Category Archives: Todd Wong

2011 Gung Haggis Fat Choy is a big success… or was it Gung HAPA Fat Choy?

GUNG HAGGIS FAT CHOY VANCOUVER!

We celebrated the 14th Annual Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner on January 30th, 2011.
Our 2011 theme featured so many performers of Asian-Celtic-Gaelic heritage that we could have called it
Gung HAPA Fat Choy!

Co-hosts were actor Patrick Gallagher (Glee, Men of a Certain Age, Night at the Museum), Jenna Choy (CBC Radio), writer/comedian Tetsuro Shigematsu, and creator of the event Todd Wong aka “Toddish McWong”Featured performers were: Jocelyn Pettit and her band – Siew & Joel Pettit + Bob Collins
Joe McDonald on pipes, accordion, Address to the Haggis, and Highland Fling.
Jay MacDonald, performing Loch Lomand and “Ring of Burns”
Jaime Foster singing Ae Fond Kiss
Vancouver Poet Laureate: Brad Cran
Dr. Leith Davis: Immortal Memory
Gung Haggis Pipes & Drums: led by Pipe Major Bob Wilkins with: Allan McMordie, Trish McMoride, Brenda McNair, Don Scobie, Danny Graham, drummers were: Casandra Lihn, Bill Burr and Tracey Morris

All photos below from our official photographer Lydia Nagai.
www.lydianagai.com

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Creator and co-host Todd Wong aka Toddish McWong with Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson, try out the haggis won ton with chop sticks. – photo Lydia Nagai
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Fiddler Jocelyn Pettit with her French-Celtic-Canadian father and the Chinese-Canadian mother – the Jocelyn Pettit Band! – photo Lydia Nagai
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CNN reporter Percy Von Lipinski and his cameraman film Jocelyn Pettit as she performs! – photo Lydia Nagai

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Actor Patrick Gallagher was our co-host, while our Bearded Scottish Lady roamed, and all posed for a picture with Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson and host and Gung Haggis creator Todd Wong – photo Lydia Nagai

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Co-hosts 3 =  2 1/2 Asians…. Todd Wong, writer/comedian Tetsuro Shigematsu and Jenna Chow (CBC Radio). – photo Lydia Nagai

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Todd Wong and Jenna Chow read the poem “Recipe For Tea”, written by Jim Wong-Chu, which describes how tea first traveled from China to the UK, via Scottish traders. – photo Lydia Nagai

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Floata manager Antonio Hung carries the haggis during the Piping of the Haggis – photo Lydia Nagai

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Dr. Leith Davis, director of the Centre for Scottish Studies at Simon Fraser University, cuts the haggis, as she read the 3rd verse of Robert Burns immortal poem “Address To A Haggis” as CNN reporter Percy Von Lipinski, films Leith close up. – photo Lydia Nagai

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Film maker Jeff Chiba Stearns explains the meaning of “Hapa” as a word to describe people of Mixed ancestry with Asian heritage.  His film “One Big Hapa Family” was featured at the 2011 Gung Haggis Fat Choy Dinner.  Co-host Patrick Gallagher, of Irish and Chinese Ancestry, looks on. – photo Lydia Nagai

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The Head Table with MLA Shane Simpson, co-host Jenna Chow and friend Mattias, Meeka, Bahareh (partner of co-host Tetsuro Shigematsu),  co-host and founder Todd Wong, Jeff Chiba Stearns and partner Jen Kato. – photo Lydia Nagai

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Musician Joe McDonald, sans bagpipes, flute or accordion – dances a jig, with bagpiper Don Scobie. – photo Lydia Nagai

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Dr. Leith Davis, gives the Immortal Memory – talking about the “Life of Robbie Burns” and the connections of Todd Wong – photo Lydia Nagai

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Trish & Allan McMordie, with guitarists Jay MacDonald and Bob Collins, join in the singing of “I Went to a Robbie Burns Dinner” – Burns lyrics set to the tune of Johnny Cash’s famous song – “Ring of Fire” – photo Lydia Nagai

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During the singing of Auld Lang Syne, people joined hands to sing…. as the Chinese Dragon weaved through the crowd. – photo Lydia Nagai

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Members of the audience joined performers on stage to sing Auld Lang Syne for the closing song.
(l-r Siew Pettit, Jocelyn Pettit, Todd Wong, Trish McMordie, Allan McMordie + 3 members of the audience) – photo Lydia Nagai

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After the singing was over, a posed picture of kilts and legs, was taken!
(l-r: bearded Scots Lady, Bruce Clark, Todd Wong, Adam Todd, Don Harder and Allan McMordie – photo Lydia Nagai

Robbie Burns Dinner for Vancouver & District Labour Council

Toddish McWong gives Address to the Haggis
at VDLC Burns Supper

Friday January 21, 2011
Maritime Labour Centre
Vancouver, BC

The Burns Supper by the Vancouver & District Labour Council is one of my favorite Burns Supper events.  It is also a fundraiser for the Queen Alexandra Elementary School hot lunch program.  I also belong to CUPE 391 Vancouver library workers, and I am a delegate for the VDLC.  This past year has been challenging for Queen Alexandra School, because it was one of the schools named to a short list of schools that could be closed due to budget cuts for Vancouver School Board.

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Paul Sihota, Todd Wong, and Bill Saunders, VDLC President.  Bill is wearing the tam hat and bow-tie in Burns check, that I brought back from the Burns Cottage last year from my trip to Scotland.  Paul and I are looking very dapper in our kilt outfits.  We were finalists in the “Best dressed kilt” contest… that was decided by a final showdown between the two of us.  Paul had great applause, but I pushed it further when I stepped up to the stage edge, and performed a kilt twirl.

This was the third year in a row that I have performed the Address to the Haggis at the VDLC Dinner.  Each year I receive great compliments.  Last year, somebody said they were outside the room, and heard a Scottish voice, but walked back into the banquet hall to see a Chinese face… They were surprised!

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Here is the bottle of Glenlivet single malt scotch that I won as a prize.

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Dinner!  There is a wee bit of haggis on the left side of the plate, but I do prefer the roast beef.

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Jim Sinclair, president of the BC Federation of Labour, gives the toast to Robbie Burns, after giving the Immortal Memory – which recounts the life of Robert Burns.  Sinclair highlighted the reasons why Burns was known as “The Ploughman's Poet”, or “workingman's poet”, emphasizing that Burns was also a public employee, while he was an exiseman (tax collector), which he hated doing, and apparently donated some of the taxes to worthy causes.

2011_January_VDLC_Burns_Dinner 027 Click on this video
If you look closely, you will see an Asian Highland Dancer… well half-Asian….

see more pictures here on my Flickr account:

VDLC Burns Dinner

VDLC Burns Dinner

Uncommon Mischief at SFU – No Burns ceremony for Scottish and scholastic tradition

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250th Anniversary of the birth of
Scottish poet Robert Burns celebrated January 25th, 2009, at the Burns statue in Vancouver's
Stanley Park.  The ceremony was organized by Todd Wong, creator of Gung
Haggis Fat Choy, and Dr. Leith Davis, director of Centre for Scottish
Studies SFU. 

Dr. Davis created a virtual wreath laying with cities around the world
that also had Burns statues. She had just arrived from a week in
Scotland, and her first destination from the airport was the Burns
statue.  My role was inviting pipers, and Burns Club members to recite
poetry and sing Burns songs.  Three national tv news cameras attended the ceremony.

Also attending were members of the Burns Club of Vancouver,
bagpipers were Allan & Trish McMordie from the J.P. Fell Pipe Band
of North Vancouver. Ron Macleod, author of the article below stands in
front of bagpiper Allan McMordie on the right of the statue. – photo T.Wong collection – photo T.Wong collection

UNCOMMON
MISCHIEF AT SFU

By Ron
MacLeod (by special permission)

It has been the custom for many years at Simon Fraser
University to celebrate the birth of Scotland’s Bard, Robert Burns, in a
unique
way. The chosen way was to bring the Bard to the SFU community of
faculty and
students. A couple of staff members, volunteer students and a guest or
two
would move about the Burnaby campus, stopping here and there along the
way to
enlighten faculty and students about a Scottish love affair with a Poet,
no
less. An SFU student would lead the way with his pipes, and as they
stopped at
suitable sites where people could congregate, a cafeteria or a hallway
niche, for example, a Burns poem or a short address on some
aspect of the Poet’s genius would entertain and enrich. A feature of
each stop
would be a recitation of Burns’ comical poem, Address to the Haggis. A
taste of
haggis would be passed to the unwary and thus entrap them in a life-long
craving for this Scottish soul food. In more recent years this ‘parading
of the
haggis’ was extended to the Vancouver and Surrey campuses.

After so many years that few, if any, can recall the onset
of this unique celebration, in 2011 it came to a sudden stop. Not by choice but
by edict. What was the rational? Cost? It couldn’t be cost since the only real
outlay was the cost of two or three haggis and the time of a couple of staff
members.

On the face of it, the edict runs counter to the founding
spirit as cast in the following words, “Simon
Fraser University reflects, in many respects, the Scottish heritage implicit in
its name. Its symbol is a claymore donated by Lord Lovat, Chief of Clan Fraser.
The name of the University has been proudly carried by the SFU Pipe Band to the
homeland of the Frasers on many occasions, to the extent that almost anyone in
Scotland will know of Simon Fraser University. Finally, of central importance
is the existence at SFU of a strong core of faculty from several disciplines
who engage with Scottish studies in their research. There is an ‘elective
affinity’, then, between this university and Scotland”.

The edict also challenges the vision expressed by the new
President, Andrew Petter, that SFU should be “student centred, research driven
and community engaged.” Community engagement and student enlightenment for long
have been a purpose of the mobile celebration of Burns. Too few students and
faculty are aware of the ‘elective affinity’ noted above.

One can only hope that once settled into his new
responsibilities, President Petter might reflect on this matter and, wisely,
correct what appears to be a decision out of step with the spirit of Simon
Fraser University. However, in taking up his new responsibilities, President
Petter may be in overload status; issues such as terminating the University’s
mobile  Burn celebration could well
pass under his radar.

The issue may be more important than one might normally
assume. A question remains. Is this a first step in eroding the ‘elective
affinity’ of which all Scots are so proud? Who knows? It is important to get an
answer to the question. The best answer will be the rebirth of the celebration
in 2012.

If your internal warning signals are buzzing, send an email to ScottishExpress@businesscentresolutions.com

or Ron MacLeod jrmacleod@telus.net to compile your responses for delivery to President Petter.

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

It was in 1993, that SFU student Todd Wong was asked to help carry the haggis for the Burns ceremony.  It was a simple ceremony. There was a student bagpiper, a history student to carry the haggis, which she was glad to do because her grandmother made her own haggis.  I carried the claymore, a scottish broadsword that had seen battle on the Plains of Abraham in Quebec, and also at the Battle of Culloden in Scotland.  First we walked to a private room, where incoming president John Stubbs met with outgoing president Bill Saywell.  Mr. Stubbs remarked that on his plane trip, he had read a story in the media about SFU student Toddish McWong participating in his first Burns ceremony. We walked to the main cafeteria to present the haggis.  I can't remember if anybody recited the Address to the Haggis, it would have been my first time hearing it.  And that was it.  Simple.  Price of the haggis – $5.  Cost or the event: Priceless.

Here is my blog stories about No Haggis at SFU:

2011 Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner will be fantastic!

The buzz is building for
Gung Haggis Fat Choy
Robbie Burns
Chinese New Year Dinner

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“Rap to the Haggis” – Video from 2009 Gung Haggis Fat Choy Dinner

January 30th, Sunday
Floata Seafood Restaurant
#400- 180 East Keefer St.
Vancouver Chinatown

For Tickets
Contact Firehall Arts Centre:
phone 604.689.0926

$65 for adults
$55 for students
$45 for children 13 & under
(prices included ticket service charge)

Our co-hosts will be:
Jenna Chow – CBC Radio reporter
Patrick Gallagher – actor
Tetsuro Shigamatsu – writer, comedian

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Jocelyn Pettit CD release party.by essexboy2424362 views

Highland Wedding Song Joe McDonald Vancouver
1 min1 Oct 2009


Performers will be:
Jocelyn Pettit & Band
Joe McDonald – singer
Jaime None – singer
Brad Cran – Vancouver Poet Laureate
Jeff Chiba Stearns – film maker
Aidan and Quinn Huang – Highland Dancers
Gung Haggis Pipes & Drums

Food will include:
deep-fried haggis won ton
traditional haggis served with Chinese vegetarian lettuce wrap
steamed wild sockeye salmon

Format will include:
Piping Parades through the audience
Address to the Haggis
lots of poetry
Singalongs
lots of food
surprises
cultural fusion twists everywhere


Interesting notes:
CNN is sending a reporter and camera
It's Vancouver's 125th Birthday on April 6 – also Tartan Day
Vancouver's first mayor was Malcolm Alexander Maclean. He was born in Tyree, Argyllshire
on Scotland’s west coast, in 1844. He arrived in Granville
in January of 1886, three months before it became Vancouver.

Here's a video from the 2009 dinner

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8 min29 Jan 2009

QI show in UK – cites Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner in Vancouver

Gung Haggis Fat Choy is QI in the UK

QI (Quite Interesting) is a British comedy panel game television quiz show.  It is hosted by Stephen Fry, and features permanent panellist Alan Davies with many other rotating guest panelists

My library co-worker friend Chris Jang just sent me this link that mentions “Gung Haggis Fat Choy in Vancouver”. 

Not sure, when these episodes were taped.  But this time last year, I was still recovering from my Nov 28-Dec 5 trip to Scotland.   I was there to attend the St. Andrew's Day closing night reception for Scotland Homecoming 2009, held at the Scottish Parliament Building.  A picture of me wearing kilt and Chinese Lion mask was featured for the exhibit “This is Who We Are: Scots in Canada” – organized by my friend Harry McGrath.   That evening I met the First Minister of Scotland, Alex Salmond.  See my article:  Toddish McWong arrives in Scotland for inaugural visit and reception at Scottish Parliament for “This is Who We Are”

I have not yet been interviewed by BBC Radio or television, but I have been a guest on BBC Radio Scotland for different things.  For January 25th Robbie Burns Day 2010, I was woken up by BBC Radio Scotland, as they wanted to know how Robbie Burns Day was celebrated abroad.  My description of Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner, followed a phone interview from a UK research base in Antarctica.

Anyways…. watch these video clips below, and have a dram of scotch whenever anybody mentions “Gung Haggis Fat Choy” or “Vancouver”…. or if you want to get drunk… “Haggis”

Vancouver Sun features Heart in the City Festival – Generations: The Chan Legacy is the 1st event listed in “At A Glance”

Generations: The Chan Legacy” is the top feature of the Vancouver Sun's “Festival at a Glance”

Generations:
The Chan Legacy – features the history of Chinese Canadians told
through 5 generations of descendants from Rev. Chan Yu Tan who arrived
in Canada in 1896, following his elder brother's footsteps to minister
to Chinese pioneers. Community service is a featured story in each generation of this CBC documentary.

7:30pm  Thursday Oct 28

Chinese Cultural Centre Museum 555 Columbia.

http://www.heartofthecityfestival.com/program/thursday-october-28/


I attended the Opening Gala for the Heart of the City Festival 2pm at Carnegie Centre.  Special guest was Lt. Gov. Steven Point.  He was very funny and serious, sharing stories about his first visits to Main & Hastings as a young law student. 
This pictures features the Carnegie Jazz Band playing “Sweet Georgia Brown

Great news – Vancouver Sun ran a story on the front page their Arts Section.  They featured a sidebar story “At a Glance” and the first event listed is Generations: The Chan Legacy!

Entertainment
news on celebrities, music, theatre reviews, television, local TV
listings guide, books and contests. Read Vancouver Sun to get current
news on entertainment in Vancouver.,To many people the Downtown Eastside
is an intimidating place: a dangerous, dirty, drug-infested 'hood

Generations: The Chan Legacy documentary to be shown Oct 28 at Heart of the City Festival

Great news for BC history and genealogy buffs.  The CBC documentary about the Rev. Chan Family descendants is being shown at Heart of the City Festival on Oct 28.

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http://www.heartofthecityfestival.com/program/thursday-october-28/
Film & Conversation
THE
REV. CHAN FAMILY LEGACY: Five Generations of Vancouver

Chinese
History 1888 to 2007

Thursday October 28, 7:30pm
Chinese Cultural
Centre Museum & Archives, 555 Columbia

The Chan family
first came to Canada to help start the Chinese Methodist Church and
every generation since has made contributions to Canadian society. In
2007, filmmaker Halya Kuchmij interviewed members of one of the oldest
families on the West Coast and made a documentary about the stories and
achievements of Reverend & Mrs. Chan, their sons Luke Chan
(Hollywood actor) and Jack Chan (golfer); grandchildren Helen Lee and
Victor Wong (WW2 veteran); great-grandchildren Gary Lee (entertainer)
and Janice Wong (artist); and great-great grandchildren Todd Wong
(community and cultural activist) and Tracey Hinder (high school
student). The many turns of the Chan family reflect the challenges of
exclusion, the fight for rights, the strength of family and citizenship,
and the right to vote. The festival is pleased to show The Chan
Legacy
, directed by Halya Kuchmij, from the CBC Learning
Generations Series (2007, 43:37) and we are fortunate to have Todd Wong
moderate the conversation afterwards. Todd is a descendent of Reverend
Chan and the creator of Gung Haggis Fat Choy, the annual celebration of
Chinese New Year and Robbie Burns Day (www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com) –
an event that marries two cultures that once lived completely separate
in the early days of British Columbia. Everyone welcome. Free

This was the lead show in the CBC Generations series that aired
on July 4th 2007.  The purpose was to interview multigenerational families across Canada, and help tell the story of Canada through the lives of that family.

I am a 5th generation great-great-grand son of Rev. Chan Yu Tan, and one of the featured stories.  My grandmother's sister Helen Lee and cousin Victor Wong are both interviewed and tell stories about their grandparents Rev. & Mrs. Chan Yu Tan, whom they respectively lived with and visited as children.  

Victor Wong is a WW2 veteran and shares stories about becoming a soldier for Special Forces operations with his cousins Howard and Leonard Lee, while Dan Lee was one of the first Chinese Canadians in the Airforce.  All this happened at a time when Canadians of Chinese ancestry were not allowed to vote in Canada, until after the Chinese-Canadian veterans returned from WW2 and lobbied the Canadian government to repeal the 1925 Chinese Exclusion Act.

Gary Lee, also tells stories about Rev. Chan's sons Luke Chan, who became an actor in Hollywood, and Jack Chan – an avid golfer and the first Chinese Canadian to serve on jury duty.

Artist Janice Wong is shown working and attending book launches for her recipe/memoir book “Chow: From China to Canada: Memories of Food + Family”
– which shares the history of the Rev. Chan family through her father Dennis Wong, chef of Chinese restaurants in Sasketchewan, son of the Rev's daughter Rose, and Victor's brother.

13 year old Tracey Hinder is seen winning the inaugural Vancouver area Canspell contest.  Tracey goes on to compete at the National Canspell in Ottawa and the Scripps in Washington DC.  Tracey is interviewed as a high school student, dedicated to learning about her community and family histoy.

Todd Wong is a community and cultural activist, known for creating Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner.  Excerpts from the CBC produced television performance special “Gung Haggis Fat Choy” are shown along with Todd's community commitments including the saving of the Historic Joy Kogawa House, Terry Fox Run, and dragon boat racing.

5 of the 7 part series are available for for sale through the CBC Learning Division
The
Chan Legacy

The
McCurdy Birthright

The
Crowfoot Dynasty

100
Years in Alberta

100
Years in Saskatchewan

http://www.heartofthecityfestival.com/program/thursday-october-28/

Accordion Flamenco – Todd Wong sits in with guitarist Rod Malkin and dancer Elin

Flamenco accordion player named “El Toddo Don Wong”

I
love flamenco music.  My usual claim to flamenco fame, is that I have twice had dinner with flamenco guitarist legend Paco Pena.

But on Thursday night at the La Zuppa restaurant in North Vancouver, I sat in with guitarist Rod Malkin and dancer Elen Ghulam.  I was walking by the restaurant on Lonsdale Avenue and decided to have a listen.  The music was lovely, the space was intimate and friendly.  I spoke with the restaurant operators Juan Carlos and Vicky. We talked about the restaurant and flamenco music. They introduced me to Rod and Elen, and told them I play accordion.

Rod invited me to sit in with them. I had never played with a flamenco guitarist before.  But they were keen that I had shared my knowledge about attending Paco Pena's Misa Flamenco concert in Vancouver, and that I knew of Al Mozaico Flamenco's productions of “Cafe de Chinatas”.  It was a big stretch for me to improvise
freely, and I gained confidence to add flourishes. It was good enough
that the dancer took to the platform. A wonderful experience musically
overall.

It was a big challenge… I have been playing with a Celtic Ceilidh
group since Christmas… and learning to play accompaniment and fills. I
still go into shock and panic when somebody says “Accordion Solo” – but
playing with Robert last night was very cool – lots of listening to
each other, and just taking it slow… working in some flourishes. And
they kept me playing with them! 🙂

While at the restaurant, I discovered postcards for Mozaico Flamenco – the company founded and directed by Oscar Nieto and Kasandra La China in 2002.  I reviewed their show “Cafe De Chinatas” in 2006 at the Norman Rothstein Theatre and in 2006 at Edie's Hats on Granville Island.  I am thrilled that “Mozaico Flamenco” is going to be perform again
in November at the Scotiabank Dance Centre. http://www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com/blog/_archives/2007/6/10/3012512.html

Look what I just discovered!
Flamenco Guitar with Accordion and performed in Edinburgh, Scotland

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PP0s41cZjV0

Chinatown Canada tv documentary on OMNI tonight at 8pm

Watch the Chinatown Canada documentary on OMNI TV tonight

Saturday, Aug 21 at 8pm PST on Omni News (BC)

Todd Wong is interviewed about Vancouver Chinatown and see the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team in action at '09 Rio Tinto Alcan Dragon Boat Festival.

The footage was shot last June, when Kerry Beattie contacted me.  I recommended a number of people for them to talk to including Andrew Wong of Wild Rice Restaurant (Andrew's grandfather used to own the Lotus Hotel, where my grandfather Sonny Wong ran the Lotus Cafe Restaurant), and Shirley Chan and many others.

check link for other provinces http://bit.ly/bNu4rv

My family elders

My family elders

Rev. Chan Yu Tan came to Canada in 1896 to serve at the Chinese Methodist Church, which had been co-founded by his elder brother Rev. Chan Sing Kai in 1888.

My family elders have lived through two world wars.  They have lived through the Chinese Head
Tax era, and the1923 Chinese Exclusion Act.

3 brothers and a cousin served in WW2, who were first not allowed to join the Canadian Forces, even though they wanted to fight for the country they were born in.

They could not vote in the country they were born in until after the Exclusion Act was appealed in 1947 – because up until then, Canadians of Chinese ancestry were considered resident aliens.

They grew up and watched the younger generation become: Miss Canada runner-up, TV news reporter, BC Lions Cheerleader, lawyer, RCMP officer, city councilor, killer-whale habitat warden, mining environment consultant, and then there’s me…  cultural and community activist.

One great-grand-daughter of Rev Chan Yu Tan is Chief of the Qayqayt First Nations.  Watch the NFB Film Tribe of One to learn the story of Rhonda Larabee, my mother’s cousin.

My parents have appeared with me in the 2004 CBC television performance special Gung Haggis Fat Choy, when we re-created a small Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner of 10 for the cameras.

In 2007, CBC created a TV documentary about her Rev Chan Yu Tan and family descendant history titled Generations: The Chan Legacy.

Some of my elders have been an inspiration to me, and also very encouraging of me for playing my accordion, when I was a child.

 

Our family committee organized a Rev. Chan Family Reunion in 2000.  We had representatives from many branches of the Rev. Chan Family, descendants from his children Kate, Rose and Millicent, and families from son Jack also attended.

Many of my family elders have also attended my Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner.   I wrote about their influence on my cooking and heritage in the 2007 book Eating Stories: Chinese Canadian and Aboriginal Pot Luck.
http://www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com/blog/_archives/2007/11/21/3367190.html