Yet Sun Garden Society; the Chinese Canadian Military Museum Society; and Army, Navy & Air Force Veterans in Canada, Pacific Unit 280, among other organizations. He organized the first public Vancouver Chinese New Year celebration in 1963, and was the only Chinese journalist invited by Pierre Trudeau to join his press corps on his first state visit to China in 1974.
He was among the first Chinese Canadians to join the Men's Canadian Club (now the Canadian Club) and the Vancouver Board of Trade, and was awarded the Order of B.C. in 2003.
© The Vancouver Sun 2007
Kilts Night June 7th at Doolin's Irish Pub
Kilts Night June 7th at Doolin's Irish Pub
Every 1st Thursday, we don our kilts, and head down to Doolin's Irish Pub, because they give us a free pint of Guinness if we wear our kilts.
Granville & Nelson St, Downtown Vancouver
Arrive by 8:30pm. The music starts at 9pm.
The Halifax Wharf Rats will perform some mean East Coast Canadiana + Gordie Lightfoot and Ian Tyson stuff like Alberta Bound and Four Strong Winds, then they will do their celtic folk takes on U2's “With or Without You”, Johnny Cash's “Ring of Fire” and KISS's “I Was Made for Loving You.”
Always lots of fun!
Janice Wong exhibit of monotypes at the Dundarave Print Workshop Gallery
Janice Wong exhibit of monotypes at the Dundarave Print Workshop Gallery
Janice Wong is my famous author/artist 2nd cousin-once-removed. Author of Chow: From China to Canada – Stories of Food and family. She sent me this note:
exhibiting recent monotypes at Dundarave Print Workshop Gallery (the
printmaking co-operative; I've been a member since 1997).
The exhibition opens June 7, 6-9 pm and continues until June 24.
Regular hours at the gallery are:
Wednesday through Sunday, 11-5 pm
Head tax news: “Ottawa drops “no apology, no compensation” hard line”
Ottawa drops "no apology, no compensation" hard line
Here's some news about the Conservative Government's approach to redress.
This sounds exactly what the United Nations asked Canada to do a few
years ago, when they addressed Canada's refusal to apologize and provide
fair redress to the Chinese head tax issue, especially following
New Zealand's redress.
Vancouver Sun, Sunday, June 03, 2007
OTTAWA - The Harper government has quietly dropped the previous
Liberal regime's "no apology, no compensation" hard-line in
negotiations with ethnic groups seeking redress for past wrongs
despite warnings that it would open the door to a possible flurry of
claims.
In government documents obtained by CanWest News Service through the
Access to Information Act, the federal government was recently advised
that the new approach "may advance calls for apologies/redress" and
that there was the "potential for other presently unknown communities
to seek recognition."
The briefing notes state that there were already three agreements in
principle with representatives of the Chinese-Canadian,
Ukrainian-Canadian and Italian-Canadian communities under the
now-defunct Liberal program.
"A number of other communities are known to have been impacted by
wartime measures and/or immigration restrictions including:
Austro-Hungarians, Bulgarians, Croatians, Doukhobors, Germans,
Hutterites, Indo-Canadians, Jews, Mennonites, Turks, etc..." says the
briefing under the heading Other Impacted Communities.
In an interview with CanWest News Service, Jason Kenney, secretary of
state for multicultural and Canadian identity, said the terms and
conditions of the Community Historical Recognition Program (CHRP) are
still being finalized and will be made public "fairly soon" once the
details are worked out completely.
He acknowledged that the "no apology, no compensation" policy of the
previous government has been dropped by the Harper government as it
picks up where former prime minister Brian Mulroney left off in 1988
with the Japanese-Canadian redress case that involved a full apology
and a $422-million compensation package.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper apologized about a year ago to Chinese
Canadians for the country's racist immigration policies of the past,
including the head tax once charged by the federal government to newly
arriving immigrants from China. Survivors or their surviving conjugal
partners have been offered each $20,000 "symbolic payments."
The documents indicate that of the 43 applicants received since by the
federal government, 36 "head-tax" survivors have been paid.
The payments come out of the Harper government's $24-million CHRP,
which drops the Martin government's "no apology, no compensation"
policy that was part of its "never implemented" Acknowledgment,
Commemoration and Education (ACE) program.
Under the Conservative government, talks are progressing towards
redress announcements with Italian-Canadians for the internment of
about 700 men during the Second World War and Ukrainian-Canadians for
government actions during the First World War, when about 5,000 were
interned while land and other assets were expropriated.
As well, consultations and a report by Conservative MP Jim Abbott, who
is parliamentary secretary to Canadian Heritage Minister Bev Oda, have
been completed for the government on the Komagata Maru ship incident
in 1914 which saw 376 Sikhs, Muslims and Hindus forced back to sea by
a Canadian warship at Vancouver harbour.
The Indo-Canadian community has long advocated for a formal apology
and commemoration of what happened to the passengers aboard the ship.
However, Abbott reportedly advised the government "there was no
consensus or agreement" on the issue of a formal public apology.
While some of its critics have called it electioneering, the
Conservatives have taken many steps over their past 18 months in power
to strengthen ties with Canada's ethno-cultural communities.
Harper has publicly recognized the Armenian genocide, launched an
inquiry into the Air India tragedy, reduced the immigrant landing fee,
and oversaw the transportation of Lebanese-Canadians back to Canada.
This included the prime minister using his airplane to safely bring
back a plane load of those escaping the region.
The documents say the Conservatives have also created a new four-year
$10-million National Historical Recognition Program to "provide a
federal government narrative that presents an objective point of view
on the history linked to wartime measures and/or immigration
restrictions."
It will include the creation of educational material, including
"Historica Minutes" ads on past wrongs, an interactive website as well
as commemoration and exhibits informing the public about the
injustices.
Kenney said major features of the Chinese-Canadian redress settlement
were the apology issued by Harper and the $20,000 symbolic payments.
"In a legal sense, we wouldn't call it compensation but in a symbolic
sense it is a form of tangible (financial) redress," said Kenney.
"But at the end of the day, this is symbolic because you can't go back
in time and take away people's pain and suffering. All you can do as a
government is demonstrate through meaningful symbolic actions serious
regret for what happened in the past."
He added that Canadians should not be made to feel "culpable" for
"occasional racist policies" committed by their ancestors and which
the country's modern democratic system would no longer tolerate.
"I shouldn't be made to feel culpable for what my great-grandparents
may have thought, say about Asian immigration. But the Canadian state
has a responsibility to face up to those moments in our history when
we allowed unjust policies to focus on particular ethnic communities,"
said Kenney.
Kenney said the previous government's policy of refusing to apologize
or compensate was holding up redress negotiations. He said one of the
effects of the slow talks under the Liberals was the gradual dying off
of survivors.
"That was exactly our sense of urgency when it came to the
Chinese-Canadian redress package. There were very few, only a few
dozen actual taxpayers left. If you are going to do redress, it has to
actually be experienced by the victims of previous injustices," Kenney
said.
(c) CanWest News Service 2007
Gung Haggis dragon boat team races in Sunday sessions for Alcan DBF regatta
Gung Haggis dragon boat team races in Sunday sessions for Alcan DBF regatta
2007 Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team at the June 3 ADBF regatta – photo Richard Montagna
The Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team had a great time racing today in the ADBF regatta, Sunday afternoon session.
Great captaincy by Jim Blatherwick. He really stepped
up to the plate when Stephen Mirowski had to go travel back home to
Thunder Bay. Thank you for the hard work Jim did in organizing the
team, making the rosters and leading the warm-ups.
Great job by Deb, our steersperson… She steered us straight and true.
Great job by our lead strokes, Wendy and Marlene. They made
adjustments from race to race and set good paces and kept time with
each other to lead us.
Great job by all our paddlers, keeping your heads up, watching our lead
strokes, and getting a good pull on the blades. You worked together,
didn't criticize each other, and looked for improvements to help us
all!
omigod…
we were seeded 3rd or 4th in our first race… and we finished 2nd!!!
Wow! That bumped us immediately up to the top half of the race grid.
Well done!
Our second race we came 5th (?) which pushed into the B final. We didn't feel it was a good race and we made adjustments.
Third race we were seeded 5th or 6th… and we were pushing hard for
4th place! And we almost had it… darn if I haven't been coaching
that UA Power Dragons team that beat us by about .35 second. Very very very close
We also had 2 brand new paddlers Hillary and Arthur who only had 3 practices previously with us. They did really well today. Peggy and Alex had just come back from vacation for their first times in a dragon boat in a month!
Comparing our June 3rd regatta team to the April 14th sprint regatta team.
Missing were experienced paddlers Todd (14 years), Stephen (3), Ernest
(4), Kristine (14), Ian (6), Cory (2), and Craig (10). Each race and
each year of experience really makes a big difference… that is why we
were right on Concord's tail at the sprint regatta.
For ADBF, our team will not be as powerful as the team for the sprint
regatta, but we are improving steadily with each practice. Our paddles
are getting a better reach, and our veteran paddlers are getting deep
longer strokes with a kick. Our rookies are learning fast, and staying
in time perfectly. We are blending very well together and haing lots
of fun. This is important. It is great to see the chemistry of the
team grow.
We are off to a great start for ADBF. We have an honourary drummer for
inspiration – James Erlandsen (Hillary's cousin) and we have a
honourary mascot (pending) – Stuart's shiba inu named Kikujiro. And we
have been asked to take part in ADBF;s opening ceremonies… truly an
honour!!!!
Congratulations, Todd
pictures taken by friend Nick at
http://www.flickr.com/gp/24064901@N00/aL7726