Todd Wong with Lion Head

Asian Canadian adventures in inter-cultural Vancouver
and home of Toddish McWong's Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner.

Welcome to GungHaggisFatChoy.com

Home to my passions for my inter-cultural adventures,

Gung Haggis Fat Choy: Robbie Burns
Chinese New Year Dinner event.


Save Kogawa House campaign,

Gung Haggis Fat Choy Dragon Boat team,

Find what you are looking for by
1) scroll the topics links,
2) use the search function

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Join the Gung Haggis Fat Choy Dragon Boat team
for lots of summer fun, fitness and friendship. We are a social team full of cultural vigor, that likes to eat.

We have been featured on television, local, national and international. We have a unique and internationally famous fundraiser dinner event.

We practice Sunday 1:30 pm -3:30 pm Tuesday 6pm-7:45pm Wednesday 6pm - 7:45 pm

We meet at Dragon Zone clubhouse - just south of Science World in Creekside Park above the Aquabus and dragon boat docks.

Our coach Todd Wong has 15+ years of experience including novice, recreational and competitive levels, and both community and corporate teams.

Our 2005 Season brought us the David Lam Award for being the team that best represented the multicultural spirit of the Alcan Dragon Boat Festival, and Bronze medals at the Vancouver International Taiwanese Dragon Boat Race. In 2007, we won Gold in B Division at Vernon Races.

For more information:
Click on Gung Haggis Fat Choy Dragon Boat team information
phone: 604-987-7124-
e-mail: gunghaggis at yahoo dot ca

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2009 TICKETS Available in October 2008

WHAT: GUNG HAGGIS FAT CHOY: Toddish McWong's Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner - 12th Annual Dinner, celebrating 250th Anniversary of Robert Burns' birth + Chinese New Year's Eve.

WHEN: 6PM January 25 2009, SUNDAY
doors open 5pm


WHERE: Floata Chinese Restaurant,
#400-180 Keefer St.


CULTURE: Our Performers create something special for us every year with traditional and contemporary performances featuring everything in-between and beyond!

FOOD: A quirky fusion/mix/buffet of Scottish Canadian and Chinese Canadian culture 10 course Chinese banguet dinner
2004 - The debut of Gung Haggis Won-Ton
2005 - Haggis lettuce wrap!
2007 - Haggis dim sum appetizer buffet
2008 - Scotch tastings!
Watch for more surprises in 2008!






Description of 2006 Gung Haggis Fat Choy Dinner featuring performers: Rick Scott & Harry Wong, The Shirleys, Joe McDonald & Brave Waves, Sean Gunn, author Joy Kogawa, with co-host Prem Gill .

Media Inquiries
Call Gung Haggis Productions 604-987-7124

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Year Archive
View Article  Max Wyman: Speaking on Cultural Activity, Creativity at Vancouver Public Library
Max Wyman: Speaking on Cultural Activity, Creativity at Vancouver Public Library

Living the Global City series

Vancouver writer and cultural commentator Max Wyman, President of the Canadian Commission for UNESCO, spoke at the Vancouver Public Library tonight.  His talk was described that he would address that:

As we move from the Information Age to the Imagination Age, the role of creative activity is fundamental to the healthy and peaceful development of human society. For these reasons, it is beyond time to relocate creative activity and expressive engagement at the heart of the social agenda - with an imagination-based education as the keystone.

Max Wyman, former dance and arts critic, now cultural commentator and mayor of Lions Bay, BC., is also the author of The Defiant Imagination: Why Culture Matters. There was a full crowd at the Vancouver Public Library, Central Branch's Alice Mackay room, when I walked in.  There were television cameras set up.  Vancouver City Councilor Elizabeth Ball, in her role as board member of Vancouver Public Library, gave Max an incredible introduction listing his many achievements.

www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com/blog/_archives/2006/1/23/1720005.html

Max started speaking about Vancouver's incredible diversity of culture, and how both he and Elizabeth Ball were recently at an incredible event called Gung Haggis Fat Choy, created by Toddish McWong.  He went on to describe that it blends together Chinese New Year and Haggis, featuring performers such as a bagpiper with South Asian tabla drums, Rick Scott and his Chinese partner (Harry Wong), and Faye Leung - the hat lady, Jim Harris the Green Party leader.  And that they along with several others including a First Nations Chief were all reading verses from Robbie Burns "Address to a Haggis"....

What a surprise, to be sitting in the audience and to have Max Wyman saying such cultural praise about my creation Gung Haggis Fat Choy.  He recognizes that culture is organic, and that it constantly changes and evolves.  The performers at GHFC are those whom I recognize and highlight, but they are already doing their own thing.  But what is important is that the creativity and the imagination helps us to see ourselves in ways that we wouldn't otherwise.  And I think that is why Max Wyman cited Gung Haggis Fat Choy as a wonderful example of the importance of Imagination and Creativity for cultural activity.

DSC_5503
Todd Wong with special guest Max Wyman at Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner, January 22, 2006 - photo Ray Shum

Max gave an incredible talk, describing the importance of cultural interchange.  He said that UNESCO was founded 62 years ago for the mission of peace and humanity, but there are more wars going on in the world today.  He said that the divisions between East and West, North and South are vast.

He also told the audience that Canada is percieved as very important at UNESCO.  He described a huge room with many many countries represented where Canada's desk is situated between Cameroon and Cape Verde.  Wyman said that when Canada speaks, everybody stops to listen.

At the end of his talk, he invited people to ask questions.  The questions were lively and the points well made. The audience was sensitive when a young Korean man struggled to convey his ideas and questions in English, but also could be curt when speakers were rambling and overbearing in their personal rants.

When I stepped up to the microphone, Max recognized and welcomed me.  I thanked him for mentioning Gung Haggis Fat Choy, and he stated that I was one of the important cultural creators.  Wow...

I stated that when Expo 86 came to Vancouver, we saw an incredible amount of great arts performances that we wouldn't have normally been able to.  Our cultural horizons are limited by our own experiences but cultural interchange with Canadians in New Foundland or Innuvik are important.  It is also important to recognize arts creators not always as starving student stereotypes but also as cultural visionaries and cultural engineers.  I pointed out that the previous Vancouver City Council had created an performing artist program at City Hall, but that it needed to be taken out to the streets in the form of a City Poet Laureate or City Arts Laureate and to that point I asked councillor Elizabeth Ball, and Max Wyman, if they as arts advocates/politicians could help support such activities.  

Max agreed with me, and said that it is most important to "take it to the streets", and he talked about how both he and Ball are new to the GVRD, but are looking at ways to create community arts interchanges within the GVRD.  In my closing, I then asked him about his comments on CBC about the 8 minutes of Canada at the closing Olympic ceremonies.

Max said that watching Vancouver Mayor Sam Sullivan in his wheel chair accept the flag, was one of the most beautiful moments of the ceremonies, that brought tears to his eyes.  He said that Ben Heppner sang O Canada, so beautifully, but was underwhelmed by the rest of it.  He did mention the stereotypes, and had said he had been less than discreet about his comments on CBC.

People really enjoyed themselves at this UBC sponsored event.  I talked briefly with Chan Centre Director Dr. Sid Katz, who apologized that he was unable to attend this year's Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner, but enthusiastically said that Rick Scott and Pied Pumpkin had been one of his first cultural events in Vancouver.

Here is a link to a Max Wyman talk called Why Culture Matters in Moncton, NB, February 12, 2004



View Article  Vancouver Mayor Sam Sullivan accepting Olympic Flag and Closing Ceremonies
Great! Just watched Vancouver Mayor Sam Sullivan accept the Olympic Flag, on CBC TV. Wonderful to see a quadripelic in a wheelchair waving the flag. Chiefs from the Squamish Nation also have now welcomed the world to come to Vancouver Olympics. Here's a story highlighting Sam's participation.   more »
View Article  Asian Canadian Olympic Athletes: Women's Ice Skaters mix cultural themes just like Canada's interculturalism
Watching the Women's figure skating is one of my favorite Olympic events. It was a special treat to watch Michelle Kwan skate (if only in practice) during the World Championships in Vancouver back in 2001. There is a special balance of grace and power, beauty and athleticism. But most of all, today I was struck by the intermixing of ethnic musical themes... American Sasha Cohen skated to the Russian folk theme of "Dark Eyes" for her short program, then to the Italian composer Nino Rota's score for the movie "Romeo & Juliet" for her long program. Russian Irina Slutskaya skated to a Spanish flamenco soundtrack, and Japanese gold medal winner Shizuka Arakawa skated to Italian Puccini's Turandot opera music, which was set in China.   more »
View Article  Tim Horton's, Asian Canadians and hockey... very Canadian!
When I saw the new Tim Horton's television commercial featuring the Chinese Canadian grandfather bringing "double doubles" to the hockey rink to sit beside his son, and watch his grandson play... I thought "Cool!" Depicting Canadians who just happen to be Asian, doing Canadian things that just happen to be hockey and going to Tim Horton's.    more »
View Article  Sending out kisses for Valentine's Day
Very interesting Valentine's Day for 2006... I went to City Hall today to join the protest against City Hall's decision to cut the funding for the Mayors from the Peace Messenger Cities World Peace Forum..... While driving along Canada Way, I saw Charlie's Chocolate Factory.....   more »
View Article  Love and Marriage in the Year of the Dog? Will it be a Great Dane or a miniature poodle?
Lots of Chinese New Year stuff going on in Vancouver now, a radio media producer called me yesterday and bounced some ideas about people wanting to get married in the Year of the Dog... because it is supposedly a good year for marriage. I told them that the Year of the Dragon is the best year for getting married, but are people going to wait for another 6 years? I got married in the year of the Sheep, supposedly great for domestic issue - but it only lasted for two years... but the relationship had actually started in the year of the Rat. Did it make a difference?   more »
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