Category Archives: Chinatown Vancouver

 Tips To Help You Start Living Healthy In 2022

We’re all encouraged to live a healthy lifestyle, but what does that involve and how do we get there? Health doesn’t just entail eating right or exercising. True health incorporates other areas we might not give much thought to, like positivity and self-care. Here, we share with you seven fantastic ways you can get healthy – and stay healthy – in 2022.

1. Follow a Balanced Diet

The saying “everything in moderation” really goes a long way. A healthy diet full of a variety of fruits, vegetables, proteins, grains, nuts and healthy fats helps to keep our bodies and minds in proper working order. There are foods you’ll want to limit, though. Processed foods might taste great, but they often carry a hefty amount of salt which can trigger high blood pressure and heart disease.

2. Embrace Positivity

Negative people or situations can trigger disordered eating and low moods. Look at the people in your life and the things that take up your time, and if something or someone brings you a lot of negative feelings, it might be a sign you need to cut ties. At the same time, work to let go of negative self-talk. A positive self-regard leads to a more positive lifestyle. Visit https://www.wtkr.com/brand-spotlight/best-weight-loss-pills.

3. Keep Moving

Exercise has been proven to lower the risk of disease, increase bone density, and even help us live longer. But how much is enough? The general recommendation is to engage in 30 minutes of moderate-intensity physical activity every day.

4. Know Your Stats

Having an idea of your overall health can help you identify areas you might need to improve. A blood test is a simple way of pinpointing any concerns. Your doctor can recommend particular things you might need to monitor or check, like your blood pressure, blood sugar levels and cholesterol.

5. Stay Hydrated

Without enough water, our bodies are unable to function normally, remove waste, and transport nutrients and oxygen. Adults need, on average, three litres of water a day. If you lose more water due to exercise, heavy perspiration or frequent urination, you will need to drink more regularly.

6. Talk About It

With mental illnesses like depression on the rise, more people find themselves feeling isolated and alone. Talking to a trusted friend or health professional about how you’re feeling can offer you the help you need to restore positive mental health.

7. Stop Smoking

Smoking is an addictive behaviour that carries no health benefits. Smokers are at greater risk of serious health issues, including lung disease, heart attack and stroke. Your family and friends can also be affected by inhaling second-hand smoke. It’s never too late to quit, and there are many support options available to help you give up smoking.

Dr. Sun Yat Sen Gardens celebrates Yearof the Ox on February 1st.

In Vancouver Chinatown, the Chinese New Year Festivities always take place on the first Sunday following Chinese New Year Day.

This year, Chinese New Year Day is on Monday, January 26th…. so on Sunday February 1st, come to Vancouver Chinatown.

One of my new favorite activities starting last year…. is to visit the Dr. Sun Yat Sen courtyard at the Chinese Cultural Centre because my friend Qiu Xia He of Silk Road Music is organizing a special Cultural Olympiad show for Chinese New Year.

Last year, I was fascinated by the show, which brought together many musicians and performers from different ethnic and cultural backgrounds: African, Japanese, Chinese, Latin, French-Canadian, and Celtic.  Oh my goodness… but her programming was a like fantastic dream team that I wish I could bring together for Gung Haggis Fat Choy.

But this year, we will be adding something new… a dragon dance by the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team!

Feb 1. 09 Sunday. Free public performances.
10:30-11:30 first show
12-1:30pm Chinese New Year Parade
1:30-3:30pm second show


Performers:
Qiu Xia He 何秋霞 – Silk Road Music Artistic Director and Chinese Pipa 
Andre Thibault –  Program assistant and Guitar, Oud and flute 
Jun Rong 戎峻 – Chinese Erhu
Jian Min Pan 潘建明 – Chinese Dizi
Pepe Danza – World instruments and percussion
Bonnie Soon and Uzume Taiko – Japanese drum and percussion
Feng Jun Wang 王君 – vocal
Willy Miles – vocal and bass guitar
Jan Walls 王健– Bilingual MC and Chinese Kuai Ban storyteller
Gung Haggis Fat Choy Dragon Boat Team
Still Moon Arts Stilt Dancers
Mt. Pleasant Neiboughood Happy Dancing Group
Jacky Essombe & The Makalas- African Dance
Jessica Jone 钟捷茜, Chengxin Wei 魏成新 and The Lorita Leung Chinese Dance Academy.
More details on the show in Chinese and English:
Check out the following from the Dr. Sun Yat Sen Classical Chinese Gardens website:

http://www.vancouverchinesegarden.com/calendar/2007/2007_feb.htm

Chinese New Year
Celebration at the Garden
Sunday, February 1
10am-4pm, by donation

Join us as we celebrate the Year of the Ox!
On January 26, 2009 Chinese people around the world will celebrate a
new year, according to the Lunar calendar. Join us at the Garden for a
day of family fun and activities. We will have fortune telling, live
music, face painting, storytelling, red envelopes, pin wheel making,
stilt walkers, and more!
Enjoy a fabulous day of live entertainment and welcome the Year of the Ox!

A Celebration in the Courtyard
February 1st, 10:30-11:30am and 1:30-3:30pm

The
Garden is pleased to co-present the Chinese New Year Celebration in the
Courtyard as part of the 2009 Cultural Olympiad. The event is quickly
becoming a part of the Chinese New Year parade day celebration. Join
Silk Road and Friends as they sing, dance and play music under a big
tent and take part in the fun art and crafts projects available in the
small tents scattered around the Courtyard.

The
courtyard-fair atmosphere, coupled with the cross-cultural
performances, provide an opportunity for artists from Vancouver’s
different cultural backgrounds to display their creativity and
collaborate to create new sounds for a traditional festival. We invite
Vancouver to celebrate Chinese New Year with a world vision!

Westender: Gung Haggis celebrates Canadian interculturalism – article by Jackie Wong

West Ender newspaper celebrates Chinese New Year and Robbie Burns Day with a profile on Todd Wong aka “Toddish McWong”

Jackie Wong interviewed me last
week, and asked me about my early years growing up in East Vancouver
and North Vancouver. This is a very nice interview that addresses some
of the cultural identity issues I faced growing up, that has led me to
creating Gung Haggis Fat Choy as an expression of BC's Scottish and
Chinese pioneer history.

Todd Wong established the annual Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner — a merging of Chinese New Year and Robbie Burns Day celebrations — in 1998. It now draws over 500 people. “People leave [the dinner] saying, ‘That is so Canadian,’” he says.

Todd
Wong established the annual Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner — a merging of
Chinese New Year and Robbie Burns Day celebrations — in 1998. It now
draws over 500 people. “People leave [the dinner] saying, ‘That is so
Canadian,’” he says.

Credit: Doug Shanks

NEWS: Gung Haggis celebrates Canadian interculturalism

Growing
up in East Vancouver in the 1960s, Todd Wong was one of many children
who had a surname in common with his classmates at Laura Secord
Elementary School. But when his family moved to North Vancouver when he
was 14, Wong’s Chinese ancestry distinguished him from his classmates
for the first time. “Suddenly, the only other Wong in the entire school
was my brother,” the 48-year-old librarian recalls over tea at a
Chinatown diner. “The other kids would ask if I was Chinese or
Japanese, because they didn’t know the difference at the time. I kept
being asked about Chinese culture because nobody else knew about it.”

Wong’s family has lived in Vancouver for five generations, and he
was raised in what he describes as a “Canadian” household. But it was
his immediate family’s move to North Vancouver that spurred him to
further explore his ancestry. His great-great-grandfather, Reverend
Chan Yu Tan, immigrated to Canada in 1896, and was part of Canada’s
vast pioneer history in which Chinese-Canadians are frequently
overlooked. “I’m one of the invisible-visible minorities,” he says.
“The Chinese culture I grew up learning from my families really doesn’t
exist anymore. [My ancestors] came over when China was still an
Imperial Qing dynasty.”

Wong’s curiosity about his family history led him to start
introducing Chinese New Year celebrations to uninitiated friends as
early as Grade 12. Years later, in 1998, he hosted a private dinner
that combined celebrations for Chinese New Year and for Robbie Burns
Day, the annual Scottish celebration marking the birthday of that
country’s national poet. The event gained momentum over subsequent
years as a restaurant-hosted fundraiser for Wong’s dragon boat team.

Word of the innovative celebration travelled fast, and within a few
years an annual inter-cultural celebration known as Gung Haggis Fat
Choy became a highlight on Vancouver’s cultural calendar, and has grown
to host as many as 590 attendees.

In 2008, Wong received a B.C. Community Achievement Award from
Lieutenant-Governor Stephen Point and Premier Gordon Campbell, and, as
part of B.C.’s 150th anniversary celebration, a life-sized photographic
rendering of Wong, also known as “Toddish McWong,” was installed at the
“Free Spirit” exhibition at the Royal BC Museum. Previous to earning
provincial recognition, Gung Haggis Fat Choy was the inspiration for an
annual cultural festival on SFU’s Burnaby campus, and was the subject
of a 2004 CBC television special.

“The Gung Haggis dinner is inclusive and it recognizes every part of
every person, and I think that’s important,” says Wong. “We don’t have
to be one or the other. We can be everything, all at the same time. I
don’t think we have a lot of events that speak to that.”

This year’s event, on January 25, rings in the Year of the Ox at
Floata Seafood Restaurant in Chinatown. Inter-cultural dinnertime
performers include the Scottish/Chinese Silk Road Ensemble,
multilingual opera soprano Heather Pawsey, DJ Timothy Wisdom, and
rapping bagpiper Joe McDonald. The Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner is a
10-course traditional Chinese banquet that also features haggis, the
traditional Scottish dish that is a Robbie Burns Day favourite.
Proceeds from ticket sales go to the Historic Joy Kogawa House Society,
the Asian Canadian Writers’ Workshop/Ricepaper magazine, and the Gung
Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team.

“It’s about hybridization — Haggis wonton, haggis lettuce wrap —
where we purposefully put haggis in Chinese cooking,” says Wong.
“People leave saying, ‘That is so Canadian.’”

While Wong often finds himself “running to catch up” with the
momentum Gung Haggis has created over the years, the event shows no
signs of slowing down. It’s even spread to Seattle’s Chinatown, where
150 attended the first event there in 2007. “People are continuing to
discover the spirit of Gung Haggis Fat Choy,” he says. “It’s something
everyone can participate in. I would like to see Gung Haggis dinners
across the country. I think that’s how you contribute to Canada being
better. It’s the good-heartedness of how you describe Canadians, and
that openness to other cultures.”

The “good-heartedness” Wong describes as a trademark of his event
also translates to political points on the municipal scene. At the 2008
Gung Haggis dinner, Wong notes that the 10 Vancouver city councillors
who were later voted into office in the November municipal election
were at the event, including Gregor Robertson and a kilt-wearing
Raymond Louie. This year’s special guests include Musqueam elder Larry
Grant; Leith Davis of the SFU Centre for Scottish Studies; Jan Walls,
formerly of SFU’s International Communications program; and
poet-translator Tommy Tao. This year’s Gung Haggis dinner is also the
only dinner in the province to feature one of 250 limited-edition
bottles of 37-year-old Famous Grouse scotch, made in a limited batch
for Robbie Burns celebrations around the world.

“We’ve always attracted people who are good-hearted and open to
interculturalism,” Wong says proudly. “That’s the Vancouver I see. We
want to create the Vancouver we believe in.”

For more information on Gung Haggis Fat Choy and to buy tickets, visit www.GungHaggisFatChoy.com

VisitScotland comes to Vancouver to celebrate Homecoming Scotland with Toddish McWong and Gung Haggis Fat Choy

A Toast to Scotland, Rabbie Burns, and to Gung Haggis Fat Choy with “The Famous Grouse” whisky and haggis won ton!

RL103 by you.

Philip
Riddle, CEO of VisitScotland, and Todd Wong, creator of Burns Night,
“Gung Haggis Fat Choy”, “toast” the Haggis Won Ton during a visit by the
Scottish Tourism Organization to Vancouver, B.C., to promote the Year
of Homecoming Scotland 2009, Tuesday, January 20, 2009. – photo Rich Lam

It is indeed an honour to be chosen one of the 250 Burns Night Suppers to receive the special commemorative 37 year old The Famous Grouse blended whisky to auction off for charity.  I was contacted only last week by Fiona Stewart of VisitScotland – the Scottish Tourism Organization.

Raise Money for your Favourite Charity with Limited edition bottles of The Famous Grouse up for Auction

We soon set up a dinner meeting for Tuesday January 20th, at Floata Restaurant in Vancouver Chinatown.  This is the site of Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner, where on Sunday January 25th, we will host a jam-packed dinner filled with music, poetry, mirth and fun.

Vancouver was the first stop for VisitScotland Chief Executive Philip Riddell and his assistant Lee McRonald.  Our Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner is the only Burns Supper in British Columbia, that will be receiving the special 37 year old bottle of  The Famous Grouse.  They will next fly up to Calgary, then onwards to Toronto where they will celebrate January 23rd at the CN Tower for the St. Andrews Society of Toronto’s Burns Supper where an original watercolour painting of Canada Hill on the Isle of Bute by the highly acclaimed Glasgow artist Alma Wolfson is being auctioned off to help in the promotion of Scotland's year of Homecoming.

The watercolour (shown below) is a perspective of Loch Striven and the
Kyles of Bute from the vantage point where families gathered in the
1700s on the Isle of Bute to wave goodbye to friends and family
emigrating to Canada from Scotland.

Canada Hill by Alma Wolfson


There are many connections between Scotland and Canada, and both Mr. Riddell and Mr. McRonald paid careful attention, as I shared that BC's first Governor 150 years ago, was James Douglas who was born in British Guyana from a Scottish father and a Creole mother.  BC's first premier was John Foster McCreight back in 1871.  I described how I am “inviting” these important BC historical figures to the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner, because life-size photographs of them were featured in the “The Party” display at the Royal BC Museum, celebrating 150 of BC's most fascinating figures.. including “Toddish McWong.”

They were certainly intrigued by descriptions of the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner, as I walked them around the Floata Restaurant, the largest Chinese restaurant in North America with a seating capacity of 1000.  We hope to host 500 people for this year's dinner, and increase from 430 people last year.  I described some of the performances that would happen, such as Silk Road Music, the Gung Haggis Fat Choy Pipe Band, opera soprano Heather Pawsey, as well as poetry performances by Rita Wong, Jan Walls and Tommy Tao.  Mr. Riddell asked for one of our posters which describes and lists our many performers. 

It was only fitting that we introduce Mr. Riddell to our deep-fried haggis and shrimp won ton dumplings. Crisp and lightly fried, they were a delight.

“I've never had haggis won ton,” Mr. Riddell shared with me. 

“I've never had “The Famous Grouse,” I shared back.  Both would prove to be delightful.

I explained that “Dim Sum” meant “pieces of the heart” or “touches the heart,.” and we joked about what the haggis was actually made of.

2009_January 078Rich Lam (standing on chair) and Lee McRonald (sitting) take pictures of Todd Wong and Philip Riddell – photo Deb Martin

Joining me to meet Philip Riddell and his assistant Lee McRonald, were my girlfriend Deb Martin, Judy Maxwell event production assistant.  We also invited two special friends of ours who are important community leaders with deep roots in Vancouver's Scottish community.

 Joy Coghill O.C. was born in Ayreshire, the home county of Robbie Burns.  She came to Canada as a child.  She became a dedicated actor, director and producer.  As artistic director of the Vancouver Playhouse, she commissioned and produced the ground-breaking play “The Ecstasy of Rita Joe.”  Joy easily spoke with Mr. Riddell about Scottish history, Burns, and many other common points.

Chuck Lew Q.C. is a Vancouver lawyer, who has carried the torch for the Chinatown Lion's Club Burns Dinners since the 1950's.  He grew up with many Scottish friends that his nickname was “McLew.”  Chuck has been fascinated by the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner, and last year we finally attended each other's Chinatown Burns dinners as guests.

Photographer Rich Lam, set up some photographs to demonstrate the meeting of VisitScotland Chief Executive with “Toddish McWong” and the haggis won ton, while Lee McDonald chatted with Deb and Judy about Scotland, and the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner.

2009_January 080 Haggis Siu-mei pork dumplings.

Both the haggis wonton dumplings and the haggis siu-mei pork dumplings were hits with our guests.  Mr. Riddell was surprised at how good they were, and Joy was absolutely delighted.

We look forward to auctioning the special 37 year old Famous Grouse whisky to help raise money for charity.  And we may even direct some of the monies raised to Scotland's National Trust to help protect and conserve items for the new Robbie Burns Museum.
http://www.nts.org.uk/Burns/Burns250/

It would certainly be appropriate to donate money for a Chinese item in the Burns Collection:

4015
(click image to expand it)
China Punch Bowl
Burns used this pretty punch bowl at his brother Gilbert's wedding.
To make a donation for the conservation of this item, please contact the Burns 250 Team (details above)

In appreciation, Mr. Riddell thanked us for our hospitality, as we thanked him for the gift of The Famous Grouse.  He told us that he was very pleased to meet people who are so enthusiastic about Scottish culture and history.

Hopefully next year, Deb and I will go to visit Scotland.  If so, we will have two new friends to visit with!  And maybe there will be a Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner on Scottish soil!

RL102 by you.

Philip
Riddle, CEO of VisitScotland, and Todd Wong, creator of Burns Night,
“Gung Haggis Fat Choy”, try the Haggis Wonton during a visit by the
Scottish Tourism Organisation to Vancouver, B.C., to promote the Year
of Homecoming Scotland 2009, Tuesday, January 20, 2009.
– Rich Lam.

Chinese Canadians that inspired me in 2008

Canadians, for the most part, seek acupuncture as an alternative medicine, one that can enhance Western medicine practices. However, for more than 3,000 years, Chinese medicine has used acupuncture as a primary means of balancing life energy flow, or qi, to improve overall health and wellness. Acupuncture can provide relief from chronic pain and provide a host of other health benefits as well. 

Here at Integrated Medical Solutions of Knoxville, our integrated medical team focuses on whole-body health and takes a holistic approach to our patients’ well-being. People of all ages in Knoxville, Tennessee, and nearby communities benefit from our natural approach to back pain, headaches, arthritis, and other common problems.

Increased energy

Do you feel tired all the time, struggling to meet the demands of everyday life? If you often feel tired, acupuncture may be just what you need to restore your energy balance. 

In fact, one study investigated the effects of acupuncture treatment on people suffering from chronic fatigue. The researchers found that the group who received acupuncture treatments reported a significant decrease in fatigue compared to the group who didn’t undergo acupuncture. If you feel chronic fatigue make sure to try out meticore.

You don’t have to suffer from chronic fatigue to enjoy increased energy levels, either. Nearly anyone can benefit from having their energy flow optimized through acupuncture. 

Decreased blood pressure

According to a recent study, acupuncture was found to be an effective supplementary treatment for people with high blood pressure. Researchers discovered that acupuncture helped significantly lower blood pressure in a group of people taking antihypertensive medication.

This is good news for the nearly 75 million adults in the United States who suffer from high blood pressure, which is a major risk factor for heart disease. While you have many options to help lower your blood pressure, including changing your diet and taking blood pressure medication, acupuncture can enhance and complement your efforts. 

Improved digestion

Do you suffer from chronic acid reflux or irritable bowel syndrome? Acupuncture may be able to offer natural relief from these and other common digestive issues. 

Experts in Chinese medicine assert that digestive issues are the result of an imbalance or disruption in the flow of energy. Acupuncture can help restore both balance and energy flow to relieve digestive problems. 

Decreased stress and anxiety

Stress is a common problem for many Americans. Acupuncture can relieve stress and anxiety by stimulating your nervous system to release biochemicals so you feel a sense of calm and well-being. Stress usually leads to chronic back pain, in order to treat most of it visit https://www.riverfronttimes.com/stlouis/erase-my-back-pain-reviews-2021-whats-new/Content?oid=34768096.

Acupuncture is also being investigated as an alternative treatment for depression. Researchers say that the insertion of the needle may help restore the flow of neurotransmitters and hormones to lift your mood. 

Quantum of Solstice… We explore the Winter Solstice Festival at both Dr. Sun Yat Sen Gardens + Roundhouse Community Centre

What do you do on the shortest day/longest night of the year?

December 21st…. and the city is being suffocated by blankets of snow.  Traffic is snarled to a halt – if people dare to go out.  Christmas shopping is threatened.

What do you do?

We went to see the James Bond movie, then mellowed by checkout the lantern procession at Dr. Sun Yat Sen Gardens + the candle light labrynth at the Roundhouse Community Centre.

It was part of the 15th ANNUAL WINTER SOLSTICE LANTERN FESTIVAL 6:00 – 10:00 p.m. www.secretlantern.org

Winter Solstice Lantern Festival Main Page – Roundhouse Community …
/www.vancouverchinesegarden.com”>www.vancouverchinesegarden.com</a>

2008_Dec 110

Many people entering the Dr. Sun Yat Sen Gardens remarked that they've never seen the Gardens covered with snow.  It really added a beautiful vision to this multi-faceted jewel in Vancouver.

2008_Dec 115

2008_Dec 105

2008_Dec 158

Trust me to find an accordion…. Zeedillia performed at the Roundhouse.

2008_Dec 131

The “Trouble Makers” are a female choir, performing at the the Dr. Sun Yat Sen Gardens for Winter Solstice.

Vote for “Broken Family” in CBC Radio contest

Donna Lee entered a film in the CBC Radio contest called Migrations.  She is in the semi-final, and needs a push from all you good folks.

I first met Donna during the Head Tax redress campaign.  She did some filming when we protested against then Prime Minister Paul Martin.  Maybe our protesting led to his downfall?  It caught media attention.

Check out Donna's film – which gives the often untold story about how families were separated not only because it was TOO EXPENSIVE to bring a wife or family to Canada (Remember $500 in 1923 would buy a small house), but because the “Chinese Exclusion Act” made it impossible to enter Canada 1923 to 1947, if you were Chinese.  No other ethnic group was specifically targeted.  I guess they knew that Adrienne Clarkson was coming.

Here's the note from Donnna”

As you probably know, Broken Family,
my short documentary on the head tax redress movement and my family, is
in a CBC Radio Canada contest called Migrations.  It's made it to the
semi-final rounds of a people's choice online voting competition. 
Thanks for your support! 

Featuring Harvey Lee, Naiya Lee Tsang, and Sahali Lee Tsang and my
family's Rio Cafe in Souris MB, which I'm sad to say doesn't exist by
that name anymore.

If you are venturing forth on the world wide
web and feel like dropping by the website for another round of voting,
then here's the url:

http://www.rciviva.ca/rci/migrations/flash.asp?lg=en&id_concours=8

it's available for viewing for this round from Thurs Nov 20th to the 26th.


There are many other fine shorts on the subject of migration – enjoy!


Many thanks for allowing me space for artist-self-promotion-type-of email.

Hope this finds you well,


Donna

Remembrance Day 2008: First Nations Lt. Governor Steven Point attends Chinese-Canadian veterans ceremony in Chinatown

Lt. Gov. Steven Point acknowledges the Chinese Canadian veterans for their support of Aboriginal veterans at Chinatown Remembrance Day ceremony

2008_Nov11 069 by you.
Lt.Cdr. King Wan, Mr. Gwendolyn Point, MP Libby Davies, MLA Jenny Kwan, Lt. Gov. Steven Point, Col. Howe Lee, MP Don Davies – photo Todd Wong


It was a special day at the Chinatown Remembrance Day ceremonies with the presence of Lt. Gov. Steven Point and Her Honour Mrs. Gwendolyn Point.  This was the first time in the 5 year history of the Chinatown Remembrance Day ceremonies that a Lt. Gov. had attended.  Traditionally, the First Nations veterans have always been included.  Last year in 2007, a special First Nations tobacco ceremony was included featuring First Nations veteran Louis Schmidt.

DSC_5210_95648 - The Hon Steven L. Point, Lieutenant Gov of BC by FlungingPictures Lt. Gov. Steven Point addresses the crowd – photo courtesy Patrick Tam

This year's crowd was the largest yet for the Chinatown Remembrance Day ceremonies.  It was coordinated by Pacific Unit 280's

Alfred Woo with SUCCESS and MCed by SUCCESS executive director Tung Chan. 

DSC_5233_95671a - Overview 3-foto pano4 by FlungingPictures.
Here's a 3 photo panorama taken by Patrick Tam – I am on the far right next to Col. Howe Lee
.

2008_Nov11 052 My grand-uncle Daniel Lee is the first to place a wreath at the monument for Chinese Canadian Veterans.  He is currently president of Pacific Unit 280 and is the only Chinese Canadian veteran to receive Awards of Merit, Appreciation and Service – photo Todd Wong

Read my 2004 story about Daniel Lee: Nov 11 – Chinese Canadian Veterans: My Uncle Dan

DSC_5151_95589 - Todd WONG & Sue by FlungingPictures

I attended the ceremonies with my new friend – author Susan Crean – photo courtesy Patrick Tam

2008_Nov11 077

After the outdoor ceremonies, Pacific Unit 280 always goes for lunch to Foo's Ho Ho restaurant.  I introduced  Susan Crean to Alex Louie who is the subject of the NFB film Unwanted Soldiers. The film documents how Canada did not want Chinese-Canadians as soldiers, but was reluctantly forced to accept them.  The film was made by Louie's daughter Jari Osborne.  Susan lives in Toronto and knows Louie's other daughter there, the composer Alexina Louie.

2008_Nov11 088 Lt. Gov. Steven Point, Col. Howe Lee, City Councilor Raymond Louie and Lt.Cdr. King Wan – photo Todd Wong

At the conclusion of the lunch, Lt. Gov. Steven Point thanked Pacific Unit 280.  He said “In my culture, we always thank the cook with a song.”  He and his wife Gwendolyn Point, then began tapping the plates with forks to simulate a drum beat, and encouraged the veterans to do so.  They then began singing a First Nations song for the restaurant owner/cook Joanne. It was a very special highlight and everybody was touched by the graciousness and warmth of the Lt. Governor.

See my pictures on Flickr:

Remembrance Day 2008

Remembrance Day 2008

Nov 11 Ceremonies in Vancouver Chinatown at Canadian Chinese Pioneer monument begins at 12:20pm

It's now a 5 year Chinatown Remembrance Day tradition for Chinese Canadian Veterans: 12:30pm ceremony after Victory Square ceremonies. 


Here is the Canadian Chinese Monument at Keefer Triangle, located at Keefer and Columbia St, across from the Chinese Cultural Centre Museum and Archives. – photo Todd Wong


My Grand-Uncle Dan at the Chinatown Cenotaph inaugural Remembrance Day Ceremony in 1994 – photo Todd Wong


Following the Victory Square Armistice Day ceremonies, the veterans of Pacific Unit 280 go to Chinatown, and have a smaller more intimate and personal 2nd Remembrance Day ceremony for Chinese Canadian veterans.  This has always been followed by their traditional lunch at Foo's Ho Ho Restaurant.

The veterans march will begin approximately at 12:20 pm, and the ceremony will begin at the Canadian Chinese Pioneer monument at Keefer St. Triangle at 12:30pm.

I have attended past ceremonies since 2004
Here are my past articles and photos: