Category Archives: Vancouver Area Adventures

Cardero's Restaurant in Coal Harbour

Where to best show “Vancouver” scenery and cuisine to a Torontonian… and make them wish they lived in Vancouver?2008_Nov15 107 by you.Cardero's is my new favorite restaurant for lunch. I went with my friend Halya Kuchmij, the film producer of the documentary Generations: The Chan Legacywhich is about the story of my great-great grandfather Rev. Chan Yu Tan, and the community contributions of his descendants – including me!

Halya and I met for lunch on Monday, November 17… Initially I had thought to take her to Granville Island – but on an inspiration I decided to check out Cardero's in Coal Harbour.  I hadn't been there for years… 

We took a short walk beside the Westin Bayshore Hotel while we waited for them to set up for lunch. The fog had lifted off the water.  We saw sea planes taking off, and a large catamaran yacht moving towards us.  I pointed out some of the local land marks such as HMCS Discovery. 

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This was our shared plate: Ahi tuna, Yellow Fin tuna, Tiger prawns, oysters – with dipping sauces.  The green stuff is crunchy vegetable stuff.  It was perfect with the yam fries.  Wonderful think crunch yam fries.  Tuna sashimi that melts in your mouth.  And a view of the harbour to rival anywhere in Vancouver.

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The view from North Vancouver in the morning… Fog draped Coal Harbour and Burrard Inlet – photo Todd Wong

HAPPY 150th BIRTHDAY B.C. Douglas Day 2008 at Ft. Langley

HAPPY 150th BIRTHDAY B.C.    
Douglas Day 2008 at Ft. Langley

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This is the birthday cake given out at the Ft. Langley Community Library.  I sneaked a peek, while everybody else was having the cupcakes following the opening of Spirit Square. – photo Todd Wong

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 James Douglas and his wife Amelia, follow a bagpiper from the newly opened “Spirit Square” to historic Ft. Langley – photo Todd Wong

2008_Nov15 244 Royal Engineer greets visitors to Historic Ft. Langley – photo Todd Wong

2008_Nov15 241 Todd Wong with Jean Barman, author of British Columbia: Spirit of the People, and Judy, president of the Friends of Historic Ft. Langley.


All proceeds of the book sales went to Friends of Fort Langley National Historic Site.  I've known Jean for a number of years, she is one of BC's most prolific authors of history.  It's always great to see her.  Yes, I finally bought a copy of the book, British Columbia: Spirit of the People, published by Howard White's Harbour Publishing.  It's a beautiful coffee table book, filled with incredible pictures and stories.

2008_Nov15 212  Lisa Pepin volunteers at Fort Langley, and counts her ancestors back 160 years back to the Fort's beginnings. – photo Todd Wong

Lisa is part of the Royal Engineers.  I first met her when they took part in the ill-fated SeaVancouver Festival in 2005.  She tells fascinating stories about Fort Langley's history which includes her own ancestors.  Check out the webpage

2008_Nov15 276 Kwantlen drummers perform on stage for the evening concert – photo Todd Wong

2008_Nov15 301 The Higgins performed during the evening concert

2008_Nov15 305 I really liked this picture.  It was evening, the concert was going, the stars were out. You can see the old style Union Jack flag on top of the flag pole, The banner tells the event for Douglas Day and BC 150 Celebrations.  You can see the Big House behind the banner and the flag. – photo Todd Wong

See more photos:

BC 150 at Ft. Langley

BC 150 at Ft. Langley

False Creek paddling after a rain storm in the fall…

False Creek is beautiful after a November rain storm –  the water is flat like glass, the sun is shining through broken cloud.  We paddle from Science World to Granville Island.

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False Creek is a photographer's paradise.  There were 3 photographers stalking this heron from the sea walk about the docks when the False Creek ferry came in – photo Todd Wong

The Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team is continuing Sunday afternoon paddling sessions for fun and fitness.  Many of the team members took the day off to attend a book reading by team mate Dan Seto for the Heart of the City Festival.  But four of us were hardy souls, and we climbed into marathon canoes for our exercise workout.

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“This is beautiful” gushed Gayle, “The water is so flat.” Stephen and Gayle paddled the marathon canoe to David Lam Park non-stop.  – photo Todd Wong

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Brooke is a rookie paddler.  She joined the Gung Haggis team in July.  This was her first time in a marathon canoe.  I steered the boat.  – photo Todd Wong

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We paddled to Granville Island and tied the canoes up at the public docks.

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It had been a long paddle and we were deserving of some refreshments, so we went to the Backstage Lounge. – photo Todd Wong

Heart of the City Festival: Stories of Chinese food from “Eating Stories” read at Chinese Benevolent Association historical building

The Heart of the City Festival celebrates Chinese food and Chinese buildings – with stories of pioneers and their descendants


CHINESE CANADIAN HISTORICAL SOCIETY WRITERS

Sunday November 2, 1:30pm – 2:30pm
Chinese Benevolent Association of Vancouver, 108 E. Pender 3rd floor

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Readings from the book “Eating Stories: A Chinese Canadian & Aboriginal Potluck” were featured at the at the Chinese
Benevolent Association on Sunday.  The book was published by the Chinese Canadian Historical Society last year and quickly sold out its first printing.  I was part of the writing workshops that helped to create this anthology of stories about food, culture and history.

Scheduled to read were moderator George Jung, Dan Seto, Larry Wong and Bob Sung. Also scheduled was Shirley Chan, but she asked me to fill in for her late Saturday…. so I was a surprise reader.

The reading started off with a welcome and an historical explanation of the Chinatown heritage buildings such as the Chinese Benevolent Association, and how the many clan associations served to help the pioneer Chinese in Vancouver and Canada.

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Dan Seto was the first reader.  He read his short story “Fong Luen Tong New Year Banquet” about the society set up for people with the names “Seto” or “Sit.”

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Bob Sung read second.  He read the story “A Lesson in Communication” about trying to impress a White Girl on a date in a Chinese restaurant, and how he kept mispronouncing the Chinese words so much that the waiter was laughing at him.

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Larry Wong read third.  He read the story “Evening With Pop (1949)” about how his father would always bring food home late at night to share with him and his sister.

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I read fourth.  I explained that my contributions were a blend of pictures and their descriptions.  The first picture I showed was me with my grandmother and girlfriend at Mother's Day 2007.

The second picture was me when I was 16 years old, holding two freshly caught salmon.  I explained how my mother's favorite way to cook fish was steamed with hot oil.

The third picture was the first picture ever taken of me wearing a kilt, back in 1993.  I was a tour guide at Simon Fraser University, and volunteers were needed to help with the university's traditional Robbie Burns ceremony.  This was when I first coined the phrase “Gung Haggis Fat Choy.”

The final picture was taken at the 2005 Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner with me holding a large haggis on a plate, while then Mayor Larry Campbell stabbed it with a knife.  I explained the origins of the dinner, and how it grew into a famous mix of cultural fusion of Chinese and Scottish food and culture.

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George Jung was the final reader.  George read his story “Applesauce” which described how 102 year old Mrs. Der had climbed two steep flights of stairs to demand “Where is the money, the frefund for the head tax that my husband paid?”  He describes how Mrs. Der met Prime Minister Stephen Harper, and how the redress ex-gratia payment arrived too late after she dies.

 I counted 18
current and past Gung Haggis paddlers + Hillary's mom – in the audience
– enough for a dragon boat team in competition! and 1/3 of the audience
..  Former paddler Elwin Xie had earlier in the day conducted his
Chinese Laundry Boy tour of Chinatown for the Heart of the City
Festival.

I acknowledged Savanah Walling in the audience – she is the
co-founder of the Heart of the City Festival.  I met her in April when
we both received the BC Community Achievement Award.

Sunday Night, CCHS writer Shirley Chan gave a reading of some of her
writings from the Eating Stories book, following the presentation of
the documentary Mary Lee Chan Takes on City Hall.  The film is about
how Shirley's mother helped to stop the demolition of Strathcona
neighborhood for freeway development.  Shirley's daughter Emma paddled
on the Gung Haggis dragon boat team last summer.

See more pictures at:

Heart of the City Festival: Eating Stories at CBA historical building

Gung Haggis paddlers come third in the UBC Day of the Long Boat – the largest voyageur canoe race in the world!

It's the biggest voyageur canoe race in North
America… maybe the world!  300 teams in the UBC Day of the Long Boat at Jericho Beach.

Day of Longboats 34A ...2008 TW by you.Gung Haggis Fat Choy team paddles to the finish in the first Community Mens race of the day – photo Todd Wong

We
had fun.  We paddled hard.  We had good turns, we had bad turns.  Boats
passed us, we passed other boats.  Lots of boats made tactical
errors…  including us. 


Okay… we were third of three Mens teams…
But in our heat of races, we also beat 3 UBC Alumni teams and 2 Women's teams, in our final heat.

We were the first boat racing a roster of 2 women & 8 men. 

We arrived for the first race of the day at 7:15am to ensure
everybody was ready for the first race of the day at 8am.  Only 3 Mens
and 2 Women's teams were in this first heat. 

Day of longboats 43 the site...Samis

Sunny skies greet the UBC Day of the Long Boat racers – much nicer than 2007's windey white-capped waves – photo Dave Samis

It's an
interesting race start.  All the teams are sitting in the boats at the
water's edge, held straight by volunteers in wet suits standing in the
water.  The steersperson of each team, is not in the boat.  They are
sitting in a chair, located high on the beach.  The start is sounded,
and the steerspeople leap out of the chair, racing for the boat.  They
jump into their boat, and the team takes off.  All the boats head
toward a single huge yellow triangular float, where they have to turn
right.  All the boats bump and jostle each other, trying to get their
first, or to get the better position.

Dave
Samis steered the Gung Haggis Fat Choy boat, Tzhe was lead stroke.
Between them were Gayle, Ernest, Stephen, Joe, Pash, Tony, Dan, and
Richard.  The boat was jostling for position against the TD Lightning
Men.   The Scaly Bytes teams was in the lead.  The teams paddled East
past the Jericho wharf, and raced towards the beach where a runner
would jump out of the boat to grab a baton, then return to the boat to
finish the 2nd half of the race.  The Gung Haggis team came in hard on
the beach, and had some troubles trying to push off.  Tzhe returned to
the boat, and helped push the nose out.  They had to back paddle to get
past another canoe that had come in beside them.

Day of the Longboats 28..last bouy ..GH with me steering

Gung Haggis team rounds the last yellow marker in their first race – photo Todd Wong

The teams headed North out towards the North Shore Mountains into
English Bay, then turned left around another big yellow float.  From
here to the end, the Scaly Bytes women's team was nipping at their
tail.  Paddling hard they headed West towards the Jericho Beach
Boardwalk.  They turned left in front of the Jericho Sailing Club, and
paddled straight to the beach, Scaly Bytes Women's team hot on their
heels.  It was a tight race.  Wow!

This is a tough race that involved not only strong paddling, but
also good steering for the three turns.  The big surprise is always
what do do for the beach drop-off.  At 8am, the water was fairly
mid-high.  But by the 2nd race at 11:40, the tide was down, and we were
switching strategies to deal with all the shallow water.

Day of Longboats 62 Todd racing to our boat...samis

Race start! Todd sprints to the boat – photo Hillary Wong

Day of Longboats 63 and they are off...Samis
All the boats take off! Try not to collide with anybody – get ready for “bumper boats” – photo Hillary Wong

For our Mens Community Final race, Gayle moved to lead stroke and
Todd took over steering.  We had a good lane for the race – 2nd closest
to the buoy.  Our start was fast.  We pulled away from the TD Mens team
on our left, and the TD Women's team on our right.  No collisions with
anybody.  I steered a good line for the turn.  TD tried to go on our
outside, but we took a wide exit and cut them off.  They cursed,
dropped back and cut to the inside shore.  We all raced towards the
beach. 

Meanwhile a lot of the teams behind us bunched up at the yellow
float colliding and bumping each other.  The Scaly Bytes team came up
behind us on our left.  TD took a tight line to the beach, but we
weren't going with them.  I had seen some teams get hung up on the sand
bard in their path.  We stayed further from shore, and Scaly Bytes came
up beside us.  As we approached the beach, we could see the water
getting shallower underneath our paddles.  It was exciting, we were in
the lead coming towards the beach.

Tzhe hopped out of the boat, ready to make the run through the
shallow water.  Oops!  The water was too deep – up to his thighs.  The
Scaly Bytes boat came up on our right and Tzhe got cut off from the
beach.  He pushed them out of the way, and ran up the beach.  We moved
the boat East along the water closer to shore, drifting past the Scaly
Bytes team as they waited for their runner.  Their runner jumped into
the boat, but we were blocking their way.  They moved forward bumping
us, as we drew right to stay close to shore, waiting for Tzhe to come
back. 

Darn but that beach was long…. TD Lighting Men took off from the
beach.  Another team took off headed for the yellow float.  Tzhe
arrived back at the boat, exhausted from the long run.  We dug in deep
and paddled away.  Richard was muttering “Damn, we're third again.”

Actually we were now in 4th place.  Another boat was right behind
us to our left.  They headed right towards the yellow float.  I took us
for a wider approach, cut in close and caught up behind the 3rd place
boat. 

“Long and
strong!” shouted Gayle in lead stroke.  They cut in front and we
bounced in their wake.  The moved to the right, and we pulled up beside
them.

“Go Long, Power Now!” shouted Tzhe.  We surge past them.  We looked
ahead.  We were slowly gaining on TD Lightning Men.  They were maybe
8-6 boat lengths in front of us.  The last yellow float was up ahead
for the final turn to the beach. 

TD Lightning made their turn.  We were still boat lengths behind,
but coming in for a good third.  The 4th place team came in tight for
the last turn and tight on our heels.  We surged for the finish,
pushing hard.  As we ran the boat up on the beach, Tzhe jumped out of
the boat.  He ran up the beach and banged the gong with the baton. 
Race finished.  Tony and Dan and Richard were all slumped over
exhausted.  We patted each other on the backs, and walked up the beach.

Tzhe  bangs the gong to finish the race at 12:48 – photo Raphael Fang

Scaly
Bytes Men's team was already on the podium congratulating each other. 
They ran a good race.  They are experienced paddlers and some of them
are our friends.  Ron and Stuart have paddled with us in the past.  It
was nice to see them get the little black canoe trophies. 

We were disappointed our race wasn;t better.  Our mid-race beach
drop-off didn't work.  We jumped out too soon.  But we know that we had
a great start and got to the beach area first.  We know that we passed
teams on the way to the finish.  We did the best we could.

Our team mates who came out to watch congratulated us on our
finish… Wendy, Jonas, Hillary, Deb, Alissa, Ryan and Raphael.  Some
of them have paddled voyageur canoes with us in the past, and know how
challenging it is.  Some of them haven't, and look forward to their
chance.

Now…. Ft. Langley Cranberry Canoe Regatta in 2 weeks.

Grouse Grind: to break the 1 hour barrier

Gung Haggis dragon boaters climb Grouse Grind in less than an hour.

Team members from the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team have been regularly doing the Grouse Grind in North Vancouver this year.  We started as a team event two years ago on Canada Day, and repeated last year.  This year, team members have been making regular treks up the Grind to improve their times and their fitness.


The following report is written by Dave Samis.  Photos by Dave Samis.

Today (the 20th) your team went
back to that staircase from Hell for another go at it.

There was a light rain prior to our ascent which
resumed when we were on the stairs.
The group quickly split with Hillary and Dave
powering up the Grind with the intent of doing better than before.  In fact, these
two were trying to get to the top in less than an hour.  To our knowledge
no one at one of the Gung Haggis Grind climbs has a done that and the best time
known was Hillary's during the last climb when she did it in 1hr and 5
minutes.
 
Other people have done the Grind in less time but
for this team, on a Saturday, when it is raining, breaking an hour is
something.
 Above Hillary disappearing behind the 1/4 way
up sign.
 
Like an endless staircase from Hell.  That's
Hillary above going up and up without a rest.
As we climbed it looked possible to break the hour
then as we passed the 3/4 mark Hillary announced only 13 minutes left to break
the hour we have to do the last quarter in 13 minutes.  Later shee called
out 8 minutes to go.
 
Hillary got to the top in 58
minutes.
  Dave got the top right after
at 59.5 minutes – just under the hour.
 
Joe and Raph arrived at to summit much
later.

Take your picture with some of BC's most fascinating people at the Royal BC Museum in Victoria

Photo Library - 2899 by you.
 
Where is Joy Kogawa in this picture? 
Where is Chief Dan George?
Where is Yip Sang?
Where is Emily Carr?
Where is poet Susan Musgrave?
Where are the Beachcombers' Bruno Gerussi and Relic?
Where is Amor de Cosmos?
 
This
is the interactive photo display in front of the Royal BC Museum, in Victoria BC,  for
the “Free Spirit” exhibition celebrating the 150th Anniversary of
British Columbia.  These pictures are from “The Party” display which
features 150 of BC's most fascinating people.  This picture was taken when Deb and I went to Victoria on August 8th to attend the “150 Years in Golden Mountain” awards gala.  
 
The
display also features Japanese-Canadian David Suzuki and other famous
authors such as Jane Rule, Douglas Coupland, PK Page and Dorothy
Livesay.
 
Check out the website and find Joy and David Suzuki in:
hint:
you can stand behind Joy, as Kogawa House committee member Deb Martin
is doing.  This picture of Joy was taken by Kogawa House committee
members Deb and Todd Wong- who is is also featured in “The Party”
exhibit.

The exhibition opened in March, and Deb and I went to visit “Joy” in April:
read our story: Traveling to “The Party” at BC Royal Museum


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 “The Party” exhibit with some of BC's “fascinating” citizens including: (front row) founding governor James Douglas, Betty Krawcyk, Joy Kogawa, Karen Magnusson, Herb Doman; (second row): Vikram Vij, Cindy Lee, Gordon Campbell, Gordon Shrum. – photo Todd Wong

Our second visit to the RBCM this year was to see the picture of Todd Wong in the museum when I was “voted in” along with Trevor Linden.
“Toddish McWong” installed at the “Free Spirit” exhibition at Royal BC Museum

Many friends have been taking trips to Victoria and returning to Vancouver, saying they have seen me in the Museum.

Photo Library - 2905 by you.

 Todd Wong stands in front of former Prime Minister Kim Campbell, but behind King Freezy, Chee-al-thluc, Chief of the Songhees people. Also in this picture are “The Beach Combers”, “The Raging Grannies,” Sir Matthew Bailiee Begbie aka “The Hanging Judge Begbie”, Premier W.A.C. Bennet, Rosemary Brown, Sen. Mobina Jaffer, Roderick Haig-Brown – photo D. Martin.

Silk Road Music brings dancing to Enchanted Evenings concert at Dr. Sun Yat Sen Chinese Gardens

Chinese and African dancing accompanied Silk Road Music's always entertaining world music concert at the Dr. Sun Yat Sen Garden's final Enchanted Evenings concert series.

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Qiu Xia He and Andre Thibault of Silk Road Music Ensemble with their
friends African dancer Jacky Essombe and percussionist Pepe Danza – photo Michael Brophy

It was a great concert to close out the Enchanted Evening series, Friday Sep 4th, at the Dr. Sun Yat Sen Gardens, by Silk Road Music, made more exciting by the presence of Cameroon dancer Jacky Essombe and the Chinese creative dance team of Jessica Jone and Cheng xin Wei, also known as Moving Dragon Dance Company.

Picture from Program.

The program opened with a traditional reel – not out of place in french-canadian or celtic circles.  Qiu Xia demonstrated esquisite picking skills on her pipa (Chinese lute), as Andre Thibault strummed furiously, and Pepe Danza played his drums.  Andre shared that they have played all over the world with Pepe, and they also perform together in the group Jou Tou where Andre is band leader (Qiu Xia leads Silk Road Music).

Qiu Xia invited dancers Cheng Xin and Jessica Jone out to join them, explaining that they would perform traditional Xingjian music from China, not often performed in Vancouver or Canada.  Next she invited African dancer Jacky Essombe, sharing that Jacky had been part of the Cultural Olympiad show that Qiu Xia had organized for Chinese New Year's earlier this year.

Clouds was a celtic inspired instrumental compsed and performed by Qiu Xia on her pipa, while Jessica performed a Chinese fan dance.  It was an unlikely but beautifully harmonious fusion of cultures, dance and song. Hmmm…. definitely something to consider for the next Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner.

Andre and Pepe followed with a rollicking flamenco song, which Qiu Xia joined in on.  Andre loves playing flamenco, and it is amazing how Qiu Xia picks the melody on her pipa with her vituostic skill.

Jessica spoke to the audience about Moving Dragon's upcoming show at the Scotiabank Dance Centre for Sep 12/13, titled LuminUS.

Full of surprises, the rest of the program blended more chinese and african dancing with the Silk Road Music repetoire.  For the final song, Jacky invited audience members to the centre stage area to join her in African dancing.  She encouraged people to yell and make noise, as the room filled up with vibrant energy.  Canadian Africanized dancers young and old joined in the dancing.

Check out this links.

www.movingdragon.ca

Special Kilts at Doolin's: Tim's Birthday + Frommer's shows up to review the night life!

Kilts Night
is always special when the Gung Haggis dragon boat paddlers show up…. especially when the “Halifax Wharf Rats” are playing their celtic tinged folk and rock songs!

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Happy Birthday Tim!  Bass player Tim Renaud of “Halifax Wharf Rats” with Alissa and Marion of the Gung Haggis dragon boat team – photo Todd Wong/Bunny Bears.

It's “Kilts Night” – the first Thursday each month.  We meet at Doolin's Irish Pub.  If you wear a kilt, you receive a free pint of Guinness beer.

There is great music by the Halifax Wharf Rats” which specializes in Canadiana music with a celtic twist of folk and rock.

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Deb, Marion and Hillary enjoy a pint of Strongbow and Guinness. – photo Marion

When you can learn thewords to songs like “Farewell Nova Scotia,” “Alberta Bound,” “Four Strong Winds,” and “Barrett's Privateers,” – you know you're Canadian.

And when you can wear a kilt and look around you at your friends all wearing kilts, and realize that half of them are Canadians of Asian ancestry, and you don't think that's weird – then you know you are amongst your friends on the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team… and that feels Canadian.

Vancouver's heritage is full of diversity, and nothing brings people together easier than music and a good drink.

Welcome to Kilts Night – Gung Haggis Fat Choy style!

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A writer and photographer Derrick Lepper, for Frommer's travel guide showed up researching Vancouver's night life.  They took a picture of Marion pulling the darts out of the dart board – photo Todd/Marion

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Yvonne and Tony showed up sans kilts, but promised to wear kilts for next month – photo Marion

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A favorite activity is to dance to the Proclaimer's song “500 Miles” Leanne, Hillary, Alissa, Jim (hidden) and Todd- photo Marion

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And we raise our hands as we dance and sing… Leanne, Raphael and Tony – photo Marion

Next Kilts Night is Oct 2.  First Thursday of the month for October!

Vancouver Sun: Chinese hardship is found in half-competed railway tunnels

My friend Bill Chu is doing lots of work to build reconciliation and recognition of shared history between Chinese-Canadian and First Nations groups, as well as to recognize the importance of the BC pioneer history both groups have contributed to.

In a letter to me about the topic of Chinese-Canadian Heritage Week and the recent “150 Years in Golden Mountain” Awards Gala, Beill wrote to me stating “The measure of success of
any such major events is whether the participants treat it as entertainment or can
carry it to the next level (or whether they can even walk away seeing a next
level).

He also reminded me that “However we need to steer away from relying on a
colonial interpretation of Chinese history and treating that as the real stuff
. “

His continued activism has resulted in two articles. 

Vancouver Sun: Half-completed tunnels tell of Chinese hardship, by Mary Frances Hill
http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/news/westcoastnews/story.html?id=89514f34-5230-4141-9178-c46f6513c554


Globe & Mail: Chinese-Canadian group wants gravesites preserved, by Jeremy Hainsworth
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20080809.wgraves0809/BNStory/National/?page=rss&id=RTGAM.20080809.wgraves0809

Half-completed tunnels tell of Chinese hardship

Unfinished railway projects raise awareness of Chinese Heritage Week

Mary Frances Hill,
Vancouver Sun

Published: Friday, August 15, 2008

HOPE
– For many years, the elders of the Sto:lo Nation have whispered about
the ghosts that linger around the half-completed mountain railway
tunnels west of Hope.

The legend says unmarked graves nearby
contain the remains of Chinese men, Canadian Pacific Railway labourers
forced in the 1880s to enter the makeshift tunnels to light the
dynamite that would blast through the rock.

“When a tragic death
happens, the elders talk about the spirit staying behind,” said Sonny
McHalsie, cultural adviser at the Sto:lo Nation office. “They would say
the ghosts of Chinese workers were still there.”

Sonny McHalsie of Sto:lo Nation led railway tunnel tour.View Larger Image View Larger Image

Sonny McHalsie of Sto:lo Nation led railway tunnel tour.

Ward Perrin, Vancouver Sun

McHalsie
and Chinese-Canadian activist Bill Chu led a tour of the half-completed
tunnels on Thursday, hoping to raise public awareness of Chinese
history during Chinese Heritage Week.

“It's incumbent on the
Chinese community to do something,” said Chu, an organizer with
Canadians for Reconciliation, a group devoted to fostering peaceful
relationships with B.C.'s first nations people.

Chu has been
organizing events and tours to help educate B.C.'s Chinese-Canadian
people about aboriginal people and their communities.

The
tunnels, half-completed but abandoned after too many workers were
killed during blasting, stand six km west of Hope, on the north side of
the Fraser River.

In the 1880s, when more than 10,000 Chinese
workers came to B.C. to build the Canadian Pacific Railway, the Chinese
were used for their work ethic, but were often perceived by Caucasian
labourers as less than worthy colleagues.

If the thousands of
Chinese labourers who died didn't perish in the tunnels, they fell
victim to malnutrition, scurvy, and from lack of access to medical
treatment when they were injured or sick, Chu said.

“We're not
talking about avoidable accidents,” he said. “We're talking about
discrimination, and the attitude that the Chinese were not human
beings.”

Chinese CPR labourers were not only ill-prepared for
Fraser Valley winters, their wages were far below those of Caucasian
workers — a point that placed them in direct conflict with their
colleagues and exacerbated the discrimination against them.

A
month's salary of $25 would have to cover a Chinese worker's debt to
the steamboat company, clothes, a room rental, tools and fares.

It
was in that era that the racist phrase, a “Chinaman's chance” was
coined. It referred to the possibility that a Chinese member of a
railway crew blasting tunnels for the CPR line would come out of it
alive.

” 'A Chinaman's chance' was a derogatory phrase meaning 'no luck,' ” said Chu.

The
area surrounding the tunnels is a physical testament to the rugged
environment the Sto:lo Nation shared with the labourers, said McHalsie,
who has worked with researchers on local first nations history from the
University of B.C., Simon Fraser University, and the University of
California at Los Angeles.

Just last week, a UCLA researcher found an antique Chinese coin sitting on the edge of a Sto:lo subterranean dwelling.

No dig was needed: the piece was found in plain sight.

Much like first nations history, the history of Chinese labourers in B.C. must be re-appropriated and rewritten, Chu said.

mfhill@vancouversun.com

See video about this story at vancouversun.com/video