Category Archives: Joy Kogawa & Kogawa House

Sept 17: Terry Fox Run and Joy Kogawa House events

Today – I just feel so proud to be a Canadian.  

Terry Fox,
Simon Fraser University, Joy Kogawa, Obasan, Naomi's Road, CBC, Tommy
Douglas, Medicare, Burrowing Owl, Ecology Conservation, Order of
Canada – were the themes of the Day.


Terry Fox Run – in Richmond BC

This morning I spoke at the Terry Fox Run Richmond BC run site. 
It was at Garry Point Park.  352 people showed up amidst the rainy
drizzle, but the mood was happy and cheerful.  I invited
teenage runners Amber and Irene, to help me set up some tents for the run site. 
John Young is the event organizer, and he introduced me to some of the
other platform party members that included Richmond city councillor Sue
Halsy Brant, and singer Jack McIntosh.  We are piped to the
staging area by bagpiper Noel.

As a cancer survivor and member of Terry's Team, I serve as a living
example that cancer research has made a difference.  I shared that
when I was diagnosed with a cancer tumor in 1989, the doctors only gave
me a 60% chance to survive.  Because my condition was so serious,
they told me that without treatment I might last two weeks.

Glyn Davies is the media/communications coordinator for the Richmond
run site.  And I shared a story about meeting his father Lorne
Davies while Lorne
was still athletic director at Simon Fraser University.  In 1993,
Terry's younger brother Darrell asked me to help start a Terry Fox Run
at Simon
Fraser University – he told me “Remember what Terry said, 'It
just takes one person.' ” I went to see then Athletic Director Lorne
Davies who had known Terry Fox, at SFU, and tells a memorable story
about going to visit Terry at the hospital the night before his leg
amputation.  I was wonderful to meet Mr. Lorne Davies, and to ask
him to help set up a Terry Fox Run for SFU.

I had to go back to
Darrell, and say “Sorry – but there won't be a Terry Fox Run this year
(due to logistics).  But next year there will be… and there will
be a Terry Fox Day!”  In 1994, there was indeed a Terry Fox
Run.  And there was a trophy case that included Terry's favorite
SFU t-shirt from the 1000 Mile Club.  And there was a presentation
of the 1994 Terry Fox Gold Medal recipient.  The first Terry Fox
Day at SFU was attended by the Fox family.  Then SFU basketball
coach Jay Triano, one of Terry's SFU friends, was also there.

I reminded the audience that this is an example of what one person can
do.  Terry said “One person can make a difference.” On my Terry
Fox Gold Medal plaque, it quotes Terry saying, “Dreams are made if
people try.”  I enjoyed sharing this story

It was a great day filled with a wonderful community feeling.  I
gave “High Fives” as I passed Terry Fox Run participants, and met many
wonderful people and we took many pictures.  I will write about
these experiences and stories in the next day or so, such as meeting
Eric and Matt – two young teens with the faces painted for Terry Fox
Day.

Kogawa House

The open house event at Joy Kogawa House went very well.  Many
many people came to see the house, and to meet Joy Kogawa, buy copies
of her books and have Joy sign them.  The Land Conservancy of BC did a wonderful job setting up displays about the history of the house, and the time line events about the Save Kogawa House campaign.

It has been great for the Kogawa House committee to work with
Heather Skydt and Tamsin Baker of TLC. Members of our Kogawa House
committee also attended to help host and volunteer: Ann-Marie Metten,
David Kogawa, Richard Hopkins, Jenni Kato, Joan Young, Sabine Harper
and myself.

As people walked up to the house, the first thing
they saw was that the white picket fence was decorated with pictures
and events highlighting the timeline to save the house from demolition,
starting from when the house was built in 1942, and when Joy's family
moved into the house.

A tent was set up in the front yard,
attended by TLC volunteers Jon and Janet, who gave people an
information sheet about the house, and recieved donations for the
restoration of the house.  TLC also had another display with
newsclippins and pictures from events during the Save Kogawa House
campaign. 

Volunteers greeted people as they entered the house,
and other volunteers stood throughout the house to help explain stories
of different rooms, as well as historic family items such as toy cars
belonging to Joy's brother Timothy, a calligraphy set used by Joy's
father, and wooden crates used by the family as they moved from the
internment camp in Slocan, BC, to Coaldale, Alberta. 

And everybody wanted to say hello to Joy Kogawa.

There was a man who used to play with Joy as a child, before she moved
away – Ralph told me that his older brother was in one of the pictures
on display that featured Joy and her brother Timothy as children in
1940.

There was a woman who brought pictures of the house, during
the 1940's when her grandparents lived there, after her family moved
away.  Both Joy and this woman were very moved by this meeting.

There was a woman Daisy Kong, who had taken pictures of Joy
at the Order of BC ceremony earlier this year in June, because Daisy's
brother Dr. Wallace Chung also recieved the Order of BC along with Joy,
in Victoria.  Daisy was amazed when I told her that Dr. Wallace's
wife Dr. Madeline Chung was the doctor who delivered me as a baby.

Garry Geddes, current writer in residence at Vancouver Public Library, arrived to give Joy a hug.

Attending the event was also Jen Kato, on our Kogawa House committee,
and Jeff Chiba Stearns, who just won the Best Animated Short for the
Canadian Awards for Electronic Arts and Animation.

People bought Joy's books and asked her to sign them.  My friend
Gail Thomson helped manage the booksales.  Gail is a librarian at
Fraserview Branch in Vancouver, where Joy came to speak during the One
Book One Vancouver program.

We surprised
Joy with a special musical performance:  Jessica Cheung (who played the
role of Naomi in the Naomi's Road Opera) sang “The Farewell Song” from
the Opera, I accompanied on accordion, Harry Aoki on double bass, and
Harry's friend Misako Watanabe on accoustic guitar.  Joy was moved to
tears.

After the event, we had birthday cake to celebrate David Kogawa's
birthday.  David is one of our wonderful Kogawa House committee
members, and Joy's ex-husband and friend.


CBC Generations

A CBC documentary film crew followed me around today,
because I am one of the subjects for a Generations program – which will
feature 120 years of the Rev. Chan Yu Tan family and descendants in
Canada.

This evening, CBC producer Halya
Kuchmij met with a few Rev. Chan descendants, and we watched a 10
minute segment that she produced/directed for A People's History of
Canada.  And then we watched a 45 minute show Generations: 100 Years in
Saskatchewan – which featured the Hjertaas family.

Halya says
the Generations project with the Rev. Chan family is going to be
awesome.  There are great people and topics for the show.  Rev. Chan,
WW2 veterans who fought for Canada, then for the vote for Chinese
Canadians and head tax redress; Rhonda Larrabee – a First Nations
Indian Chief – who is a great grand daughter of Rev. Chan Yu Tan;
Janice Wong – an artist painter who wrote a book about food and family;
me; and 14 year old Tracy Hinder – the 1st BC CanSpell champion who
went to Washington DC for the Scripps Spelling Bee, and the CanSpell
national bee in Ottawa.  Wow!

CBC: Reprieved Kogawa House opens to public

Here's a story on CBC about Kogawa House, and the open house event on Sunday.
I will be there with my accordion, and also volunteering.

Repreived Kogawa House opens to public

Joy Kogawa's house, which received a last-minute reprieve from
demolition when it was bought by a Vancouver heritage agency this
spring, will open to the public this Sunday.

The modest wood-frame house in Marpole is featured in Obasan, Kogawa's much loved novel about the internment of Japanese Canadians, and her children's book, Naomi's Road.

The
Land Conservancy of British Columbia bought the house in May and plans
to turn it into a residence for writers and an education centre
about the Japanese internment during the Second World War.

But the public is being given a one-day chance to see the bungalow before restoration work begins.

Kogawa will be there for a scheduled book signing and the desk and typewriter that she used to write Obasan will be on display.

The event is a fund-raiser to help pay for restoration of the house, which could cost an estimated $500,000.

The
house itself was saved from a wrecking ball through the intervention of
the Land Conservancy, which led a campaign to save it, working with
writers' groups and heritage groups.

The campaign drew
donations from 550 people from around the world and a last-minute
corporate donation of $500,000 helped with the purchase price.

A developer who owned the property wanted more than $700,000 for the house, which has been neglected over the years.

Kogawa lived in the house with her family from 1937 to 1942, when it was confiscated by the government.

The
house has national significance as a symbol of the racial
discrimination experienced by Japanese-Canadians during the Second
World War.

The house is one of the few residences left in
Vancouver that is identified as having been sold by the Canadian
government without the lawful owner's permission.

The house is open from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday.

Google Alerts for Kogawa House September 14

Google Alert for: kogawa house – September 14

Joy Kogawa and her childhood home


Joy Kogawa and her childhood home

in the city UPCOMING EVENTS inthecity@westender.com

Vancouver Westender – BC, Canada
Homecoming: The Save Kogawa House Committee and the Land
Conservancy host a fundraiser and the first public tour of the Joy Kogawa
House
(1450 W. 64th) on


Joy of history

Georgia Straight – Vancouver,British Columbia,Canada
racial discrimination. The open house happens on Sunday
afternoon (September 17), with Kogawa herself in attendance to
sign books.

Todd visits Kogawa House – inside and out

Todd visits Kogawa House – inside and out

The
1915 house is modest, and now seems out of place beside the new larger
homes built on either side of it.  There is a tall cedar tree and
a tall pine tree, and rhododendron bushes in the front yard, shielding
the house, as if it is hiding it from the street trying not to be
noticed.  It is really a wonder that such a small house has
survived until now, with all the redevelopment in the Marpole
neighborhood.
 


I looked
carefully at the house that I have visited many times in the past year,
always veiwing from the outside.  The front door was open. 
Inside was a planning meeting organized by The Land Conservancy of BC –
the new owners of the historic house.  We would be planning the
open house event on September 17th as the first public event at Kogawa
House.

Attending the meeting were staff and board members of The Land Conservancy of BC
Heather Skydt and Tamsin have been working with us since December 2nd
of last year when the TLC officially stepped in to lead the fundraising
to purchase Kogawa House.  Ann-Marie Metten is my colleague and
friend on the Kogawa House committee. Fran is the event chair. 
Janet is a member.  Rich Kenney is staff. 

We are planning an afternoon that will include:


– book signings by Joy
– musical entertainment
– historical displays
– history of the house
– food and drinks

The house is in pretty good structural
shape.  Past owners have renovated the house at different
times.  An addition was created.  But it looks like the
original wood floor and panels in some areas.  Joy's desk from
Toronto and typewriter that she used to write Obasan is now sitting in
her former bedroom.  A door from her childhood bedroom was created
into what used to be her parents bedroom, next door.  Her older
brother Timothy slept downstairs.

It is a modest house, but a house that you could imagine a Canadian
family celebrating Christmas in.  The father telling the children
that his sister will come look after them, while their mother has to go
to Japan to look after her mother.  You can imagine the scenes
from the Naomi's Road opera happening in this house. 

It is a house that a six year old would dream about in the years to
come, pining that she could return, after being shuffled from temporary
house to temporary house, in internment camps, and sugar beet farms
where they were forced to live and work because the Canadian government
had deemed this “Born in Canada” family “too dangerous” to live on the
Pacific Coast.

In the past
year, I have written much about the need to save this house on this
website, and even started up a new website www.kogawahouse.com.  I
wrote up
20 Reasons to Save Kogawa House from Demolition on Oct 19th.

It had been
September 22nd, 2005 when Ann-Marie Metten informed me that an
architect was inquiring about a demolition permit for 1450 West 64th
Ave. Kogawa House.  Anne-Marie and I had spoken earlier in
February, 2005 when I first wrote 20 Reasons why
Joy Kogawa's Obasan is the perfect nomination choice for One Book One Vancouver 2005 program at VPL.

Later that same day, on Sept. 22nd Ann-Marie and I had sent out the following press release:

Kogawa Homestead threatened by Demolition Permit Application
– same week as Joy Kogawa is celebrated throughout Vancouver

This week, notice was received that an application for
demolition was made to Vancouver City Hall by the owner of the Kogawa
homestead. It is a house celebrated by the award winning novel
“Obasan,” and the childhood home of famed writer Joy Kogawa.


Kogawa's reaction has been of shock and dispair, as
she knew that efforts were being made to save the beloved cherry tree in the
back yard which figures prominently in the novel. COPE mayoral candidate Jim
Green is a founding member of the “Save the Kogawa Homestead”
committee.

This is a weekend when Joy Kogawa is being celebrated
all across Vancouver… at the Vancouver Public Library for
One Book One
Vancouver
, at a Sep 24th dinnner celbebration for the Rice Paper
Magazine 10th
Anniversary Celebration
, on Sunday for the
Word on the Street Book
and Magazine Fair, and next week for the Vancouver Opera Premiere for “Naomi's Road.”

A
movement to buy the house, and to apply for heritage designation was
aborted 2 years ago because of high costs to buy the house and
resistance from the new owner to sell.  The owner at the time said
that she liked the house and did not intend to demolish it.

Now
more than ever, it is important to preserve this house for the cultural
heritage of Vancouver.  There is not another house in Vancouver
that is recognized for being confiscated during a dark time in Canada's
history.

No other house in Vancouver could be turned into a
bright spot on our cultural landscape as a writer's retreat, celebrating the
work of a writer which has been called the most influential Canadian novel of
the past 20 years. There is no other writer whose work helped fuel the
Japanese-Canadian Redress movement, and has also received the Order of Canada.

In May, the Vancouver Public Library selected Obasan
as the book chosen for all Vancouverites to read, as part of their award
winning “city wide book club.” Earlier this summer, during One Book
One Vancouver events Joy Kogawa held up a graft of the cherry tree that held such
a revered place in the novel Obasan – studied by so many Canadians in high
schools and universities across Canada. Both the novel and the homestead have a
proven place in Vancouver’s literary history.

By the next day we had a call from Alexandra Gill of the Globe & Mail, who put a small article in that weekend's edition. 

Also
on the Friday night, highlights from the upcoming Vancouver Opera
production of Naomi's Road were performed by at the 2nd Annual
Vancouver Arts Awards.  I bumped into then city councillor Jim
Green and mayor Larry Campbell.  They asked

me about the state of the house, and I informed them.  Both Green
and Campbell announced to the packed audience of Vancouver's cultural
movers and shakers that they were distraught to hear that Joy Kogawa's
childhood home was threatened, especially when city council had just
passed a motion to plant a cherry tree graft from the house at city
hall.

On
Saturday night, Joy Kogawa was celebrated with a Community Builder's
Award by the Asian Canadian Writer's Workshop at the 10th Anniversary
Rice Paper dinner.  Joy asked me to speak about the campaign to
save the house. 

On
Sunday afternoon, Joy Kogawa read from her novel Obasan, at the closing
event for the 2005 One Book One Vancouver program for the Vancouver
Public
Library, held during the Word on the Street Book and Magazine Fair.

It was a busy weekend –
but the word was out – Joy's childhood home was in danger of
demolition.  Who people be willing to help save it?

It is now a year later.  So much has happened. 

Here are some of the highlights:

May, 2005 – Obasan named as the One Book One Vancouver 2005 selection by the Vancouver Public Library. Joy also is reunited with her brother Rev. Timothy Nakayama, whom she hasn't seen in 10 years.


September 27th,
Asian Canadian Writer's Workshop / Ricepaper magazine 10th Anniversary dinner honouring Joy Kogawa as a Community Builder


(left photo courtesy of Jessica Cheung – right photo courtesy of Vancouver Opera)

September 30 – Oct 2.
Naomi's Road (review) opens at Norman Rothstein Theatre.  Commisioned by
Vancouver Opera for the Vancouver Opera Touring Ensemble, it will go on
to perform at schools throughout BC, plus Alberta and Washington State.


November 1st,
Obasan Cherry Tree Day,
declared by Vancouver City Hall.  Event is presided over by then
Vancouver Mayor Larry Campbell, and attended by Paul Whitney (City
Librarian), and James Wright (Vancouver Opera General Director).

November 3rd,
Vancouver City Council votes to delay processing demolition permit for 120 day, effective November 30th. 
120 days given to Kogawa House, as demolition timeline extended

November 2005


December 1st, 

The Land Cconservancy joins community efforts to save Joy Kogawa's childhood home

December 26th,
Joy Kogawa featured on CBC Radio's “Sounds Like Canada”
interview by Kathryn Gretzinger


January 22, 2006
Joy
Kogawa is the featured poet/author at 2006 Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese New Year dinner.  Kogawa
House is included as a recipient from annual fundraising dinner.

February 8th, 2006
Joy Kogawa House named to Heritage Vancouver's 2006 Top Ten list of endangered buildings.


February 11

Joy Kogawa & Friends – Emotionally and Truthful reading at Chapters on Robson, Saturday Feb 11

Joy is joined by Daphne Marlatt, Ellen Crowe-Swords and Roy Miki.


February 15,
Joy
Kogawa is keynote speaker for the Canadian Club's annual “Order of
Canada / Flag Day” luncheon
– welcoming BC's newest recipients of the
Order of Canada.  Joy recieved the Order of Canada in 1986.


February 27th,
“Emily
Kato” Book launch
at Vancouver Public Libary – it is a rewritten version
of Itsuka, the sequel to Obasan and focusses on the Japanese Canadian
redress process.


March 9th,
Joy Kogawa fundraiser in Toronto, at Church of the Holy Trinity.
http://www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com/blog/_archives/2006/3/11/1816004.html
http://www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com/blog/_archives/2006/3/16/1823641.html


March 26th,


Thomsett Elementary School Children visit Kogawa House with Joy

These Richmond school children also went to City of Vancouver to ask Mayor Sam Sullivan to help save the house.

March 30th,
TLC negotiates a 30 day extension for the demolition permit with the owner of the house.


April 25th,
Joy of Canadian Words
– fundraiser event in Vancouver, at Christ Church Cathedral.  Special
speakers include CBC Radio's Sheryl Mackay, actors Joy Coghill, Doris
Chilcott, Hiro Kanagawa, Maiko Bae Yamamoto, Chief Rhonda Larabee. 
Hosted by Todd Wong (Save Kogawa House Committee) and Bill Turner (The
Land Conservancy).

April 30th,
TLC exercises their option to purchase historic Joy Kogawa House.


May 15th

Naomi's Road at Seattle Public Library – seen by Joy Kogawa's brother Rev. Timothy Nakayama


May 18th,

Joy Kogawa named to Order of BC


May 30th,
TLC officially purchases Kogawa House – mortgage free! 

TLC becomes proud owner of historic Joy Kogawa House


June 22nd
Joy Kogawa goes to Victoria to recieve Order of BC
http://www.protocol.gov.bc.ca/protocol/prgs/obc/2006/2006_JKogawa.htm


June 23
Gung Haggis Fat JOY KOGAWA HOUSE celebration dinner.
Joy returns from Victoria with Order of BC





 



Name that important Canadian House: Kogawa House in Vancouver Sun today – Twice!

Name that important Canadian House:
Kogawa House in Vancouver Sun today – Twice!

Last week Vancouver Sun's Shelley Fralic asked readers to send their
nominations for Canada's 25 Most Important houses.  I quickly sent
in my nomination for Kogawa House.  Here's what she wrote:

Todd Wong's nomination for the list is the modest 1915 South Vancouver childhood home of Canadian writer, Joy Kogawa.

In
1942, when Kogawa was six, she, her brother and her parents were turfed
from the house and sent to a Japanese internment camp in the B.C.
interior. 

The house, later auctioned off by the government, was featured in
Kogawa's acclaimed autobiography Obasan, and was recently saved from
demolition after a national campaign by The Land Conservancy.


Check out this links:

Name that house the sequel
Vancouver Sun (subscription) – British Columbia, Canada
In 1942, when Kogawa was six, she, her brother and her
parents were turfed from the house and sent to a Japanese internment
camp in the BC interior.


Author Joy Kogawa's childhood home to hold open house

Vancouver Sun (subscription) – British Columbia, Canada
As a young girl living in a Japanese internment camp in the Slocan Valley,
Joy Kogawa often dreamed of her family's former home in Marpole.

Public Open House at Historic Joy Kogawa House – September 17


Public Open House at Historic Joy Kogawa House – September 17


Here's the PSA about our upcoming public open house at the Historic Joy
Kogawa House. I hope everyone will be able to attend and help mingle
with the crowd. Sunday, Sept 17 was the best date for Joy's schedule
since she will be in town to speak at our AGM in Victoria the day
before. We are still working out all the smaller event details, but
this is just a start to get the word out. Please forward this on to any
special guests you would like to attend. I'll be sending this out to
the media over the next few days.

More details to come as they unfold. Please let me know if you are
planning on attending because we may need a few hands on board with
set-up, networking, and clean-up.

PSA – UPCOMING COMMUNITY EVENT
 
What: Public Open House at Historic Joy Kogawa House
When:   Sunday, September 17, 2006
Time:   1pm to 4pm
Where:  Historic Joy Kogawa House – 1450 West 64th Ave., Marpole neighbourhood in Vancouver
Parking:  Parking at the house is limited. Public transit is encouraged.
Admission:  By donation at the door
 
Nearly 550 people from across the globe helped The Land Conservancy
purchase the Historic Joy Kogawa House in June, and now it is time to
celebrate this accomplishment! TLC will be hosting a public open house
on Sunday, Sept 17 from 1 to 4pm for everyone to see the home before
renovations take place.
 
This is a great opportunity for Lower Mainland residents to view the
one and one-half storey bungalow where Canadian author Joy Kogawa lived
from 1937 to 1942. As a special addition to the house, guests will get
to see the original desk and typewriter that Kogawa wrote her
award-winning novel, Obasan, on. Kogawa will also be in attendance for
a scheduled book signing. All proceeds from the event will go to the
restorations and to help set up an endowment for a writers-in-residence
program.
 
The Historic Joy Kogawa House has national significance as a symbol of
the racial discrimination experienced by Japanese-Canadians as a
consequence of World War II. The house is one of the few residences
left in Vancouver that is identified as having been confiscated by the
Canadian Government and sold without the lawful owner’s permission.
 
TLC protects and cares for the places you love most in British Columbia
from wilderness areas to cultural landmarks. There is no greater gift
we can pass on to future generations than a healthy environment, and
TLC is proud to be part of the international conservation movement.
Since its inception nine years ago,  TLC has preserved more than
100,000 acres on over 150 properties throughout the province.
 
-30-
For more information:
TLC: Heather Skydt (604) 733-2313; hskydt@conservancy.bc.ca
Save Kogawa House Committee: Ann-Marie Metten (604) 263-6586; ametten@telus.net

Joy Kogawa featured in Kyoto Journal: Ten Thousand Things

Joy Kogawa featured in Kyoto Journal: Ten Thousand Things

Here's an interesting article about Joy Kogawa and the
saving of Kogawa House.  There are quotes from Joy, Bill Turner,
Christ Kurata and myself.
http://www.kyotojournal.org/10,000things/044.html

I particularly like the title of Ten Thousand Things for “multicultural webfinds”
How fitting that it should find www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com and www.kogawahouse.com

Ten
Thousand Things

Multicultural
Webfinds, by Jean Miyake Downey

“Ten
Thousand Things” is a Buddhist expression representing the dynamic
interconnection and simultaneous unity and diversity of everything in
the universe.

Meet James Johnstone: house geneaologist

Meet James Johnstone: house geneaologist

I first met James Johnstone at the Chinese Canadian History Fair organized by the Chinese Canadian Historical Society of BC, and held the Vancouver Museum.  It was January 2005, and nobody expected that in one year's time Chinese Canadian pioneers who paid the head tax would be front page news.

James created a geneaology for Kogawa House at 1450 West 64th Ave. which he presented to me just  before I walked into Vancouver City Council chambers on November 3rd to ask City Council to delay processing the demolition permet for the house.  It was a fascinating look at immigration patterns for the Marpole neighborhood, by peeking at the list of inhabitants of one of the oldest homes still surviving in Marpole.

James sent me this update on his activities which include researching Chinese and Japanese homes in Vancouver:

As promised, here is an e-mail concerning my recent interview with Fanny Kiefer for the Studio 4 Show on Shaw Cable. The show aired on Monday, June 10th. I was interviewed for 30 minutes on my work as a house genealogist, talking about how the business started out as a hobby when I moved from an apartment in the West End to an old house in the East End (1036 Odlum Drive) in 1995.

Our conversation traced my move to the rowhouse in the 700-block of Hawks Avenue in 2000 and touched on a number of highlights out of the over 500 houses I have researched in Vancouver and New Westminster, including the Nora Hendrix House at 827 East Georgia, the Robert Blair house at 1550 Harwood, the Andrew E. Lees house at 909 Richards, and the Obasan (Joy Kogawa) House on West 64th.

As always, I am very interested in hearing from people who lived in the old East End Strathcona/Grandview Woodland) who may have photos of the old houses and the people who lived in them for a community history mapping website I am working on. In particular, I am looking for pictures of houses that have been demolished or streetscapes that have been lost, so that the lost parts of the neighbourhood (Hogan's Alley, Japantown, those blocks that were lost to recreate MacLean Park, etc.) can be recreated in virtual reality.

I am also wanting to hear from Chinese and Japanese families who lived in the neighbourhood during the times when the city directories failed to properly represent the Chinese and Japanese families who lived in the neighbourhood, labelling addresses, “Chinese” or “Japanese” for decades. I would love to be able to fill in as many blanks in the record as possible.

Thanks again.

James
www.homehistoryresearch.com

Joy Kogawa listed in The Toronto Star's “Essential Book List”

image

Joy Kogawa listed in The Toronto Star's “Essential Book List” 

For Canada Day, the Toronto Star examined what is considered essentially
Canadian.  They chose judges in all culture categories, who had a few
months to compile the top 10 most significant and essential Canadian
works.  Guess what made the top 10 in books?!

Here’s a link:
www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=

thestar/Layout/Article_Type1&c=Article&cid=1151665788269&call

_pageid=1150797693198&col=1150797693190

Obasan (1981)
Joy Kogawa

It's not often a piece of fiction gets read aloud in the House of Commons, but such was the case with Obasan.
The novel played a crucial role in the Japanese-Canadian redress
settlement. A blend of fiction and documentary fact, Kogawa's lyrical
and moving novel sheds light on the Canadian government's racist
policies toward Japanese Canadians during the Second World War. Centred
on the protagonist Naomi, a third-generation Japanese Canadian, the
novel interweaves past and present as it traces her struggle to unravel
the veil of secrecy behind her mother's mysterious absence during
wartime. A fiercely nationalistic novel, Obasan nonetheless
demands that we take a closer look at the myth of the multicultural
nation, and at citizenship and belonging in Canada.

Joy Kogawa Celebration Dinner on Friday June 23

Joy Kogawa Celebration Dinner on Friday June 23


Joy Kogawa recieved the Order of BC on June 22nd, at Government House
in Victoria BC. It was presented by Iona Campagnolo the Lieutenant
Governor of BC. 

We held a celebration dinner on Friday, June 23, at Flamingo Chinese
Restaurant, on Fraser St.  This was a celebration dinner for both
Joy's Order of BC, as well as to celebrate the purchase of historic
Kogawa House, Joy's childhood home, by The Land Conservancy of
BC.  The home had been confiscated by the Canadian government from
her family while they were interned in Slocan during World War II, and
also played a central figure in Joy's literary works Obasan and Naomi's
Road.


Joy Kogawa, MC Todd Wong (Kogawa House committee), and Anton Wagner (secretary of Kogawa House committee) – photo Deb Martin.

Anton Wagner is an independent film maker in Toronto.  He filmed
the Order of BC ceremony, and showed it at the dinner.  
Another film highlight that Anton shared with the audience, was an
excerpt that featured Joy from his film, Veterans Against Nuclear
War.  Joy spoke about how the Nuclear bomb that dropped on
Nagasaki was created by Christian Americans, and dropped on the largest
Christian Church and Christian community in Asia, located in
Nagasaki.  It is a very moving speech, that Joy gives.


Todd introduces Ramona Leungen, the composer of Naomi's Road opera,
produced by the Vancouver Opera.  Vancouver Opera will recieve the
inaugural Gung Haggis Fat Choy intercultural arts achievement award,
for their incredible production Naomi's Road which toured BC schools,
as well as in Red Deer Alberta, and Seattle Washington.


Todd Wong, Nancy Tiffin (TLC development officer), Ramona Leungen and
Joy Kogawa – enjoying the presenations and the food for the evening –
photo Deb Martin.


Dan Seto and Gail
Thompson, senior paddlers on the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team,
present Joy with a Gung Haggis Fat Choy, team shirt. – photo Deb Martin.

Joy Kogawa is the honourary drummer for the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon
boat team this year.  For the Alcanc Dragon Boat Festival, we
changed the team name to Gung Haggis Fat Choy Kogawa House, to ensure
that the 90,000 people who attended the Festival all heard the name
“Kogawa House.”  The team shirt is emblazoned with “lucky gold
coins” – four on the front and fourteen on the back.  This year we
listed The Land Conservancy of BC, and Save Kogawa House Committee, as
our special “sponsors” – as we also listed the websites to help create
awareness for these wonderful organizations.

For more information, go to:
www.kogawahouse.com

To donate for Kogawa House go to:
www.conservancy.bc.ca