Category Archives: Joy Kogawa & Kogawa House

Mortgage within sight for Kogawa House – Option to purchase: open letter from Anton Wagner

   
Mortgage within sight for Kogawa House
– Option to purchase:
open letter from Anton Wagner

Dear Friend of the Joy Kogawa House,

The Land Conservancy of British Columbia, which is spearheading the Fundraising drive to save the Joy Kogawa House, has an option to purchase Joy's Childhood home in Vancouver until the end of this month if it can raise sufficient funds for a mortgage on the House.

The 120-day demolition delay unanimously approved by Vancouver City Council in November has expired and there is now nothing to stop the demolition of Joy's childhood home if it is not purchased by the Land Conservancy.

Several hundred donors have already contributed over $215,000 to the Land Conservany of BC towards the purchase of the Joy Kogawa House. A mortgage for the House is in sight with your support.

If you have been moved by reading Joy's Obasan and agree that the “Obasan House” should be preserved as a centre for writers of conscience and as a living memorial to the forced evacuations and imprisonment of over 22,000 Japanese Canadians during World War II, I ask you to make a donation now to the
Land Conservancy via their website http://www.conservancy.bc.ca

Cheques in any amount made payable to “The Land Conservancy” can also be sent to The Land Conservancy, 5655 Sperling Avenue, Burnaby, BC V5E 2T2. The Land Conservancy telephone number is 604-733 2313. Each contribution, no matter how small, will show the federal, provincial and civic governments that there is public support for the Joy Kogawa House rescue drive and that government levels should also contribute.

If you have already donated, please circulate this message among your friends and ask for their assistance. Additional information about the Joy Kogawa House rescue drive can be found on the website http://www.kogawahouse.com

Thank you very much for your support.

Anton Wagner
Secretary
Save Joy Kogawa House Committee
416-863 1209
fax: 416-863 9973

www.conservancy.bc.ca

www.kogawahouse.com

National Association of Japanese Canadians calls for community support for Kogawa House


National Association of Japanese Canadians calls for community support for Kogawa House

NEWS RELEASE

For Immediate Release

CALL FOR COMMUNITY SUPPORT FOR KOGAWA HOUSE

Winnipeg, MB  March  27, 2006: 

Joy Kogawa in one of her visits to Vancouver, recently `found’ her childhood home, which out of memory had been recorded in some detail in her books.  She had forgotten the address, but discovered it to be at 1450 West 64th Avenue, in the Marpole district of Vancouver.  Not only the house, but the cherry tree which she used to climb and hug as a child was still there, symbolically surviving the harsh wear and tear of life and times.  

This is the place Joy Kogawa had spent the first six years of her life when, in 1942, she, together with her family, and all Japanese Canadians in the West Coast of British Columbia, were relocated to internment sites in the interior of British Columbia. Like other homes owned by Japanese Canadians, the Government of Canada confiscated it and auctioned it off in their absence.  This is the place she returned to in her imagination and memories to write the book, Obasan, to record the events.
 
Today the Land Conservancy of British Columbia (TLC), in response to Joy’s plea to save the house, is spearheading a campaign to raise funds to buy it and to convert the heritage property into a writers-in-residence retreat.  There have been various public awareness and fundraising events held to date, and a sum close to $200,000 has been raised.  The total purchase price is $700,000.

Canada’s leading writers’ organizations are appealing to the federal government for an emergency grant of $350,000 (matching funds) to save the historic Joy Kogawa House in Vancouver.  Letters of support have been received from MPs from both the Liberal party and the NDP.  Ujjahl Dosanjh, PC, QC, MP, Vancouver South, has written to the Hon. Bev Oda, PC, MP, Department of Canadian Heritage, to support this request.

There is now great urgency to the fundraising and to achieving its goal. We believe the NAJC membership and Japanese Canadian communities, in particular, should be made aware of this important project so that they may have the opportunity to join with others to bring this project to a successful conclusion.  

Japanese Canadian community members have been very proud of the author, Joy Kogawa, and benefited largely from the book, Obasan, which poignantly relates `our’ story, studied by students internationally.  We are now celebrating with her the release by Penguin of her new book, Emily Kato, a re-writing of Itsuka.  Joy decided that Itsuka was not quite good enough, to be placed alongside Obasan, and chose to re-write it.  The Joy Kogawa House will be a place where such writings and re-writings by young and renowned writers may occur, and may be celebrated.   

We urge you to send in your donation, large or small.  Donations may be made online on the TLC's website http://www.conservancy.bc.ca/content.asp?sectionid=179
or by sending a cheque, payable to “The Land Conservancy”,
to The Land Conservancy, 5655 Sperling Avenue, Burnaby, BC V5E 2T2
or by telephoning 604-733 2313.  Charitable receipts will be issued.

Thank you for your support.  .For further information, you may contact any of the following list of supporters.  

Save Joy Kogawa House Committee
www.kogawahouse.com  
Anton Wagner, Secretary; (416) 863-1209; fax: 416-863-9973
201 Sherbourne St., Suite 2306, Toronto, ON M5A 3X2
Ann-Marie Metten, 604-263-6586
Todd Wong, 604-987-7124

The Land Conservancy of BC
http://www.conservancy.bc.ca
Bill Turner, Executive Director; 250-479 8053; fax: 250-744 2251
Heather Skydt (604) 733-2313; fax: 604-299 5054
5655 Sperling Avenue, Burnaby, BC V5E 2T2

National Association of Japanese Canadians
www.najc.ca
Claudia Earl, National Administrator

The Vancouver International Writers and Readers Festival
www.writersfest.bc.ca
Hal Wake, Artistic Director

The Writers Union of Canada
www.writersunion.ca
Brian Brett, Chair
Deborah Windsor, Executive Director

The Federation of BC Writers
www.bcwriters.com
Brian Busby, President
Fernanda Viveiros, Executive Director

The Playwrights Guild of Canada
www.playwrightsguild.com/pgc
Amela Simic, Executive Director

The League of Canadian Poets
www.poets.ca
Mary Ellen Csamer, President; maryellen.
Joanna Poblocka, Executive Director;

PEN Canada
www.pencanada.ca
Constance Rooke, President
Isobel Harry, Executive Director

The Writers’ Trust of Canada
www.writerstrust.com
Don Oravec, Executive Director

The Canadian Authors Association
www.canauthors.org
Joan Eyolfson Cadham, National President
www.canauthorsvancouver.org
Bernice Lever, BC Regional Vice-President

The Professional Writers Association of Canada
www.pwac.ca
Gordon Graham, President

The Greater Vancouver Alliance for Arts and Culture
www.allianceforarts.com
Heather Redfern, Executive Director

The Canadian Society of Children's Authors, Illustrators and Performers
www.canscaip.org
Gillian Chan, President
Lena Coakley, CANSCAIP National Office

Asian Canadian Writers Workshop
www.asiancanadianwritersworkshop.com
Don Montgomery, President
Jim Wong-Chu, Executive Director

Ujjal Dosanjh asks Heritage Minister Bev Oda to support saving Joy Kogawa House


Ujjal Dosanjh asks Heritage Minister Bev Oda to support saving Joy Kogawa House

Ujjal Dosanjh is the Member of Parliament for Vancouver South, the federal riding containing the historic neighborhood of Marpole, home to the childhood home of Joy KogawaKogawa House at 1450 West 64th Avenue, was the first on its block in 1915.  It saw many owners before Joy's family moved into it in 1936.  They were forcibly removed due to the internment of Japanese Canadians in 1942, even though they were “naturalized citizens” and both Joy and her brother Tim were born in Canada. 

Who knew then, that the 6 year old little girl named Joy Nozomi Nakayama, on June 6th in Vancouver,  would become a future member of the Order of Canada in 1986?

Who knew then, that Joy Kogawa would write the 1981 novel Obasan, which would become the 11th most important book in Canada according to Quill & Quire (2nd live living author after Alice Munro), and be listed by the Literary Review of Canada as one of the 100 most important Canadian books ever written?
http://www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com/blog/_archives/2005/12/20/1461779.html

The Save Kogawa House committee initially met with Ujjal Dosanjh on December 19th, 2005, during the federal election campaign. He pledged support at that time, but was unable to commit to specifics because of the election call, and uncertainty whether the Liberals would be returned to power, or if he would again be a cabinet minister.

Below is the article by Robyn Stubbs in 24 HOURS

followed by the press release by Ujjal Dosanjh containing

By ROBYN STUBBS, 24 HOURS

Vancouver South MP Ujjal Dosanjh is breathing new life into efforts to save a heritage home in his riding.

The Kogawa House in Marpole is the childhood home of Canadian
author Joy Kogawa, who penned the award-winning novel Obasan
chronicling her experience as a Japanese-Canadian in Vancouver during
the Second World War.

In a letter to federal Heritage Minister Beverly Oda, Dosanjh
asked the ministry work with the Land Conservancy and the Save the
Kogawa House Committee to preserve the historic house.

The house is scheduled for demolition unless the TLC and SJKC
can come up with $1.25 million to purchase the house, restore it and
use it to host a permanent writers-in-residence program.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

For Immediate Release

March 28, 2006

UJJAL DOSANJH CALLS ON GOVERNMENT TO SAVE JOY KOGAWA HOUSE

OTTAWA – The
Honourable Ujjal Dosanjh, Member of Parliament for Vancouver South,
today called on federal Heritage Minister Beverly Oda to work with the
Land Conservancy of B.C. and the Save Joy Kogawa House Committee to
preserve Joy Kogawa House.

“Joy Kogawa House is
a historical landmark, and its existence reminds us not to forget a
past wrong,” Dosanjh said.  “I urge Minister Oda to meet with both the
Land Conservancy of B.C. and the Save Joy Kogawa House Committee, and
to work toward a viable solution to preserve this reminder of a
shameful episode in Canadian history. I am advised that as of yet,
Minister Oda has not met with either organization, despite their
requests.”

Joy Kogawa House,
located on West 64th Avenue in Mr. Dosanjh's riding of Vancouver South,
is the home from which renowned Canadian author Joy Kogawa and her
family were removed as part of the internment of Japanese-Canadians
during the Second World War. The house is featured in Ms. Kogawa's
award-winning novel, Obasan.

Time runs out for Joy
Kogawa House on April 30, 2006.  Heritage Canada denied an emergency
funding request by the organizations involved for $350 000, a portion
of the amount required to purchase the house (thus preventing its
demolition) and maintain it in the future.   

Mr. Dosanjh has
written to Minister Oda regarding this issue and today raised it with
the federal B.C. Liberal Caucus; its members fully support the call to
save Joy Kogawa House.

“My colleagues and I
feel that Kogawa House is an important part of British Columbia's
history,” said Mr. Dosanjh.  “Moreover, the innovative
writers-in-residence program proposed by the Land Conservancy would
have significant cultural value.”

For more information:

Office of the Hon. Ujjal Dosanjh

(613) 868-3846

Joy Kogawa story in Lethbridge Herald as Naomi's Road opera premieres in Alberta


Joy Kogawa story in Lethbridge Herald as Naomi's Road opera premieres in Alberta



Joy Kogawa is in Lethbridge Alberta, for the opening of Naomi's Road
opera.  She attended a reception afterwards, and also spoke to the
audience.

The following is a story published in the Lethbridge Herald

Dark days of internment come to life
By Al Beeber
Mar 28, 2006, 22:45

In Naomi’s Road, resilience offers hope for a better future in the
lives of two young children displaced to internment camps during the
Second World War.

That spirit, so vividly detailed in that work and the award-winning
Obasan by novelist and poet Joy Kogawa, survived and thrived despite
the efforts of Canada’s wartime government to disperse
Japanese-Canadian citizens, considered a threat to security after Japan
entered the war.

“The government policy was designed to make sure Japanese-Canadians
never amalgamated and made a community again,” said Kogawa, in the city
Monday to watch the Vancouver Opera presentation of Naomi’s Road at the
University of Lethbridge.

The opera is based on the 1986 children’s book by Kogawa, a
second-generation Japanese-Canadian who was evacuated to Slocan, B.C.
and Coaldale from Vancouver with the rest of her family during the war.
Born Joy Nozomi Nakayama, the author, poet and member of the Order of
Canada attended school in Coaldale from grade 5 to high school and
later taught elementary school there for a year.

The divorced mother of two was actively involved in the efforts to seek
redress from the Canadian government in the 1980s. The internment of
her people is one of the darkest stories in Canadian history and the
production of Naomi’s Road, which has been been staged numerous times
in B.C. schools, is one way to educate Canadians about the injustice,
including younger generations of Japanese Canadians whose family may
not have talked about the internments.

“There was an intense need on the part of parents to protect their
children. It’s a very Buddhist way of thinking, to move forward. The
morality was to endure suffering in silence.”

“Naomi’s Road is a fantastic tool, not just for education but for
healing people,” says the soft-spoken Kogawa who donated much of her
family’s possessions from their Vancouver home to the Galt Museum. Many
of those household items have been mentioned in Kogawa’s works.

“It’s a story that just won’t help Japanese Canadians but people in general. It teaches people about the follies of racism.”

“One can use art to bring about healing,” says Kogawa whose family home
is the centre of an effort by various groups to be converted into a
writer’s residence. It is currently slated for demolition.

The loss of the family home and their internship inspired her novel
Obasan which was named Canadian authors book of the year in 1981.

Canada’s efforts to compensate Japanese Canadians for the internship
were satisfactory to Kogawa who felt the process and dialogue between
Japanese Canadians and government was an act of healing.

“As far as I’m concerned, the appropriate process had been followed,” said Kogawa.
For healing to happen, the voice of the interned people needed to be heard and some of those voices were angry.

“When the kids were told, some got angry,” recalled Kogawa. The issei —
or first generation Canadian immigrants — chose often not to talk about
the internment while the nissei — the second generation — were caught
up in the dispersal and didn’t know what it was all about.

“The burden needs to be lifted by all of society. It’s not an easy process,” said Kogawa.

Anne-Marie Metten of the Vancouver committee of Save Kogawa House is
with the author in Lethbridge. She was planning to meet officials of
the Galt Museum Monday to look at the Kogawa collection so house
restorers can authentically reproduce the family’s furnishings if
efforts to save the house from the wrecking ball are successful.
“We want to create a sense of the house as it was in 1942.”



© Copyright by Lethbridge Herald.com
Top of Page

Joy Kogawa and Naomi's Road opera go to Lethbridge Alberta: report from Ann-Marie Metten

imageimageimage

Joy Kogawa and Naomi's Road opera go to Lethbridge Alberta:
Report from Ann-Marie Metten

Ann-Marie
Metten is the Vancouver coordinator for the Save Kogawa House
committee.  She and Joy Kogawa have  travelled to Lethbridge
Alberta to attend the Alberta premiere of the Naomi's Road opera, by
the Vancouver Opera Touring Ensemble.

Ann-Marie is a wonderful person with many literary connections and dedicated to
the cause.  She first contacted me in early 2005, after I posted a
message suggesting Obasan could be nominated for Vancouver Public
Library's One Book One Vancouver program.  She then contacted me in
September, when the City of Vancouver recieved an inquiry about a
demolition permit for Kogawa House.

The following message is from Ann-Marie:

Just want to report several small
donations received at the reception following the performance of Naomi’s
Road in
Lethbridge yesterday.

The Vancouver Opera troupe ended their
evening show to a standing ovation, with many Japanese Canadians in the
audience – those interned and their families. Joy spoke strongly about
the need for forgiveness within the community and within
Canada as a nation, and I got
to say a few words at the reception about Kogawa House and invited questions
and discussion. Lisa Doolittle of the University of Lethbridge Theatre
Department was generous in her publicity of the campaign to rescue Kogawa
House, including a summary of the project in the programme for the evening,
posting notices of the project around the reception area, speaking about it in
her introduction, and displaying pledge forms at the buffet and book sales
tables. Lisa also arranged press coverage with the Lethbridge Herald, which ran our story on the cover of today’s
edition, along with a photograph of the troupe and a photo of Joy inside on
page 2. Global TV was expected to run the story not only at
noon today but also on their
evening news report.

Many friends and relatives came to support
Joy, with 25 Japanese Canadian seniors traveling from Calgary to attend the noon performance and many,
many others attending the evening performance. Joy and I also drove out to the
communities of Coaldale, the model of Granton in Obasan — and Vauxhall, where I spent some childhood years –
and connected with people there. We visited the
Galt Museum, which houses the Kogawa
Collection of furnishings and pieces from the Marpole house. What topped
everything, though, was our walk through the coulee and the thrill of the prairie
after snowmelt, just before spring.

It was a trip well worth the effort.
Photos to come this evening . . .

Ann-Marie Metten

Save Kogawa House Committee

604-263-6586
 

www.conservancy.bc.ca

www.kogawahouse.com

HISTORIC JOY KOGAWA HOUSE GIVEN ANOTHER MONTH TO BE SAVED

NEWS RELEASE             
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:  March 16, 2006


HISTORIC JOY KOGAWA HOUSE GIVEN ANOTHER MONTH TO BE SAVED  
                   

VANCOUVER – TLC The Land Conservancy of British Columbia announced today that it has negotiated a 30 day extension on its option to purchase the culturally-significant Joy Kogawa House in Marpole.

“The fundraising has been very successful for the short timeframe we’ve had, but time was running out,” says Bill Turner, Executive Director of TLC.  “Thanks to this reprieve I’m confident we will now be able to reach our goal. The current owner has given us until April 30th as a sign of good faith and we are grateful for this gift. All we need now is for people to show their support by donating. I know we can do this if we pull together as individuals, businesses and governments.”

The historic Joy Kogawa House at 1450 West 64th Ave. first came to TLC’s attention in early 2005 through the Save Kogawa House Committee. On November 30th the City of Vancouver granted a 120-day delay on the demolition permit for the house. In early December, TLC publicly announced they would spearhead the campaign to raise the $1.25 million needed to acquire the house, restore it and set up an endowment to secure its protection in perpetuity as a symbol of Canada’s cultural heritage. The original deadline for funding was March 30.

Phone calls, letters of support, and donations have been received from across Canada, especially within the literary community. Several primary and secondary schools in BC have also donated to save the childhood home of award-winning author and poet, Joy Kogawa. The faculty association at York University contributed $1,000 to the campaign and challenges other universities to match their donation. Special book readings and silent auctions have been held in Vancouver and Toronto. One Vancouverite has even taken it upon herself to challenge other book club members to donate.

Once purchased and protected, the historic Joy Kogawa House will be a used as a home for a writers-in-residence program, enabling new and emerging writers to create new works focusing on human rights issues and Canada’s evolving multicultural and intercultural society. It will also be open for public and school tours to educate people about the Japanese Canadian experience during World War II. “We must preserve these places so that our children and grandchildren can learn what happened. In a society that doesn’t remember and recognize its mistakes, they can continue to happen,” says Turner. “An injustice to one is an injustice to all.”

“The light in this corner of the planet continues to shine with a happy glow of hope for the campaign,” says Kogawa. Donations can be made to TLC at www.conservancy.bc.ca or by calling (604) 733-2313. Donation forms can also be picked up at select bookstores, libraries and recreational centres throughout Vancouver.

-30-

Contacts: TLC The Land Conservancy: Bill Turner (250) 213-1090; Heather Skydt (604) 733-2313
Save Kogawa House Committee: Ann-Marie Metten (604) 263-6586

March 9 Joy Kogawa House Fundraiser in Toronto a Great Success

March 9 Joy Kogawa House Fundraiser in Toronto a Great Success

by Anton Wagner, secretary Save Kogawa House committee 

Joy’s
launch of her novel Emily Kato, combined with a fundraiser for the Joy
Kogawa House, was an inspiring evening at the Church of the Holy
Trinity, next to the Eaton Centre in downtown Toronto, on March 9.
Nearly $9,000 was raised for the Land Conservancy of B.C.’s Joy Kogawa
House rescue drive. About 150 people attended the event organized by
Anton Wagner, Secretary of the Joy Kogawa House Committee.

March 9th, Toronto, Tomoko Makabe sells books for the Emily Kato launch

Tomoko Makabe sells books as audience arrives –  photo by Henryk Fibich

The
evening was scheduled to begin at 5 pm. Fortunately Save Joy Kogawa
House Committee member Tomoko Makabe suggested we should start selling
books already at 4:40 so that those coming early could purchase copies
of Emily Kato and Obasan and have Joy inscribe them. There was still a
line-up as concert pianist William Aide began the evening half an hour
later with a beautifully serene classical composition.

March 9, Toronto, William Aide concert pianist

William Aide plays piano while Tomoko Makabe sells books as the audience arrives –  photo by Henryk Fibich

The
Reverend Sara Boyles welcomed the audience and spoke of the tradition
of social justice at the Church of the Holy Trinity, founded in 1847
for Toronto’s poor immigrants, and that the Churches was continuing to
stand with the homeless, dispossessed and people excluded from Canadian
society.

Michael Creal, former head of humanities at York
University, reminded the audience of the forced evacuations and
internments of 22,000 Japanese Canadians under the War Measures Act in
1942 and of the importance of Joy’s Obasan in expressing the suffering
these government injustices inflicted on the Japanese Canadian
community. He recalled that he taught Obasan at York University in the
early 1980s and that his students didn’t know what had been done to
Japanese Canadians during World War II. Michael described the very
important public meeting at the Church of the Holy Trinity in 1984 that
led to the Toronto Ad Hoc Committee on Redress and helped to make
redress a national issue. He then introduced Joy.

March 9th, Toronto, Michael Creal

 Michael Creal, former head of humanities at York University –  photo by Henryk Fibich

Joy
spoke of her childhood home in Vancouver that is now under threat of
demolition and read the description of the house from Obasan. She then
read from Emily Kato, including chapter 22 set in the Church of the
Holy Trinity, one of the many locales where organizing for redress took
place. Joy recalled that it felt like a miracle when she came across
her childhood home in Vancouver again in 2003 and that it continues to
be a miracle that the house is still standing. She also described her
encounter, in the garden of the house, with the cherry tree which was
subsequently severely pruned and may be dying. “I felt when I was
there, in all its woundedness, that somehow in the universe we are
known, our wounds are known. And I had the strange sense that this
knowing, this knowing of the community, this knowing of the family,
that when we are known we are healed. I felt that healing welling up
within me at the tree. So for me that spot became holy ground. It was
my small portal to messages that we are known. And I just felt that
healing.” Referring to the new novel she has begun to write, Joy
concluded, “My dream is that I will be able to write Gently to Nagasaki
with instructions that will come to me through the portal of that tree.
That is my dream.”  
 

March 9th, Toronto, Joy Kogawa raises her hands to make a point.

Joy raises her hands to make a point –  photo by Henryk Fibich

Bill
Turner, Executive Director of The Land Conservancy of B.C., then spoke
of the necessity of saving the Joy Kogawa House as a permanent reminder
of historical events that must never be repeated and asked those
present to assist in the drive to save the House from demolition. “The
House is a symbol of a time and a reminder when ordinary Canadians were
removed from their homes and interned. We want to save this house as a
reminder of that. We want to save this house so that it can become a
place of happiness again, a symbol of peace and hope and
reconciliation. We must not forget what happened in those years, and
it’s easy to do so. It’s easy to forget.”

Bill expressed his
optimism that the $700,000 required to purchase the House from its
present owner could be raised with Canada-wide support. “The Joy Kogawa
House is of national importance,” he stated. “As those of us who are
now here die and move on, we must preserve these places so that our
children and grandchildren can learn what happened. In a society that
doesn’t remember and recognize its mistakes, they can continue to
happen. An injustice to one is an injustice to all.”

March 9, Toronto, Bill Turner

Bill Turner, Executive Director of The Land Conservancy of BC – –  photo by Henryk Fibich

Joy’s
dream, of course, is also that other writers will be able to come and
stay and write in the Joy Kogawa House. Ron Brown, First Vice-Chair of
the Writers Union of Canada, was the first speaker representing the
dozen writers’ organizations that have backed saving the Kogawa House.
He recalled that Groucho Marx once said that he would never belong to
an organization that would have him as a member.  “Well, 1,500 members
of the Writers' Union of Canada are absolutely delighted to belong to
an organization that can claim Joy Kogawa as a member. You have written
so passionately about an unpleasant reality,” Brown stated.

“You
have arrived at an interesting moment in Ontario.  We are experiencing
a controversy about an attempt to censor a book about another
unpleasant reality.  The book is called Three Wishes.  It was written
by Deborah Ellis, one of our members, and includes interviews with
Israeli and Palestinian children who express their fears and wishes
about the conflict there. Some of those views are disturbing to some. A
teacher near Toronto objected that the contents do not adequately
reflect the Israeli point of view, and an organized effort was launched
to have school boards across Ontario remove the book from their silver
birch award reading list. A few have done just
that.”

“Canada
has faced a number of unpleasant realities.  The extermination of the
Beothuks in Newfoundland, the expulsion of the Acadians from New
Brunswick, the long standing mistreatment of our First Nations people,
and the reality which you, Joy, have written about.

But unlike
most other books written about these realities, Joy brings together
three things which the others do not. Not only has she written about
this reality, but she has experienced it herself, and third, the Kogawa
House still stands as a physical legacy of that dreadful time.”

“This
is why I find it distressing that the house is facing the threat of
demolition. I write about heritage buildings and have seen too many
demolished. Those with negative connotations especially. It seems that
in Canada it's what we do.”

“And that is why I find it even more
distressing that Canada's heritage minister has declined to provide
funds to help save the house, despite a written pledge from the federal
government that it will do everything in its power to ensure that such
atrocities will never recur. Talk about not
putting their money where their mouth is.”

“But
it is encouraging to see so much support here tonight for saving the
house, support that the Writers' Union is happy to share. But as Joy
said in the Globe this morning, there is not much time left.”

“As
with the book Three Wishes, to destroy the Kogawa House would be much
like censoring reality. In Canada we should be confronting our
realities, not censoring them.  Saving the Kogawa House will serve as a
visible reminder of one unpleasant reality. So, let's save the house
and help make Joy's dream come true.”

March 9th, Toronto, Ron Brown

Ron Brown, First Vice-Chair of the Writers Union of Canada –  photo by Henryk Fibich

In
her address, Mary Ellen Csamer, President of the League of Canadian
Poets, stated: “As writers, artists, we are both witnesses to and
participants in our times. Sometimes, as now, our shared responsibility
is to act as an amplifier for those voices who can best speak to
specific actions of the body politic, done purportedly on our behalf. 
Joy Kowaga’s intelligent passionate voice has added to the sum of our
witnessing, to the collective ‘no’ of our resistance to our own
fear-based tyranny.” She added that “It saddens me that our Federal
Government has no program in place to protect our historical and
literary heritage. The Joy Kogawa House represents the struggle for
Home. It is not real estate, it is the real estate of our collective
need to create and nurture community so that we can learn to live
without fear of each other. To create this writers-in-residence,
historic centre in the City of Vancouver would express on behalf of all
Canadians our deep desire to redress the wrongs of the past and
celebrate once again our rich and diverse cultural community. On behalf
of the League of Canadian Poets, and its 700 members, I urge the
Federal Government to provide the necessary fund to help us to save the
Joy Kogawa House.”

March 9, Toronto, Mary Ellen Csamer - with Bill Turner and Joy Kogawa in background

Mary Ellen Csamer, President of the League of Canadian Poets –  photo by Henryk Fibich

Philip
Adams next spoke on behalf of two organizations as Coordinator of the
Readers & Writers program for PEN Canada and as Treasurer of the
Playwrights Guild of Canada. “The Playwrights Guild of Canada has over
800 members who are for the most part desperate for a time and place to
write and it is our hope that one or many of them may be allowed the
opportunity to do that in the Joy Kogawa House. PEN Canada fights for
freedom of expression around the world and particularly here in Canada.

There are many exiles here in Canada as well. The First Nations
certainly have reason to feel exiled, the Japanese Canadians have been
exiled, and many people from other countries who are here now continue
to feel in exile. Again it is PEN Canada’s hope and dream that perhaps
some day soon such writers will be able to take up residency in
Vancouver.”

March 9th, Toronto, Philip Adams

 Philip
Adams, spoke on behalf of two organizations as Coordinator of the
Readers & Writers program for PEN Canada and as Treasurer of the
Playwrights Guild of Canada.
–  photo by Henryk Fibich

Dr.
Joseph Levy, Vice-President, External, of the York University Faculty
Association, explained that his field of health sciences is really
about healing and that this evening had been an evening about healing.
“We must say to ourselves that we never want this to happen again in
Canada but we also don’t want this to happen again in Somalia, in
Afghanistan, in Romania or anywhere else in the world where this could
possibly happen. So I see this project as being not only for our fellow
Canadians who were interned during the war but I also see this project
as symbolic of something that will allow all of us to continue working
around the world so that this kind of event, this atrocious, despicable
way of treating citizens in their own country, should never happen
again. But let me remind you that it is happening at this moment all
over the world.”

Dr. Levy then presented a $1,000 contribution
from the York University Faculty Association to Bill Turner for the
Land Conservancy Joy Kogawa House fundraising drive and challenged
other universities across Canada to match YUFA’s donation.  

March 9th, Toronto, Joseph Levy, with Bill Turner behind him

Dr. Joseph Levy, Vice-President, External, of the York University Faculty Association, with Bill Turner –  photo by Henryk Fibich

 

Ben
Antao, President of the Toronto Branch of the Canadian Authors
Association, also brought a donation from his organization. (The CAA
awarded Obasan its Book of the Year Award when it was first published
in 1981.) “Heritage properties of writers and artists help to enrich
the cultural mosaic that is Canada,” Antao stated. “I haven’t seen Joy
Kogawa’s childhood home in Vancouver but I have read her novel Obasan
and the book describes her house and illuminates a dark chapter in the
developing history of Canada and her people.”

MArch 9th, Toronto, Ben Antao

Ben Antao, President of the Toronto Branch of the Canadian Authors Association,–  photo by Henryk Fibich

Following
these presentations, William Aide again played the piano, Joy inscribed
more books and many in the audience spoke with Bill Turner about saving
the Kogawa House and made personal donations.

March 9, Toronto, Lynn McDonald with Joy Kogawa

Joy inscribing a copy of Emily Kato to Lynn Macdonald – photo by Henryk Fibich

There
was much animated conversation as the audience enjoyed the delicious
food and refreshments provided by members of the Church of the Holy
Trinity congregation and organized by its Social Justice Committee.

March 9th, Toronto: Professors Joseph Levy and Kym Bird of the York University Faculty Assoc. with Bill Turner and Anton Wagner

Professors
Joseph Levy and Kym Bird of the York University Faculty Association
with Bill Turner and Anton Wagner, Secretary of the Save Joy Kogawa
House Committee – 
photo by Henryk Fibich

 

March 9, Toronto, Derry Poster with Joy Kogawa

Joy signs Derry Fitzgerald’s poster of the March 9 event which Derry designed at the 6 St. Joseph Street House.  –  photo by Henryk Fibich

Vancouver Opera's “Naomi's Road” goes to the heart of Vancouver's old Japantown – a fundraiser for Powell Street Festival


Vancouver Opera's “Naomi's Road” goes to the heart of Vancouver's old Japantown


– a fundraiser for Powell Street Festival

The Japanese Canadian community used to thrive along Powell St. in
Vancouver.  I remember walking down there in the late 1960's and
visiting the different stores, on the search for more origami paper,
after being taught to fold origami paper figures by my father. 
Today it is a shadow of its former self.  But it's memory is kept
alive by both the annual Powell Street Festival
and the Japanese Hall / Japanese Language School on Alexander St.

Naomi's Road opera, put on by the Vancouver Opera Touring Ensemble, came to old Japantown on Saturday night.  It was presented in the hall at the Vancouver Japanese Language School,
newly built and connected to the Japanese Hall, built in 1918, which
stands alone as the only property among any Japanese Canadian
private citizen, business or organization to retain ownership after the
war.

About 100 people filled the new hall, in anticipation of watching the
touring production which has been playing to schools throughout
BC.  This was about the 95th presentation of the production so
far, and the cast does a remarkable job of keeping each presentation
fresh. 

It was also the 4th time I had seen Naomi's Road, writing a review of the premiere weekend, and also the excerpts presented at the Laurier Institution / Roy Miki lecture at the Chan Centre, and the Vancouver Arts Awards.  Everytime I have seen it, it is enjoyable.  I even find myself humming the songs afterwards now.

Naomi's Road, is the children's version of Joy Kogawa's
award winning novel, Obasan.  It tells the story of a family being
torn apart by the events of WW2.  The mother goes off to Japan to
look after her sick grandmother.  The father's sister comes to
help look after the children.  WW2 breaks out, and anybody of
Japanese ancestry is “evacuated” from the BC coastal region, and sent
to “internment camps.”  The father is unexplainedly sent to a
different camp (as able-bodied working males were sent to work
camps).  The two children Naomi and Steven, aged 10 and 14, learn
to deal with racism, and being separated from their parents, as well as
the negative impacts of war.

All the performers, Jessica Cheung (Naomi), Gina Oh (mother, Obasan,
Mitzie), Sam Chung (Stephen), and Gene Wu (father, train
conductor,bully, Roughlock Bill), perform well.  Cheung really
conveys the innocence and wonder of a 10 year old, while Chung plays
her foil expressing the anger and resentment of being forced into the
internment camp. 

Oh and Wu perform well in their multiple roles, convincingly altering
ther performances with each character.  In Oh's case from a loving
mother, to a reserved aunt, and a youthful child named Mitzie.  Wu
does the same, first as a concerned an playful father figure, a racist
bully, and also as Rough Lock Bill, a First Nations character that
befriends the two children.

The action moves quickly, with multiple scene changes which the actors
create by moving screens around as part of their stage action.  It
is a wonderful way to experience a small performing arts production,
watching all this stage action unfold, as the set evokes Powell St, a
living room, a train, an internment camp, and a lakeside beach.

For this performance, it was a treat for the performers to be on a
raised stage, rather than floor level at the West Vancouver, or
Vancouver Public libraries.  But unfortunately if the performers
stood too close to the front the stage, they became back lit and their
faces were difficult to be seen.  The piano was also woefully out
of tune, but giving the performance and “old-time feel” to fit with
it's 1942 setting.

A question and answer was held folowing the performance, and a special
treat was that author Joy Kogawa came up on stage with the
performers.  Joy exclaimed that she is moved to tears, everytime
she sees the opera.  She said that it is a wonderful opportunity
for sharing the story of Japanese Canadians and for creating healing.

Questions covered many topics, but in this setting at the Japanese
Language School in Japantown, it was interesting to hear that many
former internment camp survivors thanked the performers for sharing the
story, and that they related very strongly to the performance.

At the end, I stood beside the pamphets for the Land Conservancy campaign to help save Kogawa House, and answered questions about the Save Kogawa House campaign.

also see:
my review of Naomi's Road premiere weekend,
my interview with Naomi's Road performers

Joy Kogawa in Toronto March 9th, Church of Holy Trinity

Joy Kogawa in Toronto March 9th, Church of Holy Trinity


Joy
Kogawa addresses the large crowd the filled the Church of the Holy
Trinity for the fundraiser book launch of Emily Kato – photo Henryk
Fibich


A large book launch for Joy Kogawa's rewritten “Emily Kato” and fundraiser event for the Save Kogawa House campaign too place at the Church of Holy Trinity in downtown Toronto on March 9th.

Anton Wagner is the Toronto coordinator and the national chair of
the Save Kogawa House committee.  There were several speakers and
lots of pictures taken.  And we will do our best to post them.


Joy Kogawa reads from “Emily Kato” at the Church of the Holy Trinity for
the fundraiser book launch of Emily Kato – photo Henryk Fibich

Anton writes:

It's going to take me a day or so to write up Joy's reading last night  for the www.kogawa.house.com website and to thank all the participants who contributed to its success.

Fortunately
we decided to start the evening early with selling books  and
having Joy sign them. There were long line ups before the official
welcome and  at the conclusion when Joy again signed books and
spoke to the many
friends who came to see her. I was also glad to see a good number of Japanese
Canadians present and the editor of the Nikkei Voice taking notes for a future
article.  Many thanks to Tomoko Makabe  who handled the book sales and subsequent accounting so efficiently.

Great
side benefits were a strong show of support for Joy, the big article in
the Globe and Mail, one or two CBC radio spots Joy did.

Regrets
from Bill Graham's and Jack Layton's office for not being able to
attend, a very good turn out that showed the writers groups and donors
that there is public support for what we are doing, and building a
strong base of support at the Church of the Holy Trinity.

There
were five photographers present so we should get some good photos and
the whole event was filmed by videographer Edimburgo Cabrera. I'm
passing on two dvds of the event to Bill for distribution.
Best wishes, Anton.

The
event was also attended by Bill Turner O.C., who is executive director
of The Land Conservancy, which is spearheading the fundraising campaign
for the preservation of  Kogawa House.

Anton
and friends did a wonderful job and a wonderful thing.  It was
packed.  Every one was very moved.   It has opened
several new doors.    We will have some number together
in the next day or so.
I just can't thank the “Toronto” crew enough.  It is so good to see these good people working together for a common good.
– Bill Turner, executive director The Land Conservancy

MingPao: May Chiu blasts Bev Oda for the Heritage Department turning down request to help save Joy Kogawa's childhood home

imageimage
MingPao:  May Chiu blasts Bev Oda for the Heritage Department turning down request to help save Kogawa House

May Chiu
was the fiesty Chinese Canadian who ran against then Liberal Prime
Minister Paul Martin in the 2005 Federal Election.  May ran for
the Bloc Quebecois, and also on a committment for Chinese Canadian
redress for head tax / Exclusion Act.  She also had a baby 5 days
before the election.  The first polling result had Chiu in the
lead before Martin took over the path to re-election.

Cheuk Kwan is a film-maker and created the wonderful documentary series Chinese Restaurants which I wrote a review about.



Joy Kogawa is the author of Obasan
who wrote fictionalized accounts about the Japanese Canadian
internment, redress and other issues, in her books Obasan, Naomi's
Road, Itsuka / Emily Kato, and The Rain Ascends.  Information and
  donations about the
Save Kogawa House can be sent to The Land Conservancy.



The following article ran in MingPao – a chinese daily newspaper

MingPao March 10, 2006 Friday Page A3

 
May
Chiu blasts Harper saying Oda appointment was a mistake – says Oda is
the wrong candidate to negotiate Head Tax redress compensation
 
MingPao in Ottawa
– The Conservative Heritage Minister Bev Oda has made a decision
refusing 350 thousand dollars in funding to help a human rights and
cultural group to buy up and preserve the former residence of a well
known author of Japanese descent.  The reason given was “the lack of a
suitable item”.  Author Joy Kogawa’s 100 year old house is going to be
torn down at the end of this month.  Oda’s decision has brought attacks
from head tax redress groups from major cities all over
Canada.
 
In the book “Obasan” published in 1981, Kogawa described how 22 thousand Japanese-Canadians in Western Canada were labeled “citizens of an enemy country” and were confined during the 2nd World War and she wrote about the pain of separation of families.
 
In that book, she once again mentioned the former residence built with wood that she and her family had lived in.  
 
Kogawa
and her parents were all locked up in concentration camp.  Japanese
Canadian human rights groups went to the federal govt after the war
demanding apology and compensation.  The Oda family belonged to the
group which opposed redress.
 
Legal
counsel May Chiu representing the Montreal Head Tax Redress Alliance
said: “ Conservative’s Harper “has eyes but failed to see”, in
appointing someone as Heritage Minister who has no respect whatsoever
for the historical contribution made by different ethnic groups within
the country and what these groups did during nation building process in
Canada.  This person does not have a sense of social justice, and is
not a candidate to negotiate the Head Tax redress that we are asking
for. “
 
Cheuk Kwan, long time participant in Head Tax redress efforts in Toronto
pointed out that Oda is against individual compensation.  “Prospects
don’t look good in negotiating with her for an apology and redress”.
 Sid Tan agrees with this view.  Tan is a well known fighter/Head tax
activist in
Vancouver.
He
said:”Oda and her father together both were opposed to the Federal
Conservative Government's offer back in 1988 of an apology and
compensation made to the Japanese Canadians in the entire country.
 That she suggested only an acknowledgement but without individual
compensation comes as no surprise at all to me. “
 
King Wai Tse (editor's note: I think this is William Dere) of the Montreal Head Tax Alliance feels that Oda’s  refusal to acknowledge Kogawa’s contribution to the history of Canada was most unfortunate.”