Category Archives: Vancouver Heritage and History

CBC Generations documentary series features BC's Rev. Chan family and descendants (including me!)

CBC Generations documentary series features BC's Rev. Chan family and descendants (including me!)
 
Generations

Chan family

Generations is a 6 part series and the lead installment is The Chan Legacy – which is about my great-great-grandfather Rev. Chan Yu Tan, and our family descendants who are committed to community service – like me!  The episodes of the series are:


Watch
The Chan Legacy on CBC Newsworld

July 4, 10 pm ET/PT,
July 8, 10 am ET/PT,
July 29, 7 pm ET


Producer Halya Kuchmij is very proud of her work, and that we are the first in the series.  It must be a very strong, emotional,
educational documentary.  I have been an adviser and witness to many of
the interviews, as well as some of the script.  I have to say it made
me very proud of our family, and the show is very emotionally
touching.  And I haven't even seen it yet!

Many family members were interviewed:

  • Victor Wong, grand-son, WW2 veteran and Victoria resident who visited his grandparents in Nanaimo BC.
  • Helen Lee, grand-daughter, who lived with Rev. & Mrs. Chan Yu Tan in Nanaimo.
  • Gary Lee, great-grandson who tells about some of the challenges overcome by the family.
  • Janice Wong, great-grand-daughter, and award winning author of CHOW: From China to Canada, memories of food and family.
  • Rhonda Larrabee, great-grand-daughter, and chief of the First Nations Qayqayt (New Westminster) Band, featured in the NFB film “Tribe of One.”
  • Todd Wong, great-great-grandson, community and cultural activist,
    creator of Gung Haggis Fat Choy: Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner.
  • Tracey Hinder, 5th generation high school student who was the inaugural Vancouver CanSpell champion and went on to compete in Ottawa and Washington DC.  Tracey is a member of her school's “multicultural club.”


Rev. Chan Yu Tan came to Canada in 1896, following his elder brother Rev. Chan Sing Kai who had earlier arrived in 1888 at the invitation of the Methodist Church of Canada.  These two brothers were later followed by sisters Phoebe in 1899, and Naomi who later moved to Chicago.  Throughout seven generations, the family has spread throughout Canada and the United States.  The Rev. Chan Yu Tan Family was featured in the photographic exhibition Three Early Chinese Canadian Pioneer Families


Read my blog entries about
Rev. Chan Legacy Project which includes stories during the making of the documentary and events for Janice Wong's award-winning book C H O W: From China to Canada memoris of food and family.

http://www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com/blog/RevChanLegacyProject
http://c-h-o-w.blogspot.com/

Please tell all your friends and relatives about this upcoming documentary, very informative about the history of Chinese-Canadians, and the legacy they have built in Canada.

the following is from the CBC Generations home page:
http://www.cbc.ca/documentaries/generations/


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

Generations
Generations: The Chan Legacy
 

The
documentary begins with Todd Wong playing the accordion, wearing a
kilt. He promotes cultural fusion, and in doing so, he honours the
legacy of his great, great, grandfather The Reverend Chan Yu Tan. The
Chans go back seven generations in Canada and are one of the oldest
families on the West Coast.
 
Chan family
The Chan family
 
Reverend Chan left China for Victoria in 1896 at a time when most Chinese immigrants were simple labourers, houseboys and laundrymen who had come to British Columbia
to build the railroad or work in the mines. His wife Mrs. Chan Wong Shee followed him later in 1899.  The Chans were different.
They were educated and Westernized Methodist Church missionaries who
came to convert the Chinese already in Canada,
and teach them English. The Chans were a family with status and they
believed in integration. However even they could not escape the racism
that existed at the time, the notorious head tax and laws that excluded
the Chinese from citizenship.
 
In
the documentary, Reverand Chan's granddaughter Helen Lee, grandson
Victor Wong, and great grandson Gary Lee recall being barred from
theaters, bowling alleys and restaurants. The Chinese were not allowed
to become doctors or lawyers, pharmacists or teachers. Still, several
members of the Chan family served in World War II,
because they felt they were Canadian and wanted to contribute. Finally,
in 1947, Chinese born in Canada were granted citizenship and the right
to vote.
 
Todd Wong
Todd Wong
 
Today, Todd Wong,
represents a younger generation of successful professionals and entrepreneurs scattered across North America.
He promotes his own brand of cultural integration through an annual
event in Vancouver called Gung Haggis Fat Choy. It's a celebration that
joins Chinese New Year with Robbie Burns Day, and brings together the two cultures that once lived completely separately in the early days of British Columbia.

We also meet a member of the youngest generation, teenager Tracey
Hinder, who also cherishes the legacy of Reverend Chan, but in contrast
to his desire to promote English she is studying mandarin and longs to
visit the birthplace of her ancestors.

Produced by Halya Kuchmij, narrated by Michele Cheung.

Alcan Dragon Boat Festival Friday: Blessing Ceremony + we crash the VIP Party

Alcan Dragon Boat Festival Friday: Blessing Ceremony + we crash the VIP Party


The blessing ceremony for the 19th annual Alcan Dragon Boat Festival went well.. except for Todd being slowed by North
Shore traffic.  Channel M had just called me and was asking if our honourary drummer James Erlandsen, leukemia patient, would be on the boat…

“Nope” I said, “his white blood count is too depleted.” 
“But James' spirit will be with us when we are on the boat, and our spirit is with his, in his recovery back to health.” We are helping to find a matching Eurasian bone marrow for James.  3 of our paddlers are Eurasian, and we have 3 inter-racial couples on the team! Hapa is s-o-o-o in!

Hmmm…. I arrived late and the team was already on the dock.  I
brought down the kilts which paddler Stuart Mackinnon and Drummer Deb each quickly put on. Team Captain
Jim Blatherwick already had his kilt on.

We loaded up the boat, and Taoist priests were already chanting and
dotting the eyes of the dragons…   then we paddled away from the
Dragon Zone dock.  Usually it is this time that drummer Deb does her
introductions of new guest paddlers on the boat – but in the 1st seat –
the female priest was singing/chanting.  Hillary's mother Bev Wong (James Erlandsen's Aunt), and currently inactive paddlers Jeremy and Jen – took pictures of us and waved to us from the Dragon Zone deck.

We paddled over to a float set up on the North side of Dragon Zone –
within good viewing of the VIP lounge on the North West side of the
Science World deck.  We let off the priest + a VIP + Captain Jim… the priests did
blessings.  Captain Jim stood during the ceremonies, and chatted with
the captains of Concord dragon boat team – Fred Roman, and captain of Cathay Pacific –
May.   Jim says the priests gave him a “lucky coin”.  While we waited
the 20 minutes while the priests did their equipment takedown – We paddled some
figure 8's and Deb introduced our guest paddlers.  2 youngsters from
Kitsilano Water Demons junior team, and their coach Chek Tay – whom I
have known since 1999.

We paddled back to the Dragon Zone dock – We started saying our
goodbyes because Deb & Todd were heading off to the ADBF VIP
party, and our paddlers were deciding what to do next when they were
immediately asked to help carrying things down to the dock, as Water's
Edge was setting up the race course.  While our paddlers helped out, and Todd bumped into ADBF general manager Ann
Phelps who said that she had to go help out her volunteers at the VIP
party.  Todd asked if she needed more volunteers, and offered the GHFC
paddlers. So we all did get to go to the VIP party afterall…. but as
volunteers. 

It was easy… we served drinks, bused the used dishes, and Todd
helped out at the reception desk.  We were told that we could relieve the
current volunteer staff, switch off and enjoy the party.  We did…  
Free wine, beer, drinks and food, food, food. 

Steven Wong saw his brother Peter who is past-president for ADBF. 
Georgia and I talked with Marlene's very good friend Patrick Couling –
who is an ADBF race advisor.  Vancouver City Councillor George Chow asked me
to help out with the 100th anniversary dinner for the 1907 Chinatown
Riots.  I chatted up the Rogers VIP representatives we had paddled over
to the float – potential sponsorship maybe?  Deb even got her father
into the VIP party, by putting a GHFC shirt over his t-shirt.  We
schmoozed, we ate, we drank, and volunteered hard. 

Hillary, our rookie paddler is amazing… This is her first Alcan Dragon Boat Festival, and she is both a paddler and a volunteer. Tonight, she bused hard, following a previous night when she did a First
Aid course for ADBF volunteers.  Two weeks ago she volunteered at the ADBF regatta,
when Gung Haggis wasn't paddling.  And she will do so again during the
festival.  Thank You Hillary.

Gung Haggis really helped out the ADBF tonight – both during the
blessing ceremony and for the VIP party. ADBF Communications director
Anita Webster, also said I saved her bacon this morning when I
interviewed for 2 spots during the City TV Breakfast TV morning show-
and especially for coming up for a tour of the DZ clubhouse, when the
heavens let loose the rains at 9am this morning.

Thank You everybody.  This is a FANTASTIC team, because of the high
quality of the people on the team.  It is a group that I and its team
members really enjoy being around.

Slainte, Toddish

50th anniversary of the election of- Douglas Jung – 1st Chinese-Canadian Member of Parliament

50th anniversary of the election of– Douglas Jung
– 1st Chinese-Canadian Member of Parliament


June 10th, 2007 marks the 50thanniversary of the election of Douglas Jung, Canada's 1st Member of Parliament.  I met Mr. Jung on two occasions – the first was at a community meeting for redress for Chinese Head Tax back around 1984 or so.

Recently Wesley Jung launched his film documentary about Douglas Jung titled “I am the Canadian Delegate” which aired in February 18thon Channel M.  Jung received many honours during his lifetime, including both the Order of BC, and the Order of Canada.

Jung's son Arthur Calderwood is now paddling on the Gung Haggis Fat
Choy dragon boat team.  I first met Art on May 12th, at the 60th
Anniversary Candian Citizenship dinner organized by the
Chinese-Canadian veterans of Pacific Unit 280.

Here are links for Douglas Jung O.C.

Order of BC Biography – Douglas Jung

Douglas Jung – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Burma Star biography: Jung

Burma Star biography: Jung

Captain Douglas Jung 
Special Operations Australia
DOUGLAS  JUNG

Douglas Jung was born in Victoria , British Columbia on Feb 24 1924 and passed away on January 4, 2002. He will be remembered by his legion of friends and the public as an outstanding citizen with a host of accomplishments affixed to his resume.

Douglas graduated from the University of British Columbia in 1953, having the distinction as the first Chinese Canadian veteran granted university training by the Department of Veterans Affairs. After receiving his two degrees-Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Laws-he was called to the B.C. Bar in 1954. He made history in 1955 by becoming the first Chinese Canadian lawyer ever to appear before the B.C. court of Appeal.

During World War II, he volunteered for special intelligence duties and was assigned to Special Operation Australia which theatre of war covered Southwest Pacific. Trained in Australia as a paratrooper, he and twelve other Chinese Canadian soldiers was destined to operate in Japanese occupied territories in China . Operation Oblivion was canceled because General Douglas MacArthur wanted to have the South East Asia command to be an all American operation. Operation Oblivion was under the direct control of the British war ministry and it's role was under the direct command of the Prime Minister Winston Churchill. These S.O.A. members ended in Borneo and Guinea . Which four were awarded the M.M. for their war services. After demobilization from active service, Douglas joined the Canadian Army Militia, working his way up to the rank of Captain.

Douglas owned the honour as the first Member or Parliament of Chinese descent in 1957 representing Vancouver Centre. In his maiden speech in the House of Commons he urged Canada to take a leading role in serving as a bridge to the Pacific Rim Countries.

Recognized by his colleagues as an innovative M.P., Douglas was credited for the establishment of the Nation Productive Council (now called the Economic Council of Canada }. He achieved changes in the Old Age Pension regulations. Making it possible for pensioners to receive their pension while living any where in the world. Douglas also achieved the following initiatives obtained $750,000 grant to enlarge the Stanley Park Aquarium, established the Canadian Coast Guard Services, and tuition fees included as a deductible expense by Prime Minister John Diefenbaker to represent Canada as Chairman of the Legal Delegation to the United Nations.
Reflecting on his term as a Member of Parliament, Douglas noted with satisfaction when Ottawa implemented the Amnesty program, the essence of which permitted thousands of illegal immigrants to regularize their status with the Immigration Department. This measure enable them to apply for the admission of their real families into this country. He was also instrumental in broadening regulations to permit more categories of family members to apply for resident status in Canada .

Time Magazine at that time credited him for pushing for these new progressive changes.
Douglas`s multi-faceted career also included a stint as a judge on the Immigration Appeal Board in Ottawa.

Douglas took a special interest in the welfare of Chinese Canadian veterans. In his view, the contributions made by his fellow veterans were enormous. Without their service and sacrifices, Chinese Canadian might not have received the right to vote and the community would not be as dynamic as it is today.

One of the projects he spearheaded was a visit for Chinese Canadian veterans to their ancestral homeland. During that trip, the veterans received the red carpet treatment from the Chinese government and Douglas was honoured as being the first Member of Parliament of Chinese origin in Canada . On another occasion, he brought a group of Chinese Canadian veterans to Ottawa who were well received by the Right Honourable Ray Hnatyshyn. Governor General of Canada .

Douglas` record of public service was accorded nationwide recognition.  His profusion of honour included the Order of Canada and the Order of British Columbia , the highest honour a citizen can receive from the federal and the provincial government respectively. Other awards came from the Chinese Benevolent Association, S.U.C.C.S.S. Chinese Cultural Centre, Chinese Canadian National Council and Chinese Association in Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan, Thunder Bay and Toronto, Ontario, as well as the Quebec Japanese Canadian Citizenship Association in Montreal.

The broad scope of his community involvement was evident by his ready acceptance of the role as Life President of Army Navy Air Force Veterans in Canada Unit #280, Patron of S.U.C.C.E.S.S.: Director of Vancouver Symphony. B.C.: Deputy Director of the Governor General`s 1992 Regional Celebration of Canada 125th. Anniversary. Director of the Far East Relations of the Former Parliamentarians Association and the President of Japan Karate Association of Canada which awarded him a sixth degree Black Belt.

Douglas was predeceased by his two brothers. His oldest brother Major Ross Jung served as medical officer in the Canadian Army Medical Corps and second brother Flight-Lieutenant Arthur Ernest Jung was a bomber pilot in the Royal Canadian Air-Force during World War II.
The following is an abridged text of Douglas Jung`s address at the 40th Anniversary Reunion of Army, Navy, and Air Force Veterans Pacific Command Unit 280. September 6 1987, Chinese Cultural Centre, Vancouver , B.C. Canada .

This transcript was made possible with the kind permission us Sid Chow Tan who recorded the event for Roger`s cable Chinatown today:

“Ladies and gentlemen, distinguished guests and dear friends.  Seven years ago in Victoria , I had the honour of welcoming those who attended the reunion of the Chinese Canadian veterans who served Canada . Tonight in Vancouver , we celebrate the 40th anniversary of our veterans reunion.

I take pride in the knowledge that we belong to an exclusive and special club. We paid the “admission fee” to join this club and in fact for most of us, we even had to fight to be allowed into the armed force. From a military point of view, there were not enough of us to form our battalion.

Our contribution to the social and economic progress of our Chinese community was a far greater victory then any battle. The success of us veterans was entirely out of proportion to our actual numbers because after the war, we were able to demand and receive for the first time equality of treatment as Canadian citizens.

Unfortunately, after some forty years, there are many among us, particularly the younger generation and new arrivals in Canada, who are not aware that if it had not been for our efforts to demanding recognition of our status as Canadian citizens the Chinese Community would not be as dynamic, as affluent and as welcomed as it is today.

They take for granted that we have always had the right to practice any of the professions, to receive recognition for our distinction in the arts, sports, Business and academic achievement. These people know nothing about the very restrictions as to where we could live and know even less that we were denied the vote and to be recognized as a political voice, and they cannot and do not understand the discrimination which the Chinese community once suffered. For those members of the younger generation, it is almost inconceivable that these social, electoral and economic values existed .

Why should it be this way? Those of us who served during the Second World War were on the whole, less educated, certainly less affluent or sophisticated than the present generation because we never had the opportunity or privilege that Canadians now have. And yet we took up arms and made it possible for others to follow in our footsteps.

Is it too late for us to teach our children or educate our fellow citizens as to the value of what we did? I can tell you, we veterans, individually or as a group, have nothing to be ashamed of. We can hold our heads high because what we did accomplish could never been accomplished or bought with any amount of money.

We, who even denied the most fundamental rights of citizenship, acted as honourable citizens to serve our country in its hour of need.

And no one can take that honour away from us. We are now in the September of our years. Our time and resources are limited and common to all veterans in every land. Some of us have paid terrible emotional, physical and mental price for what we did.

But the price we paid was and remains a symbol of our loyalty and dedication to our country and we can be proud of our accomplishment.

I say this to you. We did something for the Chinese community no other group could ever have done. We should be proud and take satisfaction in the knowledge that without our contribution to Canada as members of the armed forces during the Second World War, none of the rights that exist in the Chinese community to day would be possible.

And to your loved ones and to members of your family, I say this, take pride in our accomplishments. Give to us the privilege to indulge a little bit in our comradeship and also give to us now, your support and understanding because what we did, we did for you.
Be proud of us, as we are with you. Be happy with us and take some time to spread the word and record of us among your friends so that someone will once more be inspired to take up the challenge to be a voice for our community in elected assembly. Do not, I beg of you, let our efforts go to waste simply because no one cares. Our efforts, instead of being recorded as a mere footnote in pages of Canadian history should, at least,, be a blazing and inspiring chapter of the Chinese people in the history of Canada.

And finally, to my comrades in arms I sent you my warmest and most affectionate greetings where ever you may be, I am proud to be one of you and to all I say, “Well done, Thank you for the honour and privilege of speaking to you. I wish you all continuing good health and success. I look forward to our next reunion. Until then. God bless.”

Submitted by W. Chong EX SOE

Courier: Rally clebrates 60 years of rights – interviews with Gim Wong and Sid Tan

Courier: Rally clebrates 60 years of rights – interviews with Gim Wong and Sid Tan

Here's a Friday May 11th article in the Vancouver Courier that interviews both Gim Wong, WW2 veteran, and Sid Tan, head tax redress activist.  When Gim rode his motorcycle across Canada in 2005, I blogged the reports that I received from across Canada and from the CCNC. 

Gim Wong, 84, fought in the Second World
War but wasn't allowed to vote. Last year, he rode his motorcycle to
Ottawa to press then prime minister Paul Martin for redress.

Photo by Dan Toulgoet


Rally celebrates 60 years of rights

By Cheryl Rossi-Staff writer

When families who were
affected by the Chinese Head Tax celebrate 60 years of citizenship
Saturday, they'll be recognizing how far they've come in gaining rights
and respect for Chinese people in Canada.

But according to Sid Tan,
co-chair of the Head Tax Families Society of Canada, they'll also
highlight problems migrant workers face today as echoes of what their
families endured.

“The issues of guest
workers, the issues of seasonal and temporary employment, live-in
caregivers and domestics, all these issues are not that different from
what the early Chinese suffered,” said Tan. “These are people that are
good enough to come to Canada and do the dirty and menial work or the
work that a lot of Canadians won't or aren't willing to do, and they
have no rights. There's something wrong with the picture, and a hundred
years ago this is what happened to the Chinese.”

The Head Tax Families
Society is organizing a rally Saturday at the Chinatown Memorial to
Chinese Canadian War Veterans and Railway Workers at the northeast
corner of Keefer and Columbia. The society became a registered
non-profit last August after Prime Minister Stephen Harper apologized
to Chinese-Canadians. The apology included a symbolic payment of
$20,000 to those Chinese, or their surviving spouses, who had paid the
head tax.

When the Canadian Pacific
Railway was constructed between 1881 and 1885, more than 15,000 Chinese
came to Canada to help build the railway. But when the track was
completed, the federal government moved to restrict Chinese
immigration. Starting in 1885, people of Chinese origin entering the
country had to pay a $50 head tax, which increased to $100 in 1900. In
1903, it reached $500, the equivalent of two years wages of a Chinese
labourer at the time. Chinese people were denied Canadian citizenship
while the government collected millions.

On July 1, 1923,
Parliament passed the Chinese Immigration Act excluding all but a few
Chinese immigrants from entering Canada. It was repealed in 1947, and
Chinese-Canadians were allowed to vote 60 years ago this May.

Tan said the society formed to tell the federal government its settlement is incomplete.

“They are redressing just a
little under 600 families, that's 0.6 per cent of all the
families-82,000 families paid the tax,” he said. “But what about the
elderly sons and daughters who were separated from their fathers for
25, 30 years? What about elderly seniors who were born in Canada [and
had no rights until 1947]?”

Gim Wong, a Canadian-born
Second World War veteran who was barred from voting until after the
war, says he knows all too well how the head tax hurt families.

His father was 14 when he arrived in Canada in 1906. His mother arrived in 1919. Both of his parents paid the $500 head tax.

In 1937, when his parents
had seven children, they couldn't afford to buy the house they were
renting, which in those days cost $700.

In January last year, the
Burnaby resident road a motorcycle to Ottawa to appeal to former prime
minister Paul Martin for redress, but the RCMP intervened and he never
got to meet Martin.

Wong wants villages in China that contributed money to send young men to Canada compensated for the head tax.

Saturday's event begins at 9 a.m.

published on 05/11/2007

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David Suzuki: The Autobiography… wins the BC Bookseller's Choice Award

David Suzuki: The Autobiography…
wins the BC Bookseller's Choice Award
 
David Suzuki…



Congratulations to the winners
announced on Saturday, April 28, 2007
at the Lieutenant Governor's
BC Book Prize Gala
, emceed by William Deverell at Government House,
in Victoria.



BC
Booksellers' Choice Award in Honour of Bill Duthie

David
Suzuki and Greystone Books
David Suzuki: The Autobiography


This is a great book!  I received it as a gift from my friend Ian
for my birthday last year.  Suzuki details many aspects of his
life.  His time spent in the Japanese-Canadian internment camps is
discussed in the chapter “My happy childhood in racist BC.”

Suzuki describes how his tenure at UBC was affected by his divorce, but
also how the assination of Martin Luther King affected his activism on
social and racial issues.  Some chapters describing his growing
commitment to environmental issues is fascinating, particularly the
descriptions of the Stein Valley Music Festival.

He also shares some stories about his children, both from his first
marriage and his second marriage.  Particularly interesting is how
his daughter Severn Suzuki-Cullis becomes committed to environmental
issues and develops the drive to attend the Earth Summit at Rio de
Janiero, becoming an environmental celebrity that captures the media
attention and an invitation to speak at the United Nations.

Dr. David Suzuki is indeed on of Canada's greatest living Canadians…

If you would like to sign a petition to have a park named after him….
call Vancouver Parks Commissioner Spencer Herbert.  Herbert has
proposed to have the park at 72nd Ave and Selkirk St. named after David
Suzuki.  This park is just around the corner from the Suzuki
childhood home that that was confiscated by the Canadian government
when the Canadian-born Suzuki family was interned during WW2 for being
“enemy aliens.”

CBC Radio Studio One Book Club: featuring Jen Sookfong Lee

CBC Radio Studio One Book Club: featuring Jen Sookfong Lee

The following is from CBC Radio's Sheila Peacock and the CBC Radio Studio One Bookclub website:

Jen Sookfong
Lee with
The End of East

Wednesday May
2, 2007
6:30 to 8:00 p.m.

The CBC Radio Studio One Book Club
takes place in Studio One, in the CBC Broadcast Centre.
Please note we have a new entrance at 775 Cambie Street
(between Robson and Georgia).

The End of East by Jen Sookfong Lee

In celebration of ExplorASIAN 2007, the CBC Radio Studio One Book Club
is pleased to present Jen
Sookfong Lee
on Wednesday, May 2, 6:30 to 8
pm, at the CBC Broadcast Centre.

Her debut novel The End of East
has been garnering great reviews from across the country. It's an
evocative portrait of three generations living in Vancouver's
Chinatown, spanning most of the last century.
Jen Sookfong Lee

Sammy Chan was sure she’d escaped her family obligations
when she fled Vancouver six years ago, but with her sister’s
upcoming marriage, her turn has come to care for their
aging mother. Abandoned by all four of her older sisters,
jobless and stuck in a city she resents, Sammy finds
herself cobbling together a makeshift family history
and delving into stories that began in 1913, when her
grandfather, Seid Quan, then eighteen years old, first
stepped on Canadian soil.


Here's your
opportunity to discuss the art of writing, and the struggles of young
writers, with one of Canada's newest literary stars!

The only way to get in, is to win!
For all the details and to enter online, go to www.cbc.ca/bc/bookclub .

check out these Links and reviews.

March 23, 2007

“The End of East is just her start”
Jen Sookfong Lee profiled in 7 section of The Globe and Mail

March 22, 2007
“End of East chronicles immigrants' gamble”
The End of East reviewed in The Georgia Straight

March 22, 2007
“Vivid Vancouver”
The End of East reviewed in NOW Magazine

March 17, 2007
“Uprooted from Vancouver”
The End of East reviewed in The Globe and Mail

March 10, 2007
Listen
to the archived conversation of SPiN talking with Sheryl
MacKay on North by Northwest at CBC Radio One's archive,
www.cbc.ca/nxnw

Bilingual book launch: Finding Memories Tracing Routs, Chinese Canadian Family Stories

Bilingual book launch: Finding Memories Tracing Routes, Chinese Canadian Family Stories


Author
Dan Seto holds a copy of the original Finding Memories Tracing Routes,
Chinese Canadian Family Stories anthology collection.  In the
picture on the right, he is signing copies at the book launch. 
Dan is also a member of the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team.

Tuesday, April 17, 7:30 PM, the bilingual edition of Finding Memories,
Tracing Routes, Chinese Canadian Family Stories will be launched at the
Vancouver Public Library.  Please come meet the authors and translators
of this very unique contribution to Chinese Canadian history. Copies of
this bilingual edition will be available for sale that evening. http://www.vpl.vancouver.bc.ca/cgi-bin/Calendar/calendar.cgi?isodate=2007-04-17 .

See my pictures and stories from the original english language book launch

“Finding Memories, Tracing Routes:” CCHSBC book launch BIG SUCCESS for Chinese Canadian Family Stories

Vancouver Sun: A tradition restored – a story about Vancouver Chinatown's Modernize Tailors

Vancouver Sun: A tradition restored – a story about Vancouver Chinatown's Modernize Tailors

Modernize Tailors
on the southwest corner of Pender and Carrall St. in Vancouver
Chinatown is a cultural landmark.  It stands right beside the
skinniest building in the world, owned by Jack Chow Insurance.  As
a child growing up in Vancouver, I learned that my Uncle Laddie worked
there – the  husband of my mother's eldest sister.  I also
learned that it was run by a man named Bill Wong, the same name as my
father.  So my father was known as “Bill Wong the sign painter,”
as opposed to “Bill Wong the tailor.”

In recent years I have
gotten to know Bill Wong the tailor better, as our paths have crossed
more often.  At dragon boat practices, Gung Haggis often bumped
into the Wong Way dragon boat team on Sunday afternoons.  Since
the elder Wong brothers grew up with many of my own family elders, I've
also known a number of their descendants, so there is always somebody
to say hello to.  In 2005, both dragon boat teams participated in carving wooden dragon boat heads

Bill Wong carving a dragon boat head with his grandchildren – photo Todd Wong

Bill
Wong has attended some of the book readings and presentations that I
have organized at the Vancouver Public Library.  And this year, he
came to the Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese New Year dinner,
and sat with my parents.

His son Steven Wong joined the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team last year.  So… lots of cross-overs.

A tradition restored

Milton Wong's ambitious project has returned his brothers' tailoring institution to its original premises

John Mackie,
Vancouver Sun

Published: Saturday, April 14, 2007

Milton Wong has managed billions of dollars in investment funds. His tireless philanthropy helped him earn the Order of Canada.

But
he has never forgotten his roots in Vancouver's Chinatown, where his
father started Modernize Tailors in 1913 in the Chinese Freemasons
building at Pender and Carrall.

Modernize Tailors is still in
business, operated by Milton's older brothers, 85-year-old Bill and
83-year-old Jack. And three decades after being forced to move, they're
back in the original location, because Milton, 68, has bought the
building.

Brothers (left to right) Jack, Milton and Bill Wong are glad to be back at the first premises of Modernize Tailors.View Larger Image View Larger Image

Brothers (left to right) Jack, Milton and Bill Wong are glad to be back at the first premises of Modernize Tailors. photo Stuart Davis, Vancouver Sun

Milton
did more than just buy it. He's completely restored it, and converted
the upper floors into seniors housing so that his family members could
retire back in the neighbourhood where they grew up.

But there's
a hitch. After a three-year restoration, and a couple of million
dollars in renovations, Bill and Jack have decided they're still too
young to retire.

“No one's moving in,” Milton says with a laugh. “That's a downer.”

The
Chinatown social services agency SUCCESS is now going to find occupants
for the 11 suites, which are quite spacious and deluxe for seniors
housing.

Meanwhile, Bill and Jack are busy setting up shop at 5
West Pender, where they were given a month's eviction notice in 1976
after someone bought the building and renovated.

Customers who go
to the old shop at 511 Carrall are directed to the new location by an
ancient piece of Modernize Tailors stationery that's dated in the
1940s, and has a six-digit number (“MArine 0630”).

“We're still using our old stuff,” Bill says with a shrug. “It says the corner of Pender and Carrall, so it's still usable.”

Back
in the '40s, Modernize had 20 employees and was a seven-day-a-week
operation. There were a couple of dozen tailor shops located all over
Chinatown, which was a bustling place full of restaurants and
nightclubs.

The throngs of people that used to fill Chinatown's
sidewalks and businesses are long gone. Modernize is the last tailor
shop in Chinatown, and one of the few old Chinatown businesses that
have survived the neighbourhood's long decline.

Jack has no illusions about the future of tailor shops like Modernize.

“This is a dead business,” he says.

“A
lot of clothes are made in China now, where the labour cost is only 10
per cent of the cost here. People buy into readymades and
wash-and-wear.”

How have Bill and Jack survived? They keep costs
low by doing the sales and tailoring themselves, along with two
employees (one is their 72-year-old cousin Park).

Milton is also an unpaid salesman, buying his suits there and recommending the shop to his friends.

“You
need mouth-to-mouth advertising, and Milton has done his job,” says
Jack. “Either that or he gives suits to his closest friends and forces
them to come down.”

For his part, Milton is optimistic about the
future of Chinatown. He points out that condo king Bob Rennie is
restoring the historic Wing Sang building and selling condos up the
street. Several new businesses are thriving on Pender Street, and the
success of the Woodward's building project finally seems to have
sparked a rejuvenation of Vancouver's historic core.

 

Vancouver Heritage Award of Honour given by Mayor Sam Sullivan to Save Kogawa House Committee and TLC

Vancouver Heritage Award of Honour given by Mayor Sam Sullivan to Save Kogawa House Committee TLC: The Land Conservancy of BC

It was one month ago that the Vancouver Heritage Award of Honour was
given to Save Kogawa House and TLC The Land Conservancy of BC. 
Now I have a picture from the event. 
You can check out the stories and press releases below

GungHaggisFatChoy.com  :: TLC and Save Joy Kogawa House committee both

Kogawahouse.com  VANCOUVER HERITAGE AWARD OF HONOUR GOES TO TLC

TLC The Land Conservancy :: NewsVancouver Heritage Award of Honour Goes to TLC & Kogawa House Committee and the activists and visionaries of our community, “says Todd Wong of the


Todd Wong of Save Kogaw House Committee, Vancouver Mayor Sam Sullivan,
and Bill Turner, executive director and founder of TLC The Land
Conservancy of BC, pose with the award certificates following the
ceremonies of the Vancouver Heritage Awards – photo Deb Martin.

More Heritage recognition for Joy Kogawa House – write ups in Vancouver Courier and Journals of Commerce

More Heritage recognition for Joy Kogawa House
– write ups in Vancouver Courier and Journal of Commerce

Here are some articles about the Vancouver Heritage Awards. 

Fred Lee wrote in the Vancouver Courier
Urban Landscape


Mayor Sam Sullivan conferred honours on the champions of
heritage at the recent 28th annual City of Vancouver
Heritage Awards held in historic Coastal Church on Georgia
Street. Recipients included Duncan Wilson and Rowland
Johnson for rehabilitating the 1899 Rand House on Bute
Street, the Land Conservancy for its efforts in saving the
home of writer Joy Kogawa and H.R. Hatch Architect, McGinn
Engineering and Ballenas Project Management for the
preservation efforts on the Left Bank temple bank building
on Main Street. The Courier's Lisa Smedman picked up an
Award of Merit for her series on the history of Vancouver
neighbourhoods.


Journal of Commerce reported the winners:
City honours 2007 Heritage Award winners

The 28th annual City
of Vancouver Heritage Awards were presented on February 19, the first
day of Heritage Week, to honour the extraordinary efforts of
architects, community organizations, developers, writers, artists and
ordinary citizens who work to preserve our heritage.

Mayor Sam Sullivan conferred award
certificates upon the winners who represented a range of projects which
reflect the diversity of the heritage in neighbourhoods across the
city.

Awards of Honour were presented for:

844 Dunlevy Street: awarded to owners Graham
Elvidge and Kathleen Stormont for their exemplary restoration of this
Queen Anne house in one of Vancouver’s first neighbourhoods, and
advancing the education, awareness, and advocacy of heritage in the
community and the city.

TLC, The Land Conservancy: awarded to TLC, The
Land Conservancy, and the Save Joy Kogawa House Committee for its
outstanding advocacy efforts in saving the childhood home of writer Joy
Kogawa, and bringing municipal, provincial, national and international
attention to the effort with its theme of “Hope, Healing and
Reconciliation”.