Category Archives: One Book One Vancouver: Joy Kogawa's Obasan

Rice Paper Magazine celebrates 10 Year Anniversary – Sept 24- with Joy Kogawa, Scott McIntyre and Gim Wong

Media Contacts:
Jenny Uechi and Michelle Siu
Telephone 604.879.5962
Email: info@ricepaperonline.com
www.ricepaperonline.com

For Immediate Release
MEDIA RELEASE

RICEPAPER Magazine Celebrates 10 Years of Publishing!

It all began 10 years ago, when a motley crew of artists, writers, and
would-be lawyers got together one night and decided to give a voice to
one of the largest and most eclectic demographics in the nation--Asian
Canadians. Photocopied painstakingly on 8x11 paper and stapled together
by a crew of volunteers, the original newsletter "Rice Paper" was born.

Fast forward to 2005. Lined up along the magazines at Chapters,
Ricepaper has evolved into the authoritative chronicle of Asian Canadian culture:
from Wayson Choy to Joy Kogawa, Kid Koala to Sook-Yin Lee, the magazine
covers major and emerging artists, while its hard-hitting articles speak of
the issues that are changing Canadian society as we know it. From
interracial marriages to head taxes, Ricepaper leaves no stone unturned in the
Asian Canadian experience.

Still driven by a crew of passionate volunteers, Ricepaper is proud to
celebrate its 10th anniversary this year.

Join us on September 24, 2005 at Wild Ginger to celebrate
Ricepaper Magazine's 10th Anniversary along with some very
special guests - Joy Kogawa, Scott McIntyre, and Gim Wong

JOY KOGAWA, born in Vancouver in 1935, is a Nisei - a second-generation
Japanese Canadian and one of Canada's most significant writers. When
World War II broke out, she, like the rest of her family, was forced from the
coast. Canada and its allies were at war with Germany, Italy, and Japan
and regarded Canadians of Japanese heritage with suspicion. Due to these
circumstances, Kogawa had to attend grade school in the internment camp
at Slocan, British Columbia. Joy has published numerous collections of
poetry, essays, children's literature and the novels Obasan, Istuka, and The
Rain Ascends.

Her novel, Obasan tells the story of the Japanese Canadian
internment through the eyes of a child. Obasan has been named the
eleventh most influential novel of the twentieth century by "Quill and Quire".
Joy is the recipient of numerous honorary doctorates as well as national and
international awards for her writing. She was awarded the Order of
Canada in 1998. The clarity of her poetry and prose continues to influence a new
generation of young minds.

The Vancouver Public Library (VPL) selected Joy Kogawa's Obasan as its
One Book, One Vancouver selection for 2005. One Book, One Vancouver is an
award-winning book club for the entire city, designed to create a
culture of reading and discussion in Vancouver by bringing people together around
one great book. The program aims to encourage people to read, create a
common topic of conversation and create opportunities to engage people in
reading and discussion about a variety of topics.

One Book, One Vancouver is presented by Vancouver Public Library with
support from Penguin Group (Canada), the Vancouver Opera, 32 Books, and
media partners CBC Radio One, CBC Radio Two, Word on the Street, and
The Vancouver Sun.

"Obasan is one of the most powerful books about the Japanese Canadian
experience ever written," said City Librarian Paul Whitney. "The story
and its message about the consequences of war and prejudice are as relevant
today as they were when this book was first released in 1981. We're
delighted to introduce Obasan to some readers for the first time, and
give those who've read Obasan the opportunity to rediscover the novel
again."

SCOTT McINTYRE, born in 1944 and raised in Vancouver, graduated from
the University of British Columbia with an honours fine arts degree in
1965. He entered publishing at McClelland & Stewart in Toronto in 1967,
returning to Vancouver early in 1970 to join Jim Douglas and to co-found the next
year what has become Douglas & McIntyre. He is Douglas & McIntyre Publishing
Group's current President and CEO.

Douglas & McIntyre has had a long-standing and continuing commitment to
publishing the voices of Asian Canadian writers. In 1988, the company
published Saltwater City: An Illustrated History of the Chinese in
Vancouver, by Paul Yee-the first such illustrated history. This was
followed in 1991 with the first novel by a Chinese Canadian in English,
Disappearing Moon Cafe, by S.K.Y. Lee, which received critical acclaim. It was also
short-listed for the Governor-General's Award and won the City of
Vancouver Book Award. The book is still in print and selling steadily. The next
year, Douglas & McIntyre published the first anthology of Chinese-Canadian
writing, fiction and poetry titled Many-mouthed Birds: Contemporary
Writing by Chinese Canadians, edited by Bennett Lee and Jim Wong-Chu.

Since then, the company has published Chinese Canadians: Voices from a Community by
Evelyn Huang and Lawrence Jeffery; Ingratitude by Ying Chen; Heartsmart
Chinese Cooking by Stephen Wong; and the much acclaimed best seller,
The Jade Peony, by Wayson Choy. It was the co-winner (with Margaret Atwood)
of the Trillium Book Award and the City of Vancouver Book Award. In 2002,
The Jade Peony was chosen as the inaugural title for the Vancouver Public
Library's "One Book, One Vancouver" reading program. Future releases
include a new updated and redesigned edition of Paul Yee's Saltwater City
coming out in the autumn of 2005.


Eighty-two year-old GIM WONG, a World War II Air Force veteran and
Canadian-born son of two Chinese head taxpayers, set off on a
cross-Canada motorcycle ride on July 1, 2004. Mr. Wong rode his motorcycle across
Canada to call upon the federal government to redress the Chinese Head Tax and
Chinese Exclusion Act, sixty-two years of legislated racism endured by
the Chinese in Canada from 1885 to 1947.

Gim Wong's neatly pressed RCAF uniform and glossy shoes are a
not-so-subtle reminder that he was ready to put his life on the line for a country
that denied him, a native son, the rights and privileges of citizenship
until 1947. He trained as an air gunner for the war in Europe and as a flight
engineer for the Japanese campaign, both of which ended before he could
be posted overseas. In 1941, when he was 19, he was riding his motorcycle
with a friend in South Vancouver. The police confiscated his motorcycle, and
that of his Japanese friend. "I had to prove I wasn't Japanese," he says.

Gim, a native of Vancouver, didn't have to pay the tax himself. But
coming up with $500 in head-tax money meant his father had to wait 13 years
before he could afford to bring his mother over from China after he had
emigrated to Canada in 1906.

Gim Wong has been involved in the campaign for restitution since
it began in 1983 after the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms was
passed.


Join us in honouring three community pioneers - Joy, Scott, and Gim -
and hear their unique and fascinating stories.

Meet the talented Ricepaper crew, dedicated volunteers, contributors,
celebrities, artists, writers, and supporters.


When: Saturday - September 24, 2005 - 6:00pm to 10:00pm
Cash Bar Reception 6:00pm - Dinner starts at 7:00pm

Where: Wild Ginger - Tinseltown - 2nd Floor, 88 West Pender Street,
Vancouver
FREE Validated Underground Parking (bring your parking stub with you)

Advance Tickets: $30 each
At the Door: $35 each

Includes delicious Buffet Dinner and 1 Year Complimentary Subscription
to Ricepaper (value $20)

Get your Advance Tickets from:

- Ricepaper Magazine 604.879.5962
- VAHM Society/explorASIAN 604.488.0119
- Wild Ginger Restaurant (in person only)
- Jim Wong-Chu 604.322.6616
- Don Montgomery 604.878.6888
- Sid Tan 604.433.6169
- Angela Leung angelal@alumni.sfu.ca
- Todd Wong 604.987.7124
- Marisa Alps 1.604.885.5185 (Sunshine Coast)

Come and reunite with old friends! Book Signings! Door Prizes!
Great company and terrific food! Please come to our celebration!
www.ricepaperonline.com

Rice Paper 10 year anniversary – ACWW Community Builder's Dinner

Come
celebrate Community Builders of the Asian Canadian literary community,
such as Joy Kogawa, Scott McIntyre, Gim Wong, and the 10th Year
anniversary for Rice Paper Magazine.

Sep 24th
Wild Ginger Restaurant

go to www.asiancanadianwritersworkshop.com
more details to follow.

I am glad to be a part of this, in my role on the ACWW executive, and
following Joy Kogawa's involvement in One Book One Vancouver this year.

Japanese-Canadian Cultural Fair and Joy Kogawa at Vancouver Public Library

Joy Kogawa was a featured reader at the Japanese Canadian cultural fair
at the Vancouver Public Library on Saturday, August 6th – which also
marked the 60th Anniversary of Hiroshima. 

We had a lovely quick catch up chat, and Joy shared with me her concern
about the Japanese Chinese national tensions and wondered what we could
do.  We reply is to emphasize that we are Canadians first while we
embrace and recognize our Japanese or Chinese heritage.  Many of
my friends are of mixed Chinese and Japanese heritage – and we all
emphasize being Canadian or American.  Maybe it's time for an
anthology of Asian Canadian writing exploring the similar experiences
and issues of Japanese Canadian and Chinese Canadian writers.

Along the peace theme…. Joy introduced me to her friend Ellen Hayakawa
who is a real peace advocate.  She has come to my Church groups to
speak about her mission, and a few years ago organized a peace forum
and conference in Vancouver.

There were many displays from the Japanese Canadian Heritage Museum, a
demonstration of Ikebana, volunteers from Japanese volunteer society
Tonari-Gumi, Vancouver Opera had a display for their upcoming
production of Naomi's Road…. 

But what really caught my attention was  a display by Jeff Chiba Stearns,
who has created a short animated feature called “What Are You
Anyways?”  This is so cool!  Jeff explores his cultural
backgrounds growing up a mix of Japanese and Caucasion in a small
white-bred Canadian city (Kelowna).  Jeff created the character
“Super Nip” to deal with the racism he experienced growing up, and has
an epic showdown against the monster truck drivin' redneck crew. 
Included is his discovery of his girlfriend who is also half-Japanese,
as they embrace their Hapa-ness hapiness.

“What Are You Anyways” will be shown on CBC TV August 12th, Friday, 7pm.

It was a real pleasure to meet both Jeff and his real-life girlfriend
Jenni Kato.  They were both excited to hear about my experience of the
Gung Haggis Fat Choy CBC TV performance special.  Hopefully we can
have them as guests/presenters for the next GHFC dinner in 2006.

Michael Tora Spier is a visual artist with a grand vision.  He
created “Hapa Board” – a gigantic skate board that features pull-out
boxes with address different aspects of being Hapa.  Hapa being…
the Hawaiian word for mixed race.  Michael believes that we are
ALL Hapa in some form or another, and invited me to make a Gung Haggis
Fat Choy contribution to the Hapa Board.  Definitely exciting and
eye-catching, Hapa Board got lots of attention from passer bys,
especially children, and a wedding party!

Pictures to follow soon!

Japanese Canadian Cultural Fair + Joy Kogawa & CBC Radio's Sheryl Mackay live on radio!

This Saturday…
Check out the Japanese Canadian Cultural Fair in the Vancouver Public Library's
Central Branch promenade on Saturday. 
350 West Georgia Street.

Joy Kogawa will be interviewed by CBC Radio's Sheryl Mackay
host of North by Northwest.

One Book, One Vancouver
Presentation  Japanese Canadian Cultural Fair
Program highlights  An interactive fair of Japanese arts, crafts, and culture plus book signings by Joy Kogawa. Held in the Promenade.
Date  Saturday, August 6th 2005
Time  11:00am – 3:00pm
Location 

Central Library
350 W. Georgia St.
Phone: (604) 331-3603

Admission  Free
Co-sponsor  One
Book, One Vancouver co-sponsors: CBC Radio One, CBC Radio Two, 32 Books
Co., Vancouver Opera, Penguin Group Canada, The Vancouver Sun, The Word
on the Street



One Book, One Vancouver
Presentation  Sheryl MacKay: North by Northwest
Program highlights  Join CBC Radio One's host Sheryl MacKay for North by Northwest live at Library Square! This program will be held in the Promenade.
Date  Saturday, August 6th 2005
Time  11:00am – 12:00pm
Location 

Central Library
350 W. Georgia St.
Phone: (604) 331-3603

Admission  Free
Sponsor  One
Book, One Vancouver co-sponsors: CBC Radio One, CBC Radio Two, 32 Books
Co., Vancouver Opera, Penguin Group Canada, The Vancouver Sun, The Word
on the Street
Co-sponsor  CBC Radio One


Joy Kogawa at VPL: Emily Kato preview (re-write of Itsuka) Aug 5

Presentation  Joy Kogawa: Emily Kato Book Preview
Program highlights  Join author Joy Kogawa for a preview of her new book, Emily Kato (formerly titled Itsuka).
Politically charged and intimately poetic, this novel tells a story of
extraordinary commitment, profound hope, and one community's struggle
for justice.
Date  Friday, August 5th 2005
Time  7:30pm
Location 

Central Library
Alice MacKay room – Lower Level
350 W. Georgia St.
Phone: (604) 331-3603

Admission  Free
Co-sponsor  One
Book, One Vancouver co-sponsors: CBC Radio One, CBC Radio Two, 32 Books
Co., Vancouver Opera, Penguin Group Canada, The Vancouver Sun, The Word
on the Street



Joy Kogawa presents Emily Kato – the sequel to award winning novel
Obasan (actually a re-write of Itsuka).  This follows the Obsan
story many decades later when Obasan (“Auntie Emily”), asks Naomi to
join the redress movement.

Joy sent me these messages:

Hi Todd,

Just thought I'd let you know that Emily Kato

(re-write of Itsuka) is being launched August 5,

7:30 in the Alice McKay room at the main library.

Hope to see you then. And please let others know. I don't have my address list when I travel. But I have your
address.




 Joy


Hi Todd,

Nice to hear from
you.  It turns out that there's a glitch and the book is not at
the printers yet, so it will not be a book launch. A
sort of book preview. I was hoping we could cancel and join with the
Hiroshima Day commemoration ceremonies, but the librarian feels we
can't cancel.
Anyway, thanks for all you are doing. I'm feeling a lot of gratitude for the opportunity to help.

Joy


One Book One Vancouver July events with Joy Kogawa and CBC Radio

The Vancouver Public Library and CBC Radio have just announced some 
joint events for One Book One Vancouver. All look very interesting.
Check them out!

Joy Kogawa will be Mark Forsythe's guest on CBC Almanac's Open Line
(690
AM) from 1 p.m. to 2 pm, this Friday, July 15. A few copies of Obasan
will
be given away to lucky listeners!

Joy Kogawa will be visiting library branches to read from Naomi's Road and
more
at Renfrew (July 20, 10:30 am), Hastings (July 21, 10:30 am),
Fraserview
(July 27 at 2 pm) and Oakridge (10:30 am).

Join Joy Kogawa at the Central Library on August 5 for the launch of
Emily Kato, which follows up on the life of Naomi's Aunt Emily from Obasan,
at 7:30 pm in the Alice MacKay Room.

The following day, August 6, Joy will be back at Central for a Japanese
Canadian Cultural fair featuring a recorded broadcast with Sheryl MacKay
and CBC's North by Northwest in the Promenade - we'll also be announcing
the winner of the Haiku Contest at this event. Check the OBOV page on our
website more more details as they become available.

The Asian Mystique – author Reading by Sheridan Prasso

From the Vancouver Public Library Website

www.vpl.ca

This event is also co-sponsored by Asian Canadian Writer's Workshop and Rice Paper Magazine

Author Reading
Presentation  The Asian Mystique by Sheridan Prasso
Program highlights  Prize-winning journalist and Asia expert Sheridan Prasso reads from her new book The Asian Mystique: Dragon Ladies, Geisha Girls, & Our Fantasies of the Exotic Orient.
This is a provocative critique of the West's eroticized illusions about
Asia and how profoundly these illusions colour our social, cultural,
business, personal, and political interactions.
Date  Wednesday, June 29th 2005
Time  7:30pm
Location 

Central Library
Alice MacKay room – Lower Level
350 W. Georgia St.
Phone: (604) 331-3603

Admission  Free

Obachan's Garden Film Screening at VPL with director Linda Ohama

As part of Vancouver Public Library's One Book One Vancouver program, there will be many related events designed to help bring the book Obasan to life.

Obachan's Garden, is the award winning National Film Board documentary about the filmaker Linda Ohama's Grandmother.  Ohama won a 2002 Leo Award for best direction for a documentary.

Check out a review of Obachan's Garden on Culture Vulture

Please see below for the information from the VPL web page.

Obachan's Garden: Film Screening
Thursday, June 23; 7:30 p.m.
Alice MacKay Room (Lower Level), Central Library (350 West Georgia St.)

Join director Linda Ohama for a special screening of Obachan's Garden.

In 1923, Asayo Murakami left Hiroshima and settled in a fishing
village in Steveston, BC. Her family has memories of a happy woman who
sang, danced and nurtured a colourful flower garden, but underneath,
the memory of what she left in Japan haunted her deeply.

Delicately peeling back the layers of her grandmother's life,
filmmaker Linda Ohama discovers a painful, buried past. In poignant
interviews, Asayo, now 103 years old, recalls life in Japan, her
arrival in Canada as a “picture bride,” her determination to marry a
man of her choice, the bombing of Hiroshima and the forced relocation
of her family during World War II.

Beautifully rendered dramatic sequences are merged with an exquisite
collection of memories, feelings, images and voices. Culminating in an
emotional reunion with a long-lost daughter, this film is an intensely
personal reflection of Japanese-Canadian history and a testament to one
woman's incredible endurance and spirit.

Roy Miki lectures on Redress + Vancouver Opera's version of Naomi's Road by Joy Kogawa – June 13

Dr.
Roy Miki, between Rev. Tim Nakayama and author Joy Kogawa – at the
Vancouver Public Library premiere for One Book One Vancouver featuring
Joy Kogawa and her novel Obasan – photo Todd Wong

This event should be very interesting.  Roy Miki is a fascinating speaker and I have featured him at readings at the Vancouver Public Library during Asian Heritage Month.  I am really looking forward to hearing Vancouver Opera's songs for their new opera based on Joy Kogawa's children's novel Naomi's Road.  This should be a One Book One Vancouver program at the Vancouver Public Library.  The Chan Centre is always one of my favorite concert or lecture halls.

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

UBC – LAURIER INSTITUTION MULTICULTURALISM LECTURE
http://services.raincoast.com/scripts/b2b.
wsc/fmp/155192/1551926504.htm
Featuring Guest Lecturer Dr. Roy Miki speaking on Redress: Dealing with Past Injustices

Vancouver Opera opens the evening with scenes from Naomi's Road based on Joy Kogawa's novel

  • Date: Monday, June 13th, 2005
  • Time: Concert starts at 7:00, 7:30 – 9:00 Talk and Q&A session.
  • Place: The Chan Centre for the Performing Arts, UBC Campus
  • To reserve a seat call 604-822-1444 or visit multilecture
  • FREE of charge

How can past injustices be recognized by today's generation? In an
evening of dialogue and reflection, Roy Miki explores personal and
collective memories of the 1980's redress movement that saw Japanese
Canadians obtain a settlement with the Canadian government. He
speculates on the continuing importance of redress as a principle of
human rights and democratic governance.

Dr. Roy Miki is a writer, poet, editor and teacher. Born in Winnipeg,
he relocated to the West Coast in the late 1960s. He is the author of Justice in Our Time (co-authored with Cassandra Kobayashi); two books of poems, Saving Face and Random Access File; and a collection of critical essays, Broken Entries: Race, Subjectivity, Writing. He has also edited numerous books, including Pacific Windows: Collected Poems of Roy K. Kiyooka, which won the 1997 Poetry Award from the Association of Asian American Studies, and more recently, Meanwhile: The Critical Writings of bp Nichol. His third book of poems, Surrender, received the Governor General's Award for Poetry. His latest book is Redress: Inside the Japanese Canadian Call for Justice. Dr. Miki teaches contemporary literature in the English Department at Simon Fraser University.

About the UBC – Laurier Institution Multiculturalism Lecture:
The annual UBC – Laurier Institution Multiculturalism Lecture was
launched to celebrate Canada's diversity by examining the various
aspects of today's multicultural society. The lecture series, sponsored
by UBC and The Laurier Institution, brings together speakers from many
cultural backgrounds who share their views as Canadians and shed light
on the many threads which make up our mosaic. It is proudly presented
by CBC and will be broadcast on their IDEAS program.