Category Archives: Commentaries

CBC “On this Day”: Martin Luther King's “I have a Dream” speech

CBC “On this Day”:  Martin Luther King's “I have a Dream” speech

Yesterday, the CBC website marked “On This Day” with Martin Luther King Jr.'s famous “I Have a Dream” speech.  This is such an incredible speech.  It still sends shivers down my spine.  Especially with my experiences over this past year, becoming surrounded by the Chinese Head Tax redress movement as well as the campaign to save Joy Kogawa's childhood home, and bringing up all the issues of the Japanese Canadian internment.

This morning I have been reading the first chapter of David Suzuki: the autobiography, titled “My Happy Childhood in Racist British Columbia.”  It has been very moving, as he describes the experiences that shaped his perceptions of the world, both against Canadian white society, and the Japanese community – to which he felt an “outsider.”

Martin Luther King was assinated on April 4, 1968.  Suzuki writes about his experience:

Students at UBC organized a rally on the steps of the library to express our sorrow.  I was an associate professor and spoke out, telling British Columbians that this was a time for us not to smugly reaffirm our sense of superiority over Americans but to reexamine our own society.  I reminded them of the incarceration of Japanese Canadians during World War II, the treatment of Native people, and the fact that Asians and blacks wer not allowed to vote in B.C. until the 1960's.  The Vancouver Sun wrote a scathing editorial that chastised me for opening old wounds, for raising issues that were not relevant on the occasion of a King memorial.  It was then that I realiszed how important tenure was as I was subtly informed that university administrators were nervous about faculty members who might attract negative publicity.
                    – page 52-53  David Suzuki the Autobiography

Suzuki writes an autobiography that is both gripping and enlightening.  He shares how events shape his life and perceptions.  He demonstrates how action or inaction both have consequences.  And most importantly how Canada has a racist history, and it is recent, and the victims are still walking amongst us, still hurting and suffering. 

Meeting so many head tax descendants and hearing their family stories, of how separation makes you ask what kind of human beings did we have running our governments.  The same kind that kept African Americans segregated in the American south, or kept First Nations Canadians segregated on reserves.

See the special article that my friend Ian wrote for the David Suzuki event for the CBC Book Club
http://www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com/blog/_archives/2006/5/8/1942735.html

My last week of July… filled with intercultural incidents

My last week of July… filled with intercultural incidents

There is never enough time to write about everything I do… but for
the past week – here are some intercultural highlights and thoughts.


July 20th  Tang Concubines.

I went to see Tang Concubines at the Centre in Vancouver
for Performing Arts
.  It was amazing… the acrobatic feats, dance
choreography.  I went with my friend Meena, who was born in
Beijing.  Meena kept hitting me on the shoulder, exclaiming how
fantastic the show was.  We agreed that it was for more of a
Chinese audience, or at least an audience that could appreciate Chinese
culture and history more, or interested in it.  Lots of classical
Chinese stylizations in the dance and movement.  It certainly made
it interesting to learn about the Tang dynasty and the roles that the
first Women empress and the emperor's favorite concubine's played.

Looking forward to seeing the remount of Terracotta Warriors and Of Heaven and Earth.


July 22/23 – Vernon Dragon Boat Festival.

The sleepy town of Vernon was very excited to “dot” the “eyes of the
dragon” and host the 2nd annual Greater Vernon Dragon Boat Races. 
I met a lot of Vernon people who were dragon boating for the first
time.  I even got to steer the boat for the Vernon breast cancer
survivor team “Buoyant Buddies.”  Our Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon
boat team was there enjoying the hot weather and spreading our
multicultural message of intercultural harmony.  Four of us wore
kilts, in the 41 degree weather (thankfully cooler on the
Saturday).  Lots of questions about the kilts, and compliments on
our team shirts.  Look for a Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner coming to
Vernon or Kelowna for January 2007!


Wednesday – Fireworks – July 26th.

Italy lit up the sky.  A small group of dragon boaters watched
from a rooftop patio in Kitsilano with a brand new friend, our host for
the evening.  We shared mutual love of music including Sinatra,
Volare, and other Italian masterpieces such as Puccini and Verdi, and
Rossini.  Wine, music, fireworks, a roof top hot tub and dragon
boat buddies to share it with.  What could be better? 
Chinese ethnicities mixed with Scots, Malaysian, Newfoundland, English,
French and whatever else in between and beyond.


Thurday night – COPE fundraiser BBQ at Rowing Club.

My friend Meena is now the cultural liason for COPE, and insisted I
drop in after I finished my work shift at the Central library.  I
parked my car, just down from the stature of Robbie Burns just inside
the entrance to Stanley Park, across from the Rowing Club.  It was
great to meet so many interesting people, as Meena introduces me as
“Toddish McWong.”  There was a silent auction.  One of the
prizes featured a dvd titled “The Vanishing Tattoo” about tattoo artist
Thomas Lockhart's trip with adventurer Vince Hemingson in Borneo to find some of the aboriginal tattoo
artists and “the last authentic tattoo”.  Of course this big prize included a $100 certificate for
at tatoo at his West Coast Tattoo studio. 

I quickly recognized the picture of Vince
who comes to kilts night – in the video too!  After
introducing myself to Thomas Lockhart, who was attending with his partner Sharon Gregson (COPE school trustee) –  I had to put a bid on the prize. 
Surprise!  I out bid a number of people…  Now what design
to tattoo? and where?  Maybe the “Gung Haggis Fat Choy” logo and
dragon head wearing a tam?  What will my girlfriend say? 
Maybe I can appease her by offering her the prize?

Storyscapes Chinatown: “Spiritual Kinship” – Todd Wong

Storyscapes Chinatown: “Spiritual Kinship” – Todd Wong


Here is my contribution to Storyscapes Chinatown, bringing together
stories of interactions between First Nations and Chinese peoples in
Vancouver.  I was very pleased to bring a Creation Story to tie in
the spiritual kinship between these two cultural groups.  I have
always personally felt a spiritual bond to First Nations peoples…
especially since I have travelled to Nu-Chal-nuth territory in Kyuquot
Sound, Nootka territory in Clayquot Sound, Haida territory in Haida
Gwaii, Squamish and Musqueam territory throughout the Lower mainland
from Tsawassen to Lillo'wat and Okanagan Territory too.

This particular story about the Mongolian birth mark on First Nations people was told to me by an elderly First Nations man that I met at the mouth of the Capilano River in North Vancouver.  My father and I went for a walk, and some First Nations people were fishing on the East side of the river.  All the land here is land belonging to the Burrard First Nations.  We had a good talk about fishing, then about being non-white, and giving appreciation to each other's culture.  Then we talked about how both Chinese and First Nations babies both have the Mongolian birthmark when they are born.  He shared this story with me.

There are many theories about how Asian peoples may have migrated
across the Bering Strait to North America across an “ice bridge.” One
of my favorite Creation stories about the First Nations people, is by
Bill Reid.  It is how Raven found a clam.  He opened it,
setting the first peoples free.  There are many Creation stories,
and we need to respect all of them. 

But we also know that there are aboriginal people in Siberia and also
in the Aleutian Islands of Alaska – who are family and travel across
the Bering Sea to visit each other.  It is the same as aboriginal
people on Southern Vancouver Island who travel to North West Washington
across the Juan de Fuca Strait.  They have been related and family
– since before Canada or the United States existed.  What are
geographic borders but creations of human ideas?

Storyscapes Chinatown: “Know Where You Come From” – Rhonda Larrabee

Storyscapes Chinatown: “Know Where You Come From” – Rhonda Larrabee

This is my cousin Rhonda Larrabee.  Actually she is my mother’s cousin.  I knew Grand Uncle Art since I was a child, but I never met Rhonda until we started preparing a family reunion in 1999 for the Rev. Chan Yu Tan descendants.  Previously I had heard of Rhonda, and that she had created a family tree, as I had similarly done.  It was inevitable that we should meet, and
instantly like each other tremendously.

Rhonda is incredible.  She has singlehandedly resurrected the Qayqayt First Nations Band.  When she first applied for her Indian status, she was denied and was told that the Qayqayt “didn’t exist anymore.”  Disappointed, she was shocked because clearly she existed, and her brothers existed, and her mother’s siblings still existed.  A few years later… she applied again and was granted status.  She was told “I guess you want some land now too.”

Rhonda was the subject of the award winning National Film Board documentary “Tribe of One,” directed by Eunhee Cha.  It is the story of Rhonda and how she discovered her First Nations heritage at the adult age of 24, and how she claimed it, and became elected band chief. 
There are some pictures of family attending the “Three Chinese Pioneer Families” photo exhibit at the Chinese Cultural Centre Museum and Archives in 2002.

I am proud of Rhonda… and she is proud of me.  We enthusiastically support each other in our endeavors, and especially with the Rev. Chan Legacy Project, and family reunions.

The Contrarians: Listen to Todd Wong on CBC Radio One – interviewed tonight by host Jesse Brown


The Contrarians: Listen to Todd Wong on CBC Radio One – interviewed tonight by host Jesse Brown


Tuesdays, 9:30 a.m. – 10:00 a.m.
Wednesdays, 7:30 p.m. – 8:00 p.m.
July 5th 
The Contrarians

“It's a new show, in which Jesse Brown explores ideas so
contrary to popular thought that they're almost…inexpressible.” – CBC website

I was interviewed in Early June by CBC radio host Jesse Brown to speak about multiculturalism.  The question that was posed to me was “Is traditional multiculturalism valid?”

Somehow the producers found my website, and liked my ideas about
interculturalism, since I say we are actually now living in a
post-multicultural world, because ideally… we should be inter-acting, inter-married, and inter-communicating.  Traditional multiculturalism has tended to put ethnic cultures into little jars for display purposes – bringing them out for presentation for Canada Day shows, multiculturals shows… to say “look how nice and multicultural we are – we're not racist!”

One friend heard the show yesterday morning at 9:30am, and e-mailed me.

"Are you sure about a probationary period for new citizens?  is that 
what you really meant on cbc? It seemed like the interviewer didn't sum
up what I heard you say, but maybe i'm wrong.

"I wasn't quite sure on the take of the interviewer -anti-racism or fear
monger."

Hmmm…. Jesse Brown's style is to be controversial with ideas.  He is trying to project a debate like that some ideas we take for granted aren't really what they seem to be.  For example, the Conservative Government redress package on the Chinese Head Tax and Exclusion Act all sounds nice with an apology and invidual compensation for surviving head tax payers and spouses.  But if my grandfather was alive, he'd be 140 today… He would want his TAX REFUND to be able to benefit his children, who also suffered through the extreme racism and forced separation of families cause by the Canadian Government's purposeful exclusion of Chinese people, to better create a White Canada.

Interculturalism – that's how I believe I live my personal and public life.  I interact with many cultures.  My multi-generational British-Canadian girlfriend says “There's no cultural difference between Todd and me, because we are both multi-generational Canadians,” as opposed to new immigrant Canadians…  Our families amazingly communicate well together.  She eats with chopsticks, cooks sweet and sour chicken and pork.  I play accordion and speak almost conversational French.

I really did say that maybe new Canadian citizens should be on a probationary period.  With the recent attempt to bomb the CBC in Toronto and storm parliament, or street racing causing death in Richmond and Vancouver… something's got to be done to protect good Canadian citizens and good Canadian values.

This is going to be an issue for European immigrants, as well as Asian or African or Caribbean immigrants.  We must encourage all new citizens to engage in Canadian society, and we must encourage Canadian society to engage with new immigrants…. and the First Nations people too – not leave them behind!  We must interact.  We must be inter-cultural… not multi-cultural.

Please don't get me wrong… some of my nicest friends are immigrants to Canada…  I have even spoken as a member of the Canadian Club, welcoming new citizens at Citizen Court, with Judge Sandra Wilking presiding (Sandra is a friend, a former Vancouver City Councillor, and an ethnic Chinese immigrant from South Africa).

But how do we interact between cultures?  I don't want to sound like some of the White Canadian forefathers who created the racist Head Tax and Chinese Exclusion Act, as well as the Potlatch Law, and the Indian Act -further creating hardship for our First Nations peoples…   And maybe that is the question that Jesse Brown wants to pose on The Contrarians… push our buttons a little and make us re-think what it means to be Canadian.  Do ya think? eh?

If every Canadian family inter-racially married… would there be more racial tolerance and cultural understanding in our country?  I think so.  My family has already done that.  Every generation for fiver generations!

Check out Jesse Brown and the CBC Radio summer program
The Contrarians
Tuesdays, 9:30 a.m. – 10:00 a.m.
Wednesdays, 7:30 p.m. – 8:00 p.m.


Canada Day and Multiculturalism… We must embrace our racist past + past words of Chief Dan George

Canada Day and Multiculturalism…
We must embrace our racist past
+ words of Chief Dan George



The
history of Canada – is not a nation of white people.  Oh… the
white people tried to make it so by not allowing First Nations, and
Asian people the right to vote, or to be citizens.  The white
forefathers of this country called Canada, tried to keep Asian people
from coming by using head tax (from China), restricting immigration to
direct passage only (from India), and by diplomatic means (asking Japan
to limit people emmigrating to Canada).




But that
was before the White people learned about Multiculturalism, and that
all peoples really are people.  We are all human beings under the
sun, and it was Canada that led the way at the United Nations with a
Charter of Rights, under Prime Minister Lester Pearson.




A new
friend Lorna MacDonald (First Nations and Scottish ancestry) has
alerted me to the speech that Chief Dan George made on Canada Day, 1967
– Canada's Centennial.  He said:


“How long have I known you, oh Canada? Two hundred years? Yes, a
hundred years. And many, many seelanum more. And today, when you
celebrate your one hundred years, oh Canada , I am sad for all the
Indian people throughout the land.

For I have known you
when your forests were mine; when they gave me my meat and my clothing.
I have known you in your streams and rivers where your fish flashed and
danced in the sun, where the waters said come, come and eat of my
abundance. I have known you in the freedom of your winds. And my
spirit, like the winds, once roamed your good lands.

But
in the long hundred years since the white man came, I have seen my
freedom disappear like the salmon going mysteriously out to sea. The
white man's strange customs which I could not understand, pressed down
upon me until I could no longer breathe.

When I fought to
protect my land, I was called a savage. When I neither understood nor
welcomed this way of life, I was called lazy. When I tried to rule my
people, I was stripped of my authority.

My nation was
ignored in your history books — they were little more important in the
history of Canada than the buffalo that ranged the plains. I was
ridiculed in your plays and motion pictures, when I drank your
fire-water, I got drunk — very, very drunk. And I forgot.

Oh
Canada , how can I celebrate this Centenary, this one hundred years?
Shall I thank you for the reserves that are left to me of my beautiful
forests? For the canned fish of my rivers? For the loss of my pride and
authority, even among my own people? For the lack of my will to fight
back? No! I must forget what's past and gone.

Oh God in
heaven! Give me back the courage of the olden chiefs. Let me wrestle
with my surroundings. Let me again, as in the days of old, dominate my
environment. Let me humbly accept this new culture and through it rise
up and go on.

Oh God! Like the Thunderbird of old, I shall
rise again out of the sea. I shall grab the instruments of the white
man's success — his education, his skills, and with these new tools I
shall build my race into the proudest segment of your society. Before I
follow the great chiefs who have gone before us, oh Canada , I shall
see these things come to pass.

I shall see our young
braves and our chiefs sitting in the houses of law and government,
ruling and being ruled by the knowledge and freedom of our great land.
So shall we shatter the barriers of our isolation. So shall the next
hundred years be the greatest in the proud history of our tribes and
nations.”


Chief Dan George, Tsleil-Waututh Nation, born “Geswanouth Slahoot'  (1899-1981)
http://thefirstamericans.homestead.com/SpeechCDG~ns4.html



It is
time for all Canadian peoples to stand up and recognize the global
heritage of Canada's peoples.  We can all celebrate and recognize
the contributions of First Nations, Scottish, Chinese, Japanese,
English, French, South Asian, African peoples.




It is
also time for all Canadian peoples to stand up and denounce the words
of racists, bigots and anti-apologists for past racists actions in
Canada's history, such as Trevor Lautens in the
North Shore News
Canada must and will be healed…. in our hearts, our souls and our
minds.  We are a family, and families do not leave family members
behind.  For the racists… we embrace them, bless them, and help
them on their learning development, and we offer them “tough love.”




This
past year, I have been active as a director for The Canadian Club of
Vancouver, which is one of the oldest clubs in Canada.  It was
founded to create an identity away from the “British traditions” of
Canada's early British pioneers.  It was founded to create and
support a “Canadianess” that was unique and growing.


I love
the people who are on the board.  They have welcomed me. 
They have welcomed my ideas.  For this year's prestigious Order of
Canada luncheon, we featured writer Joy Kogawa.  Last year the
club featured architect Bing Thom.  Both are Order of Canada
recipients.




On the
evening of Canada Day….  a Sing Tao Daily reporter phoned me to
ask what I loved about Canada.  I told him it was the acceptance
of Canadian people to embrace and learn about each other's
cultures.  This is how we grow as a nation.  This is how we
see beyond the flat world of monoculturalism, and look at how to evolve
Canadian culture – by incorporating the best of all cultures, while
recognizing what is specifically and historically Canadian.

Why I love Hawaii…. on Canada Day

Why I love Hawaii…. on Canada Day

Hawaii:  My dad's sister lived in Hawaii from 1960 to 1990.

I LOVE Hawaii….
I need to return…. 
It has now been 15 years since I was last there….  I first went
to Hawaii when I was 5 years old.  I have been six times, which
include 2 Easters, and 3 Christmases.

There is a level of cultural and
intercultural understanding and acceptance in Hawaii – that does not
exist in Canada yet.  Except in certain families of intercultural race with mixed race children.

And in Hawaii…
The Japanese-Americans were NOT interned like they were in California
and Canada.  They stayed in Hawaii, in their own homes which were
not confiscated like in Canada by the Canadian government which
confiscated Joy Kogawa's childhood home – now in the processs of becoming a national landmark in Vancouver.

But in Hawaii in 1976, I noticed that all the
television newscasts had Asian reporters.  There was a complete feeling
of acceptance, + everybody spoke English.  I felt at HOME in Hawaii.

And I Love Hawaiian Music
I have records and cd of Beamer Brothers, Cazimero Brothers and pop
group Kalapana + traditional slack key guitar by Gabby Pahinui.

My first kiss was in Hawaii – I was 18, she was 17.  We wrote letters
for about 2 years…. before they slowly diminished…  She was
Chinese-Hawaiian and Catholic, prom queen of Sacred Hearts Academy.  I
still have her pictures.

Thursday night I attended a farewell party for Chip
Frank, at Centre for Spiritual Living.  I got up on stage, spoke about
Chip and Rev. Candace, and how the Hawaiian-themed farewell party was so
appropriate for this man, who would sit in the back of the room with a
Hawaiian shirt while his minister wife was up on stage, dressed ministerarily,
with a conservative flair.

I spoke how Chip and Candace brought the
sense of “Ohana” to CSL – the Hawaiian word for family…. and how Ohana means
“nobody gets left behind” (just like in the movie Lilo and Stitch)

I spoke about how there are two different
kinds of Hawaiian leis… the touristy kind of closed circle lei – that everybody is familialr with… and the
traditional sacred “mai lee” lei made of tea leaves – that are long and
open… because it represents “open love” and that is just the way Chip is…
with open arms… for open love.

I offered a Hawaiian blessing – but
forgot some of the words., so explained that the meaning and the energy was
still there.
Hi`ipoi I Ka`Aina Aloha

“Cherish the
beloved land….

Canada Day…. what I love and hate about this country

Canada Day…. what I love and hate about this country


This year, Canada Day is bittersweet.

For the Chinese community… starting in 1923, the day of the Chinese
Exclusion Act, July 1st became known as “Humilation Day.”  How
else can you describe the country of your birth or choice, not wanting
you because of your ethnicity or skin colour… not wanting “your kind”
so much, they they pass laws banning any immigration of your ethnicity
or ancestry, from anywhere in the world.

While the Conservative government has apologized officially for the
Chinese Head Tax and Exclusion Act, it has failed to recognize all
payers of the head tax.  They have offered financial payment to
“living head tax payers and spouses… who were directly
affected.” 

But what about the head tax payers and spouses who died waiting for the
apology?  And weren't familes direcly affected by the head tax and
exclusion act, which deliberately deterred families from being together
and ultimately separting them for decades?

Prof. Henry Yu of UBC, says that “giving redress only to those head tax
payers and spouses still alive, is like giving redress to First Nations
people who are still alive after their land was initially
stolen.”  Hmmm… I guess they would have to be 150 to 250 years
old now.

If my father's father was still alive today, he would be 140 years
old.  He had to pay $500 to bring my father's mother to Canada,
which would have been the price of a house, or 2 years salary.  In
today's world that would cost $200,000 to $350,000.

If the Canadian people thought that the $1000 immigrant landing fee
that the Martin Liberal government repealed last year was unfair to new
immigrants – a $200,000 deliberately prohibitive head tax is
unbeliveably unfair.

July 1st 1923, was the first day of the Chinese Exclusion Act. 
The present redress package only addresses the surviving head tax
payers and spouses.  Chinese immigrant families have always been
multi-generational and lived together because of  1) family values
2) economic necessity.  So yes… descendants are directly
affected by both head tax and exclusion act.

My friend Bill Chiu just sent me this information:

In the case of the reconcilation movement in Australia with the
aboriginals before Australia's 2000 summer Olympics, the country had a
reconciliation plan that affects every community, every institution and every
government( http://www.reconciliationaustralia.org/i-cms.isp). Knowing
full well that 2010 is coming up, if we can build up the community to
that level, the momentum will be there to transform the government and
the community.

On Friday night, last week, we held a celebration/fundraiser dinner for Joy Kogawa and Kogawa House.  Wow!!!  Joy received the Order of BC on June 22 in Victoria.  The Land Conservancy of BC
purchased historic Joy Kogawa House on May 30th, and we will work
together to create a writing centre, and writer's in residence, as well
as a national landmark for Canada.

On last Saturday, I attended a board meeting for the Canadian Club Vancouver
I have now been appointed to co-chair the annual Order of Canada – Flag
Day luncheon – the premier event of the Canadian Club Vancouver…
indeed an honour.  My co-chair is Linda Johnston, Director for
Canadian Heritage, Western Region.  For 2005, I helped organize parts of the 2005 Order of Canada luncheon with Joy Kogawa as keynote speaker, Margaret Gallager as MC, and Harry Aoki as special guest musician.

CBC Television is going ahead with the follow up to the award winning
series “Canada- a People's History,” titled “Generations.”  
They want to do a episode following the 7 generations of the Rev. Chan
Yu Tan family
.  Wow!  I have been co-chair of the Rev. Chan
Legacy with my mom's cousin Gary Lee.  Chief Rhonda Larrabee is
excited, and I have also talked to my cousin Joni Mar – former CBC
reporter.  All agree this is good for the family, and good for
Canada.

And then there is our Gung Haggis Fat Choy Dragon Boat team.  30
individuals of different ages, ethnicities, interests and abilities…
paddling together for fun and recreation to help move the boat
forward.  Gee…. that sounds like Canada.  Maybe if Bob Rae
wins the Liberal leadership, we can get him in a dragon boat with his
guitar singing his self-composed song “We're All in the Same Boat Now!”

What I love about Canada, is Canadian's willingness to be inclusive,
and to think beyond their own needs and beyond their own selves. 
We can be incredibly giving to other countries…. but sometimes we
forget to look in our own backyard, or in our own mirrors. 

What I hate about Canada, is the petty selfishness of people to resent
and stereotype First Nations and non-white Canadians with negative and
ignorant characters.

Canadians we dislike (hate is a strong word… almost un-Canadian)
Trevor Lautens
Pamela Anderson
Doug Collins
racists
bigots
selfish self-centred people
ignoramuses…
all of the above


Canadians we love
Joy Kogawa
Joy Coghill
Thomas King
Roy Miki
Sarah McLachlan
David Suzuki
Wayne Gretzky
Steve Podborsky
Rick Hansen
Madeliene Thien
Evelyn Lau
Bryan Adams
Paul Yee
Shelagh Rogers
Sheryl Mackay
Prem Gill
Heather Deal
Harry Aoki
Mom & Dad
+ many more  (it's just so much easier to Love, than to Hate)

There's lots to cheer and boo about Canada…  but like any
family, you wish every member the best, you encourage them to grow and
learn, and you love them in spite of themselves.

Cheers, Todd

North Shore News: Canada's future includes head-tax descendants – by Todd Wong

  
North Shore News: Canada's future includes head-tax descendants – by Todd Wong


Here's
the opinion piece I wrote for the North Shore News.  I felt it was
important to share with North Shore readers that many prominent head
tax descendents live amongst them. 
This is also designed to be an
educational piece explaining the hardships and the effects of systemic
racial discrimination, and to highlight North Shore connections to the
Chinese community.  I wanted it to serve as a stand alone piece to

balance a previous June 2nd opinion piece that was ignorantly critical
of the Conservative government's decision to make an apology for the Chinese Head Tax and Exclusion Act
Harper blunders with Head Tax Apology by Trevor Lautens in the North Shore News.  It had prompted a June 18th response from my friend Grace Wong Head Tax lessons not learned,
which explains how much suffering the Chinese pioneers had to go
through because of paying the exhorbitatn head tax, plus separation of
family due to both the head tax and the Exclusion Act.  
I removed any original references to Lautens from my original article –
as much as I wanted to put him in his place, crate him up and send him
back “where he came from.”   – Todd 


Trevor Lautens  June 2nd
http://www.nsnews.com/issues06/w052806/061106/opinion/061106op2.html

Grace Wong's letter to NS NEWS  June 18th
http://www.nsnews.com/issues06/w061806/064106/opinion/064106le1.html

http://www.nsnews.com/issues06/w062506/065106/opinion/065106op3.html

Canada's future includes head-tax descendants

Todd Wong

Contributing Writer

My ancestors first arrived in Canada in 1888 and 1896.

They weren't railway
builders or gold seekers. My paternal grandfather, Wong Wah, was a
respected merchant in Victoria, and my maternal
great-great-grandfather, Rev. Chan Yu Tan, was a respected pastor for
the Chinese Methodist Church. My family has lived in North Vancouver
since 1974. I am a fifth-generation Chinese-Canadian head-tax
descendant.

My name is Todd Wong, and
I am active on the B.C. Coalition for Head Tax Payers, Spouses and
Descendants. As well, I devote community service to the Save Kogawa
House campaign, the Asian Canadian arts community, and dragon boats. I
am also currently a director for the Canadian Club. Every September, I
speak at Terry Fox Runs as a Terry's Team member, serving as a living
example that cancer research has made a difference.

But I am better known
around the Lower Mainland as Toddish McWong – the creator of Gung
Haggis Fat Choy, a Robbie Burns Chinese New Year dinner, which is
increasingly recognized as a unique cultural fusion event, which also
inspired a CBC television performance special that aired in 2004 and
2005.

Multi-racial harmony and
understanding cultural diversity is important to me, and increasingly
important to both Canada and the North Shore.

It is unfortunate that so
many people criticize Chinese head-tax redress payments as wrong and a
burden on Canadian taxpayers. They say that head-tax descendants should
move on and “get over it.” But how can you move on, when it has been
ingrained over decades – over a lifetime – that you are inferior,
second-class, and worth less than white Canadians?

Both the
Japanese-Canadian and the Chinese-Canadian communities were victims of
the Anti-Asiatic League in the 1907 riots by white Canadians who
attacked both Chinatown and Japantown. Yes, the Chinese pioneers had a
choice to come to Canada, but being victimized by social and legislated
racism is not a choice.

Systemic racism continued
long after Chinese were finally given enfranchisement to vote in 1947.
They believed in the ideals that Canada stood for, equality and
fairness, despite understanding the notion of having a “Chinaman's
chance” in a court of law. The early pioneers learned to keep their
heads down, not make a fuss, and be “good Canadians.” Rev. Chan Yu Tan
emphasized that his family learn Canadian ways, and he successfully
appealed the wrongful conviction of Chinese houseboy Wong Foon Sing for
the murder of Scottish nanny Janet Smith.

My father taught me early
on that because I was born of Chinese heritage I had to work harder
than white people to prove myself equal. His elder brother graduated
near the top of his UBC engineering class, but was not hired. Chinese
were disallowed from being members of professional organizations
because they weren't allowed on voting lists until 1947, but racism
continued beyond that. Barred from living in West Vancouver's British
Properties, Chinese-Canadian pioneers and their descendants were
challenged to overcome the learned helplessness created in the face of
racism.

My mother remembers
taking the ferry as a child from Vancouver to North Vancouver and
having picnics in Mahon Park and Horseshoe Bay. The North Shore has a
rich and hidden Chinese-Canadian history, descended from those pioneers
who paid the head tax. They came to Canada like emigrants from
Scotland, England, France, Russia and Italy. Yet only the Chinese were
so unwanted and treated so badly that legislation was passed to create
an immigration deterrent called the Chinese Head Tax followed by the
outright banning of all Chinese immigration from 1923 until 1947 under
the Exclusion Act. It was the contributions of Chinese Canadian
veterans in the Second World War like my Uncle Dan and his brothers who
helped overturn it.

Not many Chinese lived
here in North Vancouver's early days, but gradually it would become
home to some of our greatest role models. Former North Shore resident
Bev Nann received the Order of British Columbia in 2001. Retired high
school teacher Bill Chow taught generations of students at Balmoral and
Windsor secondary schools. Donna Wong-Juliani has made incredible
contributions to the Vancouver-area arts scene. She both grew up and
still resides in West Vancouver. The granddaughters of Alexander Won
Cumyow, the first Chinese born in British Columbia, went to school with
me at Balmoral and Carson Graham. Next in line is my second cousin,
14-year-old Tracey Hinder, national CanSpell finalist last year in
Ottawa.

The Chan family was
featured in the Chinese Cultural Centre exhibit Three Pioneer Chinese
Families in 2002, and we have just been approached by CBC television to
be the subject of one of their episodes for a future series titled
Generations. Our family contains two Miss Canada contestants (one
Caucasian, one Chinese). Cousin Rhonda Larrabee is chief of the Qayqayt
First Nations and her daughter lives on the Burrard Band Indian
Reserve. Rhonda jokes that her mother's side of the family lost their
land, while her father's side had to pay the head tax. Our family is
“so Canadian.”

But no government should
be allowed to profit from racism. Twenty-three million dollars was paid
to the Canadian government in blood, sweat and tears – above and beyond
what any other immigrant was forced to endure to become part of
Canada's society. The symbolic return of the $23 million should be
viewed as a tax refund which is simply 80 years in the making, albeit
without interest!

In 2004, The United
Nations asked Canada to make an apology and financial redress,
following New Zealand's example. Canada needed to make the apology so
that our country could move forward in its cultural and social
development. Financial redress is simply an important part of that
process. Future generations of multi-racial Canadians and head-tax
descendants need to know that Canada recognized its wrongs, and did not
refuse to make a fair and honourable redress while head-tax payers,
spouses and descendants were still alive. This is the legacy, not a
burden, which we leave to all our children and all their children.

We must believe that for the healing of our country – our inclusive, multicultural country – nobody should be left behind.

published on 06/25/2006

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Edmonton Journal: “Canada isn't Canada anymore”

Gee…  I wonder what the First Nations people say about all the white people coming to their homeland, cutting down the trees, polluting the water, taking over the best fishing areas….  Todd

June 26, 2006

'Canada
isn't Canada
anymore'

By LYN COCKBURN



He
hauls himself out from under my kitchen sink like William Shatner
in those Kellogg's commercials. But instead of offering me some All-Bran, he
nods his head towards the TV and asks: “What's he doing?”

The
“he” in question is Stephen Harper, and he's apologizing to the
Chinese-Canadian community for the racist head tax once imposed on immigrants
from China.
And for the 24-year outright ban on immigration from China.

It
is a fine speech indeed, one that makes me proud to be Canadian. Harper calls
the head tax “a great injustice.”

And
he terms the apology the “decent” thing to do. And so it is.

“Apologizing,”
I say to the plumber, who has been labouring under
the sink in a valiant effort to discover why it refuses to drain.

“To who? And why?”

“To the Chinese community in Canada for the head tax.”

“What's
that?”

I
explain the main points, having just learned the precise dates myself. I tell
him that starting in 1885, the Canadian government charged Chinese people $50
to stay here and, in 1903, it raised that amount to $500. All of this in an
effort to make the very workers it had brought here to build the CPR go home.

“Sounds
like a great idea,” he says. “We should be doing that now.” He
leaves me open-mouthed.

“We
fully accept the moral responsibility to acknowledge these shameful policies of
our past … ” Stephen says to the accompaniment of a snort of derision
from under the sink.

He
emerges again. “They should all be sent back,” he says.

“They, who?” I ask.

“Those
Asians,” he replies patiently, as though I am some dim child who refuses
to learn her ABCs.

“The Chinese, the ones from India, all of them.”

For
the first time he notices the look on my face. “I'm not a racist,” he
counters. “But there are too many of them. Canada
isn't Canada
anymore.”

“My
father came here from Scotland
when he was 20. Maybe he should have been sent home,” I offer.

The
plumber looks at me pityingly.

I
can't get control of my mouth: “But I guess that was OK,” I say. “Because he was white.”

This
salvo is greeted by a withering silence. I am once again the idiot child with a
lot to learn about life.

“I
think immigrants make the country more interesting and more vibrant,” I
continue weakly, wondering where our pre-apology conversation went.

“Vibrant,
hah!” he says. “My old neighbourhood, I
don't feel comfortable there anymore. There's so many of them, I'm the
minority.”

I
consider telling him that I hope to hell he is in the minority, that I don't
want a totally white Canada
where people can be arrested for Driving While Off Colour.

He
doesn't give me a chance, and begins a story about his cousin's son, who
evidently didn't get into university because so many of “them” had
money and bought their way in.

Before
I can say anything, he takes a quick breath and tells me about all the single
aboriginal women who evidently have mobs of children and rip off welfare.

I am
reminded of an aboriginal friend's favourite joke. A
white person screams at a First Nations person: “Go back where you came
from.”

“So,”
says my friend with satisfaction. “He pitches a tent in the white dude's
backyard.”

“And
the worst part is you can't say what you think anymore. You have to be careful
or someone will call you a racist or sue you,” says the plumber.

He
has discovered the problem. The sink is working again.

He
gathers up his tools, gets my signature on his worksheet, tells me, if somewhat
insincerely, that he hopes I have a good day and heads for the door.

Stephen
has finished his speech and now an elderly Chinese man, whose name is cut off
by the sound of the door closing, is speaking.

“I
am grateful,” he says into the reporter's microphone. “That I lived
to see this day after so many years of trying to get the Canadian government to
say 'Sorry.' ”

http://www.edmontonsun.com/News/Columnists/Cockburn_Lyn/2006/06/26/pf-1653293.html

 

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