Monthly Archives: September 2007

Hip Hapa and Happening…. Sep 14 onwards

Hip Hapa and Happening…. Sep 14 onwards

check out the Fringe Festival:

Assaulted FishVancouver Asian Canadian Theatre presents the Henry David Hwang play Bondage… and something called Deep-Fried Curry Perogies…

I just saw Assaulted Fish performing at the Sept 7th Reconciliation Dinner at Floata Restaurant.  And they were bang-on funny… poking lots of fun at multicultural stereotypes and characters like Jacky Chan.

David Henry Hwang is North America's most successful Asian-American playwright.  I have seen his plays FOB, M. Butterfly and Golden Child performed in Vancouver… so I can't miss Bondage.

I eat perogies… I put curry on my popcorn… I deep fry haggis wrapped in won ton dumplings… gotta go!

Assaulted Fish
Vancouver, Canada

Comedy/50 mins/14+

Pacific Theatre

For its second Fringe appearance, 83% pan-Asian Canadian sketch comedy
troupe, Assaulted Fish presents the “best of 2006-2007”. “No dud
sketches here…plenty of laughs.” — Kathleen Oliver, Georgia Straight
“…one of the smartest, boldest, most hilarious, most exciting comedy
troupes around…” — Morgan Brayton, former Executive Artistic
Director, SketchFest Vancouver “…cast is brimming with charisma and
enthusiasm.” – Schema Magazine.

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Showtimes

Sept. 6 – 6:45pm
Sept. 9 – 4:00pm
Sept. 11 – 6:15pm
Sept. 12 – 8:45pm
Sept. 14 – 5:30pm
Sept. 15 – 1:30pm

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Vancouver Asian Canadian Theatre
Vancouver, CAN
Drama/60 mins/14+

Firehall Arts
Centre  

In an S&M parlor, a dominatrix and her client are clad in costumes
to conceal their faces and ethnicity's. Their disguises allow them to
play out fantasies based on racial stereotypes and sexual mythologies.
Their power games expose the arbitrariness of racially minded thinking
that moves them towards a true intimacy which transcends the bounds of
race.

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Showtimes

Sept. 6 – 8:00pm
Sept. 7 – 10:45pm
Sept. 9 – 7:30pm
Sept. 12 – 10:30pm
Sept. 15 – 8:15pm
Sept. 16 – 11:00am

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Deep Fried Curried Perogies

Mahatmamajama Productions

Comedy, Dance, Drama/70 mins/14+
Playwrights Theatre

What do you get when a Jamaican Filipino and a Ukrainian Brit start a
family? A Jalipinukranibritinadian? A Deep Fried Curried Perogy?
Definitely a legacy full of stories, hair trauma and certain
indigestion. Touching, funny, smart – a show for anyone who is black,
white, Ukrainian, Asian, European, flat-chested, short, breathing…
*****Edmonton Sun ****Vue Weekly ****See Magazine.

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Showtimes

Sept. 6 – 6:45pm
Sept. 7 – 10:30pm
Sept. 8 – 9:15pm
Sept. 12 – 10:30pm
Sept. 15 – 11:30pm
Sept. 16 – 4:45pm

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Reconciliation Dinner: Addressing the 1907 Anti-Asian riot and a century of change

Reconciliation Dinner: Addressing the 1907 Anti-Asian riot and a century of change


The dinner was good.  In the theme of Anniversaries of Change, it
wasn't stuck on an anti-anti-asian theme.   There were a few speeches
by George Chow, the organizer of the event, and a welcoming by Larry
Grant of the Musqueam Nation – whom I invited to come as a special
guest to the next Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner.

There was a short panel discussion where members from different aspects of the community gave their take about the anniversary of change.  Dr. Henry Yu spoke first.  He is also the chair of the Anniversaries of Change committee.

Rika Uto, spoke about the Japanese community.  She is also the chair of the Japanese Language School.
 
Bill Saunders spoke from a labour perspective, acknowledging that many of labour's members have all been immigrants throughout our province's history. 

Harley Wylie reminded everybody that the 1907 riot took place on traditional Musqueam lands, and gave a First Nations perspective.

Sketch comedy troupe Assaulted Fish, performed riffs on Asian and caucasian stereotypes…. very funny!

During
the 2nd dinner break, I decided to explore the North side of the room and stopped by to say hello to my friend Meena Wong who was sitting with her friends from SUCCESS.  Last year Meena arranged for me to be interviewed by the SUCCESS youth leadership training
program.

I saw the students from the SUCCESS youth leadership training
program
at their table, some were holding their cell phones, text messaging their friends. 
I asked them how they were enjoying the dinner. I told them that
there were many many cultural and community leaders in the room, and
would they like to meet people, and learn networking skills.  I asked
if they would like to meet Minister of Multiculturalism Jason Kenney. 
They said yes…

So a table of 10 students + their 3 adult sponsors followed me to the
front of the stage… where city councillor George Chow was getting up
from his seat.  I introduced them to George, and he shared some wisdom
with this group that I introduced as “future community leaders”

Then we went over to Jason Kenney's table where SUCCESS ceo Tung Chan
presided over introductions.  Kenney told the kids about the naming of
the Douglas Jung building, and the contributions that Jung and the
Chinese Canadian veterans had made for the community.

I asked the kids that since Kenney had told them about the veterans –
would they like to meet some Chinese Canadian Veterans…  They said
yes!  I introduced them to Col. Howe Lee, founder of the Chinese
Canadian Military Museum (whom Barb met on Nov 11) and Peggy Lee, the
first Chinese Canadian woman volunteer in the military auxillary.

“Who's next Todd?” somebody asked.  Darn… they were enjoying meeting community leaders.

“Let's go meet the people I have been sitting with.” I replied.

I introduced them to City Councillors Heather Deal and Raymond Louie. 
Heather is also a biologist with the David Suzuki Foundation, and I
told the kids that if they ever visit the Vancouver Aquarium, they will
see a life size picture of Heather that they can take a picture with. 
Raymond is a descendant of one of the earliest Chinese pioneers Yip
Sang… and also used to ride bicycles competitively and helped to
found the Taiwanese Dragon Boat races.

Andrea Reimer was there too!  The first Green Party member elected…
to Vancouver School Board – where I first met her when I did a
presentation to include Asian Heritage Month as part of the school
curriculum.  She is executive director of the Wilderness Committee and
recently was trained by former US vice-president Al Gore to give
presentations of “An Inconvenient Truth” – If you want to talk to
somebody about helping to save the environment… talk to Andrea.

Dr. Kerry Jang is an award winning medical doctor from the UBC school
of Psychiatry, but now he is turning his energy to community service.  Last year Jang received the BC Community Service Award. 
The students thought this was good.

Then we went over to the next table where I introduced them first to my
friend Charlie Cho, CBC researcher, writer, and now a playwright of
“Twisting Fortunes.”  I first met Charlie when he was editor of
Ricepaper Magazine. 

Also on the table was Charlie Smith, editor of the Georgia Straight
Back in 1993, Charlie called me up for my first ever radio interview. 
I had just received the SFU Terry Fox Medal for courage in adversity
and dedication to community, and it was Charlie who put me on CBC
Radio's “Early Edition.”

Next we introduced Joan Andersen, Regional Director of CBC Radio in
British Columbia.  I have known Joan many years through some of my
involvements with CBC Radio.  She was surprised last year when she had
the honour of presenting me with my 30 year service pin, in her role of
Vancouver Public Library Board Chair.

The editor of the Sing Tao Chinese language newspaper was sitting next
to Joan, so they got to meet him too!  But one of the first questions
was to Charlie Cho… asking about Ricepaper Magazine.

Cheers, Todd

1907 Riot: The Walking Tour

1907 Riot: The Walking Tour

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At 5pm my friend George Jung and I met with the 1907 Riot walking tour at Victory Square.  It was being hosted by CBCer Margaret Gallagher and led by Michael Barnholden (author of Reading the Riot Act)

Check out http://www.anniversaries07.ca/riot_walk.php for a map and description of the 1907 riot route and historic buildings.

From there we walked down Hastings St. to Carrall St. to stand at Shanghai Alley (between Carrall and Abbot), back up Carrall St. to walk down Market Alley (between Hastings and Pender), left on Columbia to walk up Hastings to Pantages Theatre…

We silently walked past the Quan Lum Quan Lung Sai Tong Association headquarters at 164 East Hastings Street, where we had the first Head tax redress meetings following the Nov 2005 rally against the ACE program and then PM Paul Martin.

We stood across the street from the site of the former Vancouver City Hall, then proceeded up Hastings, left on Gore, to stand in front of the Firehall Arts Centre on Cordova St.  We learned that the Fire Dept was called on to stop the fires in Chinatown.  Next we walked along Cordova Street to the Powell St. Grounds (now Oppenheimer Park) where the tour guide talked about how the rioters were repelled in Japantown.

The tour then went on to Alexander St. to the site of the 100 year old Japanese Language School.  I quit the tour and walked into the Kalayaan Centre to say hi to my friend Sid Tan, and have a beer with Gim Wong

some of my pictures are available at:

Sep 7 2007, Douglas Jung building, 1907 Riot walk, Reconciliation Dinner

Sep 7 2007, Douglas Jung building, 1907…

Busy Friday

Friday was a very busy day…

On the picket line at Library Square we hosted a media event creating “a wave of picket signs” around the building… + we had a 1pm visit and reading from Vancouver Poet Laureate George McWhirter  – details to come

2 to 4 pm, the opening ceremonies and reception for the naming of the Douglas Jung Building

5 to 6:30pm – a walking tour of the 1907 Chinatown/Japantown riot.
pictures and description to come…

6:30-9:30pm – Reconcilation Dinner.  part of the Anniversaries 07: Anniversaries of Change events, hosted by CBC's Margaret Gallagher and event organizer George Chow.  pictures and details to come.

401 Burrard Building is now named the Douglas Jung Building

401 Burrard Building is now named the Douglas Jung Building

Art Calderwood, son of Douglas Jung, speaks on behalf of the family, about his father, and thanks the committee, ministers and community for the honour accorded to his father.  Art also paddles on the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team, and we had several team mates there to support him.- photo Todd Wong.

Douglas
Jung is a Chinese-Canadian hero… and finally being recognized as a
Canadian hero.  50 years ago on June 10th, 1957, he became Canada's
first elected provincial or federal politician, when he became the
Member of Parliament for Vancouver Centre. On September 7th, 2007, the federal office tower at 401 Burrard St. was named the Douglas Jung Building
http://news.gc.ca/web/view/en/index.jsp?articleid=348829

It was a great bringing together of the Chinese Canadian community
leaders.  Milton Wong, Bob Lee, the first Chinese-Canadians to become
university chancellors in BC, Dr. Wallace Chung, Joe Wai, Art Lee,
Judge Randall Wong and his wife Bev, David Wong architect, Walter Quan,
Jim Wong-Chu, Faye Leung, head tax activists such as George Jung, Elwin
Xie, Fanna Yee, city councillor Raymond Louie, former city councillors
Tung Chan and Maggie Ip, Kelly Ip, Ramona Mar…  the Jung family…
and of course the Chinese Canadian veterans, with filmaker Wesley Lowe,
who directed and produced the Douglas Jung film biography
I Am The Canadian Delegate.

Speeches were given by the Honourable Jason Kenney, Secretary of State (Multiculturalism and
Canadian Identity) and the Parliamentary Secretary James Moore, on
behalf of the Minister of Public Works and Government Services Canada,
the Honourable Michael M Fortier.

A 10 minute excerpt of the film I Am The Canadian Delegate was shown by film maker Wesley Lowe.  The film premiered on television in May, on both Channel M, and the Biography Channel.  Lowe said that Minister Jason Kenney was so taken by the film, that it was shown across Canada to help celebrate Asian Heritage Month in May.

After the film, Art Calderwood, son of Douglas Jung was introduced.  Art thanked everybody involved in the naming process, and especially Wesley for making the film.  It was a very tender speech in which Art invoked the humbleness of the Chinese Canadian veterans and especially his father and uncle, but it also spoke to the important place that Douglas Jung and the Chinese Canadians like him have in the history of Canada.


Douglas Jung's son Art Calderwood is paddling on Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team, and we had several team members there to support him.  Here are Stuart Mackinnon, Steven Wong, Hillary Wong and Todd Wong – each a multi-generational Canadian whose families have long ties to the history of BC.

some of my pictures available at:

Sep 7 2007, Douglas Jung building, 1907 Riot walk, Reconciliation Dinner

Sep 7 2007, Douglas Jung building, 1907…


More about Douglas Jung

Jung became a WW2
enlisted soldier for Canada when he was 19 years old.  He helped
recruit other Canadians born of Chinese ancestry, at a time when Canada
would not grant them full citizenship rights or voting privileges. 
These young Canadians were given one of the toughest assignments by the
British Command, Operation Oblivion, suicide missons behind enemy
lines.  Fortunately the war ended before they were deployed, but some
Chinese-Canadians saw action in New Guinea.

After the war, Jung
went to law school, after the Chinese Canadians helped secure the
repeal of the infamous “Chinese Exclusion Act” that banned Chinese from
entering Canada from 1923 to 1947.   He became elected as a
Conservative MP in 1957, and was soon appointed by Prime Minister
Diefenbaker to lead the Canadian legal delegation to the United Nations.

see more Douglas Jung bio at
http://www.burmastar.org.uk/jung.htm
Douglas Jung – Veterans Affairs Canada
DOUGLAS JUNG – SOLDIER, LAWYER, POLITICIAN

It's the 100th anniversary today of the 1907 Anti-Asian Riots

It's the 100th anniversary today of the 1907 Anti-Asian Riots

It is known in Chinese-Canadian stories as “The Night the White Boys Played.” It was a time when anti-asian sentiment in Vancouver raised to a pitch that resulted in broken windows, smashed storefronts, and physical violence in Vancouver's Chinatown.  The angry mob also went to Japantown – but citizens there had heard about the attack on Chinatown and had prepared themselves as they repelled the invaders.

A lot has changed in Vancouver's last 100 years.  Many Asians and the Caucasians have met, fell in love and had babies.  In my family, the 7th generation of Rev. Chan Yu Tan is only 1/4 Chinese.  The family wing that married First Nations produced my mom's cousin Rhonda Larrabee, now Chief of the Qayqayt Band (New Westminster). 

Chinese and Japanese, First Nations and South Asians all have as much right to being Canadian as Irish, Scottish, French, English and Ukranians.  All have contributed many ways to help build this nations called Canada.  It was remarkable to watch the recent Generations documentary series on CBC Newsworld as 6 families from across Canada had their family stories told and intertwined with Canadian history.  I was involved with the episode The Chan Legacy which told the story of my great-great grandfather's 1896 arrival in Victoria BC, and how subsequent generations have contributed community service to Canada, and helped others integrate into Canadian society.

Check out the www.Anniversaries07.ca website

REFRACT: who we are
The Vancouver of yesterday, today, and tomorrow.

Anniversaries is a
Vancouver-based consortium of Asian-Canadian institutions and
organizations marking 2007 as an anniversary year in the search for
justice and a multicultural Canada.

RECORD: what we're about

1907, 1947, 1967, and 1997
represent watershed moments in the story of Asian migrants in Canada.
From the anti-Asian riots of 1907, to the hard-won franchise of �47 and
new immigration act of �67 through the handover of Hong Kong a decade
ago, Anniversaries is dedicated to claiming these transformative
markers of struggle and triumph.

RECONCILE: Join Anniversaries of Change …

In
2007 we invite you to join Anniversaries of Change as together we begin
writing the next chapter in the evolving story of Transpacific Canada.

Share the moment by coming to the Reconciliation Dinner on September 7 at Floata Restaurant, Vancouver

Check out all the media action the Anniversaries of Change got this
week! And listen to CBC's Early Edition this week (Tuesday and
Wednesday mornings) for more interviews.

The Georgia Straight
http://www.straight.com/article-107637/commemorating-a-race-riot

The Courier
http://www.canada.com/vancouvercourier/news/story.html?id=27e737a2-acbb-4671-a6c1-5f39adaee1d8&k=77221

The Sun (and click on the link on the right under “Related Links” for a video of additional coverage)
http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/news/story.html?id=ada365e9-fba9-427e-8829-3c860bca9a81&k=27005

What I learned from Pavarotti…

What I learned from Pavarotti…

Music lovers are lamenting the passing of Luciano Pavarotti.
cbc.ca World-renowned Italian tenor Luciano Pavarotti dies at 71

Thursday on CBC Radio's almanac, host Mark Forsythe interviewed local Vancouverites Mark Donnelly and Leo Aquino.  Leo had played his accordion for a short muscial introduction to one of the songs that Pavarotti had performed at GM Place in 1995.  Mark had sung in the chorus accompanying Pavarotti.  Both were asked about their experiences meeting Pavarotti, and sharing the state with him.

Next I was surprised to discover I had personal connections to both of the interviewees.  As a young accordion player, Leo Aquino had been one of my adjudicators at music festivals.  Recently last fall, I met Leo again at a cabaret show evening for the Back Stage Club, and I just happened to be performing my accordion.  Mark mentioned that he discovered the joys of listening to Pavarotti when his piano accompanist had suggested he broaden his repetoire beyond singing leider, and start listening to some opera.  His accompanist's name was Bonita Shuen, one of my long-time accordion playing competitors at music festivals.  Strange how Pavarotti's death can bring me closer to two accordion playing figures from my musical past.

I never met the man, and he never came to a Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner… but he did make an impact on my musical life… and my pocket book.

Pavarotti came to Vancouver to perform at GM place in 1995, and I attended with friends. It was an incredible concert.  Our first time at GM Place and the sound was good, even up in the rafters.  He later came back to BC Place to perform with the Three Tenors, and again I attended with friends.  The sound was terrible… ticket prices were being slashed.  The Tenors left the stage at 11:45pm and the audience was left to welcome in midnight with the chorus singers performing the Carmina Burana.  An unfortunate incident that left Vancouver soured on Pavarotti, after the 1995 swooning.

I didn't listen or attend much opera then.  I had attended a few, Janacek's “Cunning Little Vixen”, Mozart's “Cosi Fan Tutti” and Beethoven's “Fidelio”.  During the 1980's I wrote some opera reviews for the Capilano College student newspaper, called the Capilano Courier.

But by the 1990's I had started listening to more operatic vocal music, sparked by the Vancouver concerts of Cecilia Bartoli.  She was damn sexy back then.  Pavarotti and the Three Tenors concerts made opera even more accessible by singing many popular tunes that I already had played on my accordion such as “Return to Sorento”, and “Granada.”  After listening to their cd's I quickly learned “La Donna E Mobile” and “O Solo Mio” – now both regulars in my accordion repetoire.

When I was younger, I didn't like opera because it was usually sung in foreign languages and generally “very European.”  But today, I appreciate opera not only for its musical beauty, but also for it's multiculturalism.  For many people, the operas set in different lands with different languages is an opening door to learning about the world.  If all the stories were set in one culture and only sung in one language, we would have monoculture – less colourful and certainly less exotic. 

We have learned cultural stereotypes from operas such as Nessun Dorma, set in old Peking.  I shiver at the thought of the court magistrates named Ping, Pang and Pong.  But the power of contemporary operas to open doors to cultural understanding can be readily seen in the Vancouver Opera's recent productions of a First Nations Magic Flute, and the Japanese-Canadian internment setting of Naomi's Road.

It helps that I can attend events put on by my friend Karen Lee-Morlang, and I have singing friends now such as Heather Pawsey who performs with the Vancouver Opera Chorus (and Gung Haggis Fat Choy), and Jessica Cheung and Gina Oh who performed in Naomi's Road.

Pavarotti helped to open the ears and minds of many non-opera listeners, especially with his collaborations with the Three Tenors, Bono, Diana Ross and Bryan Adams.  It's hard not to listen to Nessun Dorma, his signature song, and not picture him on stage.  Rest in peace.

Poets at the library: George McWhirter – Vancouver Poet Laureate coming tomorrow

Poets at the library:  George McWhirter – Vancouver Poet Laureate coming tomorrow

Today poet Rita Wong came to read at Library Square to our Vancouver library workers.  Yesterday, Fiona Tinwei Lam came to read from her book “Intimate Distances.”  And tomorrow…. Vancouver Poet Laureate George McWhirter is coming.

Fiona and Rita both expressed the sadness at the library being closed due to the strike, and extended empathy to the library workers.  Fiona introduced her sister Shona, who is a librarian at the Cancer Control Agency of BC.  Rita shared that when she worked at the Delta Museum, they were out on a long strike.

Rita started off reading a poem from her collection Monkey Puzzle, which was written during that time on strike.

Both Rita and Fiona were well received and our library worker audience supplemented with members of the public, were appreciative and listened well.

Tomorrow… George McWhirter, Vancouver poet laureate, comes to read.

“Let’s talk” in black and white

Aliza wrote this in the late afternoon:

Tomorrow is going to be action packed, so get ready!

Members can start their day by picking out a wardrobe that is black & white. This is the theme for the day.

In the morning, members are encouraged to make and wear signs that
will bring public attention to our website, where they can access the
full picture of who we are and why we are out here walking the lines,
in “black & white”.

At 11:00 AM there will be a fabulous puppet show, a fantasy tale about a farmer named Sam and how he learns to negotiate.

12.00 PM is another filling and fun BBQ.

1.00 PM Poet Laureate of the City of Vancouver George McWhirter
will be speaking to the members. He is the author of Queen of the Sea :
Poems, Catalan Poems, Eyes to See Otherwise. He is also professor
emeritus of the UBC Creative Writing Department where he was department
head from 1983 until 1993. On March 8, 2007, Prof. McWhirter was named
the inaugural Poet Laureate of the City of Vancouver – an honourary
two-year term. As a champion for poetry, language and the arts, he is
tasked to create a unique artistic legacy through public readings and
civic interactions.

1:30 PM– Members will be making a human wall around
the pillars of the library, then moving that wall out to the sidewalk.
This wall will then shift over to the North Plaza where, at 2:00 PM, our members will be spelling out a message to our employer and the City of Vancouver:

“Let’s Talk”

If you know anyone who works in the Federal Tower, let them know what a great photo opportunity this will be.

Finally, at 2:30 PM, everyone will be collecting on the South Plaza for “Grandeur on Georgia”, our daily “hello” to the citizens of Vancouver.

“Read-In” for literacy.

Saturday is World Literacy day. To celebrate CUPE 391 is having
another “Read-In” from 2:00 PM until 2:30 PM on the South Plaza. Bring
your favorite book and some family and friends, and sit down to enjoy
the printed page in honour of literacy.

Finally, another reminder about Saturday night and the great benefit
planned for our local. Details are available on our bargaining
resources page (see right) and our “Splash” page. Look for the bright
green icon.