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

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

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

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

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

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

Year Archive
View Article  True patriot Love: North Shore News article on Todd Wong, Betty Wong and Tracey Hinder re: The Chan Legacy
True patriot Love: North Shore News article on Todd Wong, Betty Wong and Tracey Hinder re: The Chan Legacy

http://www.canada.com/northshorenews/news/live/story.html?id=281951b4-4181-4c68-a39b-5e5855445271

True patriot love

Family proud of its Canadian heritage

Erin Mcphee, North Shore News

Published: Sunday, July 29, 2007

- Generations: The Chan Legacy is re-scheduled for August 19, on CBC Newsworld at 4 p.m. PST / 7pm EST


Three generations of the Chan family: Tracey Hinder (left), Betty Wong and Todd Wong look over their family's impressive legacy.

Three generations of the Chan family: Tracey Hinder (left), Betty Wong and Todd Wong look over their family's impressive legacy.

NEWS photo Mike Wakefield

To say that Todd Wong, a 47-year-old North Vancouver resident, is proud of his roots would be an understatement.

Wong's family is one that has greatly impacted Canada's history and as a result its members continue to celebrate where they come from.

Wong's ancestors arrived on the West Coast from China in 1896 and were able to integrate into Canada despite the many barriers that existed. Inspired by that impressive past, today, the Chan family, one of the oldest on the West Coast, continues to thrive with its new generations working hard to keep their legacy alive.

"We're just a Canadian family," says Wong, not downplaying his family's identity, but rather stating, realistically, who they are.

Not only has the Chan family survived, its members are continuing to thrive, exemplifying what it means to truly be "Canadian."

Wong's family's unique story is being brought to life in Generations: The Chan Legacy, a CBC documentary airing today on CBC Newsworld. It's part of a series of documentaries called Generations and was produced by Halya Kuchmij.

Filmmakers approached Wong, known in the Lower Mainland for his unique interest in multiculturalism, community work and activism. He's the founder of Gung Haggis Fat Choy, a website promoting inter-cultural activities.

Wong is also behind a 10-year-old Vancouver tradition, the Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner -- a mix of Chinese and Scottish traditions meant to play against racial stereotypes -- and he's a member of the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team that further promotes multiculturalism and community spirit.

Wong's website site also details his adventures, told at times through his alter ego, "Toddish McWong," further celebrating what it is to be Canadian, he says.

The documentary discusses Wong's great, great grandfather Reverend Chan Yu Tan and how he and his wife came to the West Coast in 1896 to "spread the gospel" throughout, he says. Methodist church missionaries, they were tasked with "Westernizing" and "Christianizing" the Chinese pioneers, the majority working in labour-based jobs like the railroad.

Filming and interviews with Wong and his relatives, encompassing a number of generations, happened last fall.

"Before the documentary, I didn't know a lot about my ancestry," says Wong's second generation cousin, West Vancouver resident Tracey Hinder, 15, who's featured in the film. Hinder attends West Vancouver secondary.

"I only knew that I was Chinese-Canadian, that my mother was Chinese and that my father was British-Canadian. With the making of the documentary, I found that my family history started to unfold and I never knew that part of myself. It was absolutely fascinating," Hinder says.

Hinder is a member of her school's multiculturalism club, which organizes activities for students to participate in. She's also learning Mandarin.

Wong says he's proud of her as he believes it's important to ensure the younger generations of his family come to know and recognize their ancestral roots.

Read More:
View Article  Generations: The Chan Legacy on CBC Newsworld. July 29th - 4pm and midnight
Generations: The Chan Legacy on CBC Newsworld.
July 29th - 4pm and midnight

The Chan Legacy is the lead episode in the new documentary series Generations on CBC Newsworld.  It debuted on July 4th - my grandmother's 97th birthday.

How fitting!  Because the show is about her grand-father Rev. Chan Yu Tan who came to Canada in 1896 as a Christian missionary.

Feedback has been very positive.  Family members are very proud.  Friends are very supportive.  Historians are enthusiastic. Strangers are thrilled.

Listen to Auntie Helen and Uncle Victor tell stories about Rev. and Mrs. Chan, and about growing up in pre-WW2 BC, and facing racial discrimination.  Uncle Victor Wong also tells about enlisting as a Canadian soldier to go behind enemy lines in the Pacific for suicide squadrons, fighting for Canada, even though Chinese-Canadians could not vote in the country of their birth.

The next generations assimiliated more easily into Canadian culture.  Gary Lee became an actor and singer.  Janice Wong became a visual artist and author of the book CHOW: From China to Canada - memories of food and family, which addressed the history of Rev. Chan coming to Canada, and how Janice's dad started a Chinese restaurant in Prince Albert SK.

Then there is Todd Wong - cultural and community activist who founded Gung Haggis Fat Choy: Toddish McWong's Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner - which inspired a CBC Vancouver television performance special.  Todd is shown active in the dragon boat community, and speaking at a Terry Fox Run in the role of a 16 year cancer survivor.  Renowned Japanese-Canadian author Joy Kogawa makes an appearance, as Todd was also involved in helping to save Kogawa's childhood home from demolition and to turn it into a national historic and literary landmark.



July 29th Sunday - repeats at midnight

  4:00 p.m. Generations: The Chan Legacy
- Missionaries from China come to the West Coast help Westernize Chinese immigrant workers in the late 1800's.
Generations: The Chan Legacy
J
View Article  Kilts and family history abound during two episodes of the 6-part Generations series on CBC Newsworld
Kilts and family history abound during two episodes of the 6-part Generations series on CBC Newsworld

Find out what a 250 year old Anglophone family in Quebec City and a 120 year old Chinese-Canadian family in Vancouver have in common.

Both have:
bagpipes and kilts
+ accordion music
+ canoe/dragon boat racing
+ immigration as a topic
+ Church music
+ archival photos/newsreels of an ex-premier
+ cultural/racial discrimination stories
+ prominent Canadian historical events to show how
   the families embraced them or were challenged by them
+ both featured saving a historical literary landmark.
+ younger generation learning the non-English language

Generations: The Chan Legacy features Todd Wong, founder of Gung Haggis Fat Choy, a quirky Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner, which inspired a CBC Vancouver television performance special.  Todd's involvements with Terry Fox Run, Joy Kogawa House campaign and dragon boat racing are also shown.

July 29th 4pm PST / July 30th 12am

4:00 p.m. Generations: The Chan Legacy
- Missionaries from China come to the West Coast help Westernize Chinese immigrant workers in the late 1800's.
Generations: The Chan Legacy
August 5th 4pm PST

4:00 p.m. Generations: The Blairs of Quebec
- An Anglophone family with 250 years of history in Quebec City struggles to maintain it's heritage.
Generations: The Blairs of Quebec

July 4, 10 pm ET/PT, July 8 10 am ET, July 29, 7 pm ET
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 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 and his wife Wong Chiu Lin 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. 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, Reverend Chan's granddaughter Helen Lee, grandson Victor Wong, and great grandson Gary Lee recall being barred from theaters, swimming pools 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.

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 Michelle Cheung.

July 11, 10 pm ET/PT, July 15, 10 am ET, August 5, 7 pm ET

For 250 years, the Blair family has been part of the Protestant Anglophone community of Quebec City. The Anglophones were once the dominant cultural and economic force in the city, but now they are a tiny minority, and those who have chosen to stay have had to adapt to a very different world. Louisa Blair guides us through the story of her family, which is also the story of a community that had to change.
Ronnie Blair
Ronnie Blair

The senior member of the family today is Ronnie Blair. He grew up in Quebec, but like generations of Blairs before him, he worked his way up the corporate ladder in the Price Company with the lumber barons of the Saguenay. Ronnie Blair's great grandfather came to the Saguenay from Scotland in 1842. Ronnie's mother was Jean Marsh. Her roots go back to the first English families to make Quebec home after British troops defeated the French on the Plains of Abraham in 1759. The Marsh family amassed a fortune in the shoe industry in Quebec City.

The Marshes and the Blairs were part of a privileged establishment that lived separately from the Catholics and the Francophones, with their own churches and institutions. The Garrison Club for instance, is a social club that is still an inner sanctum for Quebec's Anglo businessmen.

Blair family
The Blair family

Work took Ronnie Blair and his family to England in the 1960’s but his children longed to return to Canada, and to Quebec City. Alison Blair was the first to return, as a student, in 1972. Her brother David followed in 1974. Both were excited by the political and social changes that had taken place during the Quiet Revolution in Quebec and threw themselves into everything Francophone. David learned to speak French, married a French Canadian and settled into a law practice.

Then came the Referendum of 1995, a painful moment in the history of the Anglophone community, and for the passionate Blairs. But David decided he was in Quebec to stay, and today his children are bilingual and bicultural. More recently his sister Louisa also returned to Quebec City and a desire to rediscover her past led her to write a book called, The Anglos, the Hidden Face of Quebec. Her daughter is also is growing up bilingual and bicultural, representing a new generation comfortable in both worlds.

Produced by Jennifer Clibbon and Lynne Robson.
View Article  Generations on CBC Newsworld. The Chan Legacy plays 5 times
Generations on CBC Newsworld. 
The Chan Legacy plays 5 times

The Chan Legacy is the lead episode in the new documentary series Generations on CBC Newsworld.  It has played a total of 5 times.  But only the 1st and 2nd times were listed correctly on the www.cbc.ca/documentaries/generations website.  I had trouble finding listings on the www.cbc.ca/newsworld program listings.

Feedback has been very positive.  Family members are very proud.  Friends are very supportive.  Historians are enthusiastic. Strangers are thrilled.

The series is supposed to repeat on July 29th and is listed on the Generations website - but not the CBC Newsworld program listings.  Let's keep our fingers crossed.

I am looking forward to seeing the other Generations stories. 
The Blairs of Quebec begins on Wednesday July 11th.
The McCurdy Birthright begins on Wednesday July 18th
The Crowfoot Dynasty begins on Wednesday July 25th

July 4th Wednesday
  7:00 p.m. Generations: The Chan Legacy
- Missionaries from China come to the West Coast help Westernize Chinese immigrant workers in the late 1800's.
Generations: The Chan Legacy
July 4th Wednesday

  10:00 p.m. Generations: The Chan Legacy
- Missionaries from China come to the West Coast help Westernize Chinese immigrant workers in the late 1800's.
Generations: The Chan Legacy
July 6th Friday
  1:00 a.m. Generations: The Chan Legacy
- Missionaries from China come to the West Coast help Westernize Chinese immigrant workers in the late 1800's.
Generations: The Chan Legacy
July 8th Sunday
  7:00 a.m. Generations: The Chan Legacy
- Missionaries from China come to the West Coast help Westernize Chinese immigrant workers in the late 1800's.
Generations: The Chan Legacy
July 9th, Monday
  12:00 a.m. Generations: The Chan Legacy
- Missionaries from China come to the West Coast help Westernize Chinese immigrant workers in the late 1800's.
Generations: The Chan Legacy

Other upcoming Generations episodes
July 11th, Wednesday

7:00 p.m. Generations: The Blairs of Quebec
- An Anglophone family with 250 years of history in Quebec City struggles to maintain it's heritage.
Generations: The Blairs of Quebec
July 18th, Wednesday

7:00 p.m. Generations: The McCurdy Birthright
- From the Underground Railroad to the House of Commons, one of the oldest Black families built a civil rights legacy.
Generations: The McCurdy Birthright
July 25th, Wednesday

7:00 p.m. Generations: 100 Years in Crowfoot
- The Crowfoot Dynasty: The descendants of a great Chief continue a legacy of Native leadership through seven generations.
Generations: 100 Years in Crowfoot


View Article  Where was GENERATIONS: The Chan Legacy on CBC Newsworld at 10am PST
Where was GENERATIONS: The Chan Legacy on CBC Newsworld at 10am PST

I received a number of e-mails this morning asking this very question?

The http://www.cbc.ca/documentaries/generations/ website listed 10am EST/PST but evidently only broadcast at 10am EST (7am PST)

I have sent notice to the Generations executive producer.
looks like different branches of CBC (Newsworld and documentaries aren't talking to each other).

I have both video and dvd - and will try to arrange for a public /family viewing at a restaurant if possible.

In the meantime - please check http://www.cbc.ca/programguide

The Chan Legacy is next set to air on July 29th, Sunday, 7pm EST (which means 4pm PST).


View Article  Watching "GENERATIONS: The Chan Legacy" with my grandmother and family
Watching "GENERATIONS: The Chan Legacy" with my grandmother and family

We attended the 97th birthday dinner for my grandmother, Mabel Mar (who can be seen in the documentary during the home movies, and in the Gung Haggis Fat Choy television special dinner segment.  It was great to watch with family members who hadn't seen the documentary yet.  My cousins Diane, Chris, Auntie Sylvia and Uncle Ian were all so pleased at how well done the show was. 

They kept talking over the narration whenever they recognized somebody in the pictures or the home movies that were shown.

Below are e-mails and messages that I have received from friends and family:

Todd - YOU have made us all very proud of our ancestors.
YOU did a great job to make this happen
MANY thanks
- David Young (Toronto cousin)

Dear Todd-really touched by your family, thought it was beautifully told - you look like your aunt Helen Lee
but in a handsome, manly way. What a treasure to have this documentary of this incredible
clan-well done, thanks for sharing
- Jane Duford - artist and Gung Haggis paddler

SO Canadian. Great documentary, and I'm glad that I caught it. Well, I
only received half a dozen messages about it. ;) The other segments
look really good, too.
- Hillary Wong

I really enjoyed the program although I missed the first 10 minutes of the hour long program.  Now I know more about the story of your life than before.  I was touched not only by the story of Reverend Chan, the struggles of the early Chinese immigrants and "Canadian" Citizens but also your own survival and how overcame your health challenges and your Gung Haggis Fat Choy initiatives. A documentation well done.
- Kelly Ip (community organizer, Canadian Club advisor)

Karen and I enjoyed it. Watch the whole thing.
- Richard Mah (Vancouver International Dragon Boat Race - race director)

Congratulations, Todd!  I actually read a story last year about your family in the North Shore News -- how proud you must feel!!!!  & how proud I am to know you!!! 
--Terrie Hamazaki (writer)

Todd! Generations was excellent! I loved it!  You were so great in it!!
Great job on all of your hard work in putting this together, it was really interesting.
Tell Aunty Mabel Happy Birthday for me!  Talk to you soon
Katie (Toronto cousin)

Yay for you, Todd, and all your family - mine are relative newcomers, just here since 1948, when we were refugees after ww2 -cheers!
- Ieva Wool - choir conductor of High Spirits

EXCELLENT PROGRAM TODD!!
Congratulations!  I am proud of you and your accomplishments!!
You are a blessing to our world.
Rev. Angelica (minister of Celebration of Life Centre)

The Show was excellent. It is a piece of history that needs to be taught in school.
Raphael Fang - Kilts Night co-ordinator

Thanks for letting me know about the documentary.  I manage to see it last night.  It was well done and you interviewed well and looked great!   A lot of hard work but well worth it.
- Gordy (genealogist organizer and head tax advocate)

Just finished watching "Generations" and just want to say THANK YOU!  for a great documentary on our family history.   You did a great job working with Halya!
Love, Auntie Roberta (grand-daughter of Rev. Chan Yu Tan, Victor Wong's sister)









sharing,-jane         

View Article  GENERATIONS: The Chan Legacy airs today 10pm on CBC Newsworld

GENERATIONS: The Chan Legacy airs today 10pm on CBC Newsworld

  10:00 p.m. Generations: The Chan Legacy
- Missionaries from China come to the West Coast help Westernize Chinese immigrant workers in the late 1800's.
Generations: The Chan Legacy

Yesterday I was interviewed 8:20 am Tuesday morning, July 3rd, by Rick Cluff for the CBC Radio 690 show "The Early Edition."  Rick first asked me how I got interested in family history, and I replied that one of the first computer programs I got was for genealogy.

I had found it fascinating that we were descended from a Chinese United Church minister. It was important for me to find positive role models growing up, because as a Chinese-Canadian, there weren't many.  I grew up in North Vancouver, and many people couldn't tell the difference between Chinese and Japanese back then. Some people would tell me to go back where I came from.

I brought some photo displays into the radio studio and Rick asked about them.

"Here's a picture of Rev. Chan Yu Tan" when he first arrived in Canada in 1896."

Here's a picture of Uncle Dan and his brothers during WW2"

"Here's a picture of our family reunion in 1999."

"How many people attended, Todd?"

"We had over 200 people, from all across the continent Rick - from Ontario, Alberta, Washington, California."

Rick asked what I hoped the younger generations would learn from the story.  I told him that it was important for our younger generations to learn what our ancestors had overcome, such as the head tax, the 1907 riot, the exclusion act, gaining the voting franchise.  And that it is an important story for all Canadians.  Too often as multigenerational Chinese-Canadians we get lumped in with the new immigrants as "Chinese" - even though our family has been here for seven generations.

Rick asked "What would Rev. Chan think of Gung Haggis Fat Choy"

 but our family didn't go to Church. When I was little, I attended one day of class at the Chinese United Church.  I was little and cried for my mother almost the entire time. 

But the legacy of Rev. Chan Yu Tan and his brother and sisters still lives in our family.  It lives on in the stories that my grandmother and my mother have shared with me.  My grand-uncle Daniel Lee and his sister Helen Lee, lived with Rev. and Mrs. Chan Yu Tan in Nanaimo while they were growing up.  Auntie Helen recalls her memories while she is interviewed for the documentary.  There are some newsclips of Uncle Dan and Chinese-Canadian veterans at Vancouver's Victory Square cenotaph for Remembrance Day.

Many of our family is excited at seeing the documentary tonight.  I have received e-mails from Ontario, and Washington.  Distant family members I haven't met have found the Rev. Chan Legacy facebook page: http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=2390778670

Here are some well wishes from my friends after hearing me on radio and receiving my announcements about GENERATIONS: The Chan Legacy

Good morning Todd, just heard you on CBC Early Edition about your family.  
I look forward to watching it tomorrow night on CBC Newsworld at 10 p.m.
I hope some of our colleagues will watch some of the Chinese history in
Vancouver. You may wish to tell us something more about this 6-part series
on Chinese pioneers in Vancouver.
- Kelly Ip (Community organizer and advisor on Canadian Club Vancouver)

Thanks, Todd...
Heard you this morning, and you sounded great (however brief).
Will try to catch your segment. In fact, they all sound fascinating.
Cheers,

Thank you Todd for sharing your family's history with us. This forms part of the Canadian national identity.
- Begum Vergee (my co-director on Canadian Club Vancouver.


Wonderful experience to be part of such an important legacy. Thanks for letting us know.
Shirley Chan (community activist)


Todd: Thanks so much for this!
Chuck Davis - Vancouver Historian

Hi Todd
congratulations !!!!
where are you going to watch tonight's episode .... invite me along if
appropriate.
All good things,
Joseph Roberts - publisher of Common Ground

Hey Todd,
Great to hear from you.  I look forward to seeing the doc.
Warm regards,
Moyra Rodger - producer of the Gung Haggis Fat Choy television performance special

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

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.

check out the
CBC Generations home page:
http://www.cbc.ca/documentaries/generations/

View Article  CBC Radio 690 - Todd to be interviewed for Early Edition with Rick Cluff
CBC Radio 690 - Todd to be interviewed for Early Edition with Rick Cluff

I am being interviewed 8:20 am Tuesday morning, July 3rd, by Rick Cluff.  They will be asking me about my involvement with the Generations: The Chan Legacy television documentary.

It's been an incredible experience!  How often does a family get to tell their story in a national television series?  I know this is also the result of a lot of hard work.  In 1999, and 2000, we held the first of Rev. Chan Family Legacy reunion dinners.  We were featured in the Chinese Cultural Centre Museum and Archives project: Three Pioneer Chinese Canadian families.

I have been able to preview a dvd of the show - and it brought tears to my eyes.  My parents watched it with me last week, and on Friday night, we showed it to my grandmother.  She was so amazed to see pictures of her grandparents - Rev. & Mrs. Chan Yu Tan... and to hear the stories about them from her sister Helen Lee and cousin Victor Wong.

There are also home movies from my great-grandmother Kate Lee's 75th birthday party from 1965.  As my multi-generational Caucasian-Canadian girlfriend says - "It's like any Canadian family - this one just happens to have gone through anti-Asian racism, the head-tax, and couldn't vote until 1947."

With film clips from WW2, Douglas Jung, Nanaimo Chinatown in the 1800's, Vancouver Chinatown in the 1950's, Vancouver's golden Jubilee celebrations - This documentary truly is a history of Chinese Canadians in Vancouver and BC.

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.


check out the
CBC Generations home page:
http://www.cbc.ca/documentaries/generations/


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