JULY 15, 2009 carnnews@vcn.bc.ca www.camnews.org (373 hits peraayt) http://harvesters.sfu.ca/chodarr (INDEX
Longing For
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Longing For Light "Is there a light at the end of the tunnel?" a thoughtful person asked at a gathering of people telling Downtown Eastside stories. ( I) How many times have we asked ourselves that question, "Is there a light at the end of the tunnel?" Arc we getting anywhere with our work, or arc things just as bad as ever? Is gentrification c rushing the low income community of the Downtown Eastside in spite o f all our efforts? Will Insite be destroyed by people who are unable to understand the extensive research on harm reduction? Is the lig ht at the end of the tunnel really a train coming right at us? Sometimes we are overwhe lmed with sorrow, although we want jus tice to prevail. We work to make our community a better place, not a perfect place, but a beucr place. If we look for immediate results in this work, we are in danger o f fallin g into despair. Society doesn't change quickly, and our commitment is for the long haul. Thomas Merton was a Trappist monk, a peace activist, and a writer. A fri end o f his was fa lling into despair because he couldn't see the lig ht at the end o f the tunnel. Merton wrote to his friend, saying, "Do not depend on the hope of results ... you
may have to face the fact that your work will be apparently worthless and even achieve no result at all... As you get used to this idea, you start more and more to concentrate not on the results, but on ... the rightness, the truth of the work itself.... in the end, it is the reality o f personal relationships that saves everything." A good example of a determined commitme nt to the ri ghtness of a cause, is the five hundred year o ld resistance move ment of First Nations people against injustice. Thi s inspiring struggle will continue from o ne generation to another until justice is done. Leonard Peltier of the A nishinabe and Lakota Nations has been unjustly imprisoned for over thirty years, yet he docs not despair. He wrote in his book Prison Writings- My Life Is M y Sun Dance, "Never cease in the fight for peace, justice and equality for all people," and "I know that without compassion and respect for all of Earth's inhabitants, none of us will survive- nor will we deserve to." Leonard Peltier has turned his life into a prayer, and he wrote, "No prison bars can stop a prayer." A wise Inuit poem recognizes our longing for light. The poem goes like thi s:
"In the eternal darkness the crow unable to find food longed for light and the earth was illumined." This poem is te lling us that the light is not at the end of the tunnel. The poem says that light arises out o f our longing. It is within us, but we need sile nce and full attention in order to see it. When asked what he taught his children, the Lakota Chief Stand ing Bear replied, "They were taught... to look when there was apparently no thing to see, and to listen intently when all seeming ly was q uiet." (2) People who follow that path will see the light. Sandy Cameron
( 1) Eastside Stories - The People, The Voices; sponsored by the Vancouver Moving Theatre, the Radha Yoga and Eatery, and the Carnegie Community Centre . (2) American Indian Prose and Poetry: An Anthology edited by Margot Astrov, Capricorn Books, 1962, page 39.
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Pain Scale
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Lost in pain, crying in unmarred pride Robbers stole your childhood away Stealers of babies - dying to make you pay They enshackled your culture and dis-spirited you away Invaders of your wee heart, them crazed other people tore you apart in their makeshift death camps. Your lonely spirit cried in vain Pleading for mercy left on deaf ears But I myself can still hear your angels sing Songs for a new destiny's circle of life You knew well where you righteously belonged Yet in the hands of them denominations of cruelty They done you harm .. they done you wrong Fearful child, crying angelic eyes -taught to lie Fathers, mothers, sisters, brothers - stay strong For mine lost soul will forever live in your faint hearts -please don't cry I'm not endlessly lost in pain, i'll come again
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H=i l ! 1l l l 1,l This is my story I was born in North Ballleford on March 6, 1944. 1 am Cree, French, Irish and Scouish. M y name is Marlene June Wuttunce. 1 broke my hip and was li vi ng in the Brandiz Hotel. On October 26, 2007 I went to Pigeon Park to see my friends. I wasn't there long when the wagon came. There were two Caucasian policemen. They were arresting people. One of [those arrested) was my friend David De Kocher. I was in a wheelchair because of my hip and was on my way back to my room. One cop said, "Where do you think you' re going?" I said, "Back to the Brandiz." He said, "You're not going anywhere." He picked me up from the wheelchair and threw me on the ground. I was on my stomach. He grabbed my left arm, his black foot was on my back, and he twisted my arm violently. The pa it~ was excruciating pain. He didn' t say I was under arrest. He put me in the wagon. ln the morning I went home in the Safe Ride. I went to St. Paul's and got Tylenol 3 for the pain. Went back got robbed. Second time to St.Paul's got Tylenol 3 wi th morphine. Went back got robbed. 3'd time went to General Hospital & operation. There' s a rod from my elbow to shoulder plate on shoulder 18 staples & scar on back. Bone completely crushed. I went to Central City Lodge on November 9, 2007 and a care aid had to feed me for six months because my arm was in excruciating pain. Only then could I feed myself. I am suing the V.P.D. for $25,000, naming Constable Steverding (#2387) and Constable Brown(# 1768) as the police present when I was auacked.
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Falling like raindrops dancing on mother earth Waiting for a new life - waiting for a new birth Mine ancestors told me where I belong I belonged in the longhouse singing my spirit song Grizzly bear -grizzly bear- yes! My grizzly bear song Lost in pain? Lost in pain? No way My spirit will forever keep me strong. All my relations, William Arnold Combes
I ATTENTION: Keith Glover This is notice of the next court date, Aug 12, 2009 at I :30 pm in Sechelt ,BC, in regards to your daughter Evlyn Olson. Please contact Amanda Amaral at the Ministry of Children and Family Development in Scchelt, BC at 604-740-8900 or Afterhours 1-800-663-9 122 for more information.
News f rom the Library Have you checked out our Reference Self-Help section yet? T hese are books which tend to go missing pretty quickly fro m the regular library collection, and are now available to look at in the library. Latest add itio ns to the collection include: The Secret by Rho nda Byrne ( 158. 1), Unstuck: Your Guide to the Seven-Stage Journey Out of Depression, by James S. Gordo n (6 16.85), and The Soulmate Secret: Manifest the Love of Your Life with the Law of Attraction ( 158.2). While observing a fami ly group of elephants in the wild, Caitlin O'Connell , a young fi eld scientist, noticed a matriarch elephant tum her head and lift her foot off the ground. As she did this, the other e lephants in the g roup followed suit, all facing the same direction. O'Connell soon discovered that these elephants were "listening through limbs", using the ir feet, toenails and trunks to listen to the earth and commun icate with each o ther. Find out more about the fasci nating world of the elephant in The Elephant's Secret Sense: The Hidden Life of the Wild Herds of Africa (599.67).
Humanities 101 & Writing 101 Intake sessio ns for Human ities 10 1 and Writing 101 have been arranged for Aug ust this year, please see the attached document to fi nd o ut details of where and when. T he details are also posted on o ur website: humanities I0 l .arts.ubc.ca- fo llow the link o n the homcpage to access the information. Please pass on the detai ls to anyone you think will be interested in taking either of the courses. We hope to see you at steeri ng committee o n Saturday August 8th from I - 3p.m in the third
On October 25, 1946, in a crowded room in Cambridge, England, Ludwig Wittgenstein and Karl Popper came face-to-face for the fi rst and only time. The encounter lasted j ust te n minutes, and did not go well. Their loud and aggressive confrontation became the stuff of instant legend, with rumours that the two philosophers had come to blows, armed with red-hot pokers. In Wittgenstein's Poker ( 193), David Edmonds and John Eid inow use the legendary meeti ng as a j umping off point to explore the two phi losophers, modem philosophy, and the sig nificance of language in solvi ng o ur philosophical proble ms. Music can move us to the heights or depths of emotion. lt can persuade us to buy something, or remind us of our fi rst date. It can lift us out of depression when nothing else can. ln Musicophilia (78 1.15), Oliver Sacks explores music- which occupies more areas of our brain than language docs- through the individual experiences of patients, musicians and everyday people. Throug h this book, we meet people with "amusia" who hear grati ng no ise where others hear music, learn about a man whose me mory spans only seven seconds for everyth ing but music, explore how music can give words to stroke patients, and discover how a catchy tune can subject us to hours of mental replay. Beth, your librarian
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noor classroom at the Carnegie Centre. Thank you to all who have been attend ing and contributing to the meetings in recent mo nths. The purpose of steeri ng committee is to coordinate the activities of the Humanities I 0 I programme. As alumni of the programme your views and opinions are crucial to help g uide the course, we encourage you to come alo ng and offer your support. Humanities 10 1 Community Programme Dr. Margot Leigh Butler, Academic Director Paul Woodhouse, Programme Assistant Alison Rajah, Programme Coordinator Katherine Coburn, Writi ng 10 1 Coordinator
Free University
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Humanities 101 Community Programme Do you want to learn more about Writing, Critical Thinking, First Nations Studies, Literature, History &Politics, Art, Philosophy, Architecture, Music, Sociology, Gender Studies, Religions, Popular Culture & more? • • • •
Free university-level education for low income people with a passion for learning who live in & around the Downtown Eastside. There are 2 evening courses (on Tuesdays and/or Thursdays) : an 8 month course in the humanities and a 3 month Writing course. Students receive books, school supplies, student cards, transportation, meals, & child care if necessary. Your part is actively & regularly participating in class at UBC.
Information and applications at: Downtown Eastside Women's Centre, 302 Columbia St Thursday August 6th 1:30 - 3:00p.m Carnegie Centre, Main & Hastings- Thursday August 6th@ 4:00p.m The Gathering Place, 609 Helmcken- Friday August 7th 1:30-3:30 p.m Aboriginal Front Door, 384 Main St
Saturday August 8th 10:30-12:30 p.m
Recovery Club, 261 East 12th- Sunday August 9th 11:30-1:30 p.m Dr Peter Centre, 1110 Comox St- Monday August 1oth 10:00-11 :30 a. m Crabtree Corner, 533 East Hastings St- Monday August 10th 1:30-3:30 p.m For more information please call: Email: hum101 @interchange.ubc.ca
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604.822.0028 website: http: // humanities1 01.arts.ubc.ca
B.C. DAY INDIGENOUS GATHERING BEFORE Colonization/Canada THURSDAY, .JULY 27 2009 5:00 p.m.-7:00pm Grandview Park Commercial Drive
Indigenous people and friends invite you to share the beauty and truth of Indigenous history and culture before colonization. Sharing music, drumming, singing, women's warrior song. We invite you to bring your drums, guitars and spoken word pieces. We also will share with the homeless people living in the area. Please bring food to share i.e., boxes of fruit, sandwiches, frybread, flats of juice and clean sox to hand out. Discussion Topics: 1) Colonization, 2) Marginalization 3) Joseph Trutch. 4) Decolonizing
••••1 HUM101 JULY DOCUMENTARIES CARNEGIE THEATRE 6:00PM JULY 18 Uncovered: The Whole Truth About The Iraq War. & Outfoxed Rupert Murdoch 's War on Journalism JULY 25 WE BLUE UP TH E WTC No plane hi t the pentagon, Hello! & Sick, Wounded, Go Home And Die & William Pepper Hasta lA Victoria Simpre
CA RNEGIE VILLAGE PROJECT UPCOMING SUMMER INTENSIVE We had our last spring gathering June 13 and will be pausing for a summer break throughout July. In our gatherings we have been learning songs from our different ethnic and fami ly roots: English, Goan, Japanese, and Ukrainian, as well as the Rolling Stones' song, "As Tears Go By", a rock ballad from the 60's. So far we have been singing in English, Japanese, Ukrainian and Goan in unison and 2 part harmony. We have listened to a variety of songs generously offered by several participating si ngers with First Nations, German, musical theatre, sea shanty, English folk and 60's rock classic roots. We will resume regula r weekly meetings every monday from 1-3 pm. on September 14, mostly in the Carnegie Theatre. Check the poster for any change in location. 1n the fall sessions, we will also be learning a Chinese folksong, a German lullaby, a Japanese-Canadian song, a First Nations song, Afro-Canadian song and a labour song; as well as any new songs offered by Carnegie villagers. I have invited guest artists to teach and share their songsDalannah Bowen/Afro-Canad ian song; Olivier Wong/Chinese folksong, and Matthew Sheena/First Nations. In the summer, I will be offering 3 workshops on consecutive Mondays, August 17, 24 and 3151 from 1-3 pm in the Carnegie T heatre. In these wor kshops we will focus on building healthy voice production, in tune singing, deep listening a nd improvisationa l skills. Please pre-register at the noor office. I look fonvard to the opportunity to present our Carnegie Vi llage songs, stories and poetry as a work in progress during the Heart of the City Festival in October or November. Our final performance wi ll be either later this year or earl y in 20 10. Thank you to all Carnegie Villagers who have come to share, learn, listen and sing together. I look fonvard to a continu ing relationship. Beverly Dobrinsky Carnegie Artist in Residence Carnegievillage@gmail.com I" Floor Info.Desk or 604-665-2220/msgs carnegievillage.blogspot.com
Downtown Ambassadors will face --------~~--~ B.C. Human Rights Tribunal Pivot Legal Society and the Vancouver Area \ s+o oa Network of Drug Users 0' ~'!) have. . c~s\~~ ... successfully opposed an apphcallon to dts~tss human rights complaint made last July agamst the Downtown Ambassador program. Pivot and V ANDU brought the complaint to high light discriminatory practices and policies on the part of the Downtown Ambassador program. The Downtown Ambassador program is run by the private security company Genesis, and is funded by the Downtown Vancouver Busi ness Improvement Homeless deprived by HEAT shelter closing Association and the City of Vancouver. By Rolf Auer The PivotN ANDU complaint alleged systemic One of two City Homelcssness Emergency discrimination against homeless people by the Actio n Team's (HEAT) homeless shelters closed Ambassadors, who re move homeless people and on Wednesday, July 8 due to complaints from panhandlers from public streets and sidewalks by residents in the False Creek North area about that harassing them until they move along. shelter under the Granville Street bridge. The City of Vancouver and the Downto~n. ("Sleeping outside shelter's door," Ian Austin, The Vancouver Business Improvement AssoCiallon Province, July 9, 2009) argued that the compl aint o ught to be dismissed The other shelter in the vicinity is a lso under without a hearing, arguing that there was no similar pressure to close, and is o n "probation" prospect that the complaint could succeed and until the end o f July. ("Finding space for homeless therefore no benefit to allowi ng it to proceed. The remains a challenge," CTVBC.ca, Jul y 8, 2009) BIA also alleged that the complaint was filed for an Some of the homeless who were taking refuge in improper purpose and brought in bad faith. These the closed shelter were moved to other she lters in arguments were rejected by the Tribunal. the Downtown Eastside (DTES). Others refused to "This is an important case, and we are glad that the move, instead setting up camp in an alley behind Tribunal has decided to allow it to go to a full the closed shelter. hearing," says Laura Track, Pivot' s ho using . According to Wendy Pedersen, coordinator of the campaign lawyer. "Everyone has a right use pubhc Carnegie Community Action Project, the 30 or so space, and private interests shouldn't be allowed,~o people camping are from neighbourhoods other hire security guards to take control of that space .. than the DTES. 15 would move to shellers in the Of particular note in the j udgment was the fi~d路 ~g DTES as a last resort. The rest wouldn't move here by Tribunal Member Tonie Beharr~llt~al, wh1le 1t for any number of reasons, including that the area is not a human rights violation to d1scnmmate (for the m) acts as a trigger for their addiction against homeless people, Pivot could establi sh problems, or being afraid of being beaten up, or di scrimination has occurred if it can show that havi ng been barred from the area. homeless people are disproportionately Abo riginal, That some of the fo rmer shelter occupants have mentally ill, physically disabled or addicted. In taken to camping in the area wasn't w hat Terry fact, according to a 2005 City of Vancouver report, Kellog and other nearby residents "expected when 34% of homeless people are Aboriginal, compared they furio usly lo bbied the city to shut down the to 2% of the general population. That report shows Granville Street shelte r." that home less people also suffer extremely high " T m obviously quite upset about it,' said Ke llog, rates of mental illness, physical disability, and 55. ' It's really, really frustrating. This is a story addiction. that's being written about us bei ng rich and them Laura Track, Housing Campaign Lawyer, being poor. I'm just a construction worke r who
happened to keep his nose to the grindstone."' (Province article) . Kellog's attitude is typical of poor-bashmg. He- relatively well-off compared to the poorassumes poor people are lazy and just as capable as he is of findin g a nd keeping work, and attaining his middle-class sLandard of living. There's a famous quote by author Hcnnan Melville which exactly applies to thi s: "Of all the preposterous assumptions of humanity over humanity, nothi ng exceeds most of the criticisms made on the habits of the poor by the well -housed, well-warmed, and well-fed." Observations (Province article) by Mayor Gregor Robertson confinn Wendy Pedersen's infonnation: " ... some o f the ho meless aren' t willing to move to shelte rs in the DTES. 'Many of them have been Ji ving in thi s neighbourhood for years -they'd rather live outside downtown than move into a shelter or housing on the DTES. The only solution here is hous ing, and that [is] my focus, working with the provincia l government to create more spaces in more neighbourhoods. Until then, we 're Ji ving with a visible crisis on our streets."' Wendy Pedersen further said that mo re social housing is n eeded in all parts of the city. Cenain~y enough ho using should be built for the homeless 10 the DTES, but more housing is also required elsewhere for those who are homeless outside the DTES.
EViL DEWHR
224 affordable housing un
Why ? We all know that there is an affordable housing/ homelessness crisis in Vancouver. However something could be done very quickly to provide housing for about 700 people. Vancouverites must have noticed the 224 apartments boarded up around 36th and Main Street, an area called Little Mountain. Yes, about 700 people could Jive there. To renovate them would only costs about $10,000 per unit to make them fully usable said the form er director of the C ity of Vancouver Housing Department Cameron Gray. A bui lder has also confirmed this estimate. The Federal government has said that they have infrastructure money speci fically targeted for the refurbishing of social housing and have been waiting to hear from the BC Ho using Corporation as to how much they would need. Why is the Minister of Housing not fixin g up the Little Mountain Housing Project? What are they waiting for?? About 12 uni ts are still occupied and the last residents are being bullied to get out. Yesterday I was at Little Mountain and a middle-aged woman came running across the lawn in deep distress saying that BCHC subcontractors had tom o ut her washing machine and the mai lbox. Then 1 saw men removing stoves and fridges in excellent conditi~n from an empty unit. 1 tried to block the move wtth my bicycle and was informed that they had the right to take out the appliances. The day before they took a chain saw to a unit next to a unit in which an elder women was recuperating from an operation. Too many people need housing (over 15,000 people are on the BCHC wait list) but can't afford the rents even in the SRO's because income assistance on ly pays $375 for shelter. Today's report on the City of Vancouver shelters are that they are all full and there arc over a thousand people still
homeless and thousands more at risk of homelessness. The Salvation Army has just released a report saying that 113 of the men in their shel ters are working. Little Mountain is a project that has housing ready to be used in short order. The developer Holbum , has no immediate plans to develop the site and even if he did it wou ldn't be built for many years. This week BC Housing Corporation was accepting applications from companies who want the contract to demolish this Project yet they do not yet have a City of Vancouver permit to demolish. The Minister of Housings has millions to spend on homelcssncss, so he can surely find some money to
renovate all the Lillie ntain units and provide immediate ho usi ng for 700 people in desperate need of a roof above their heads. Ellen Woodsworth Vancouver City Councillor
Open Letter to BC Housing To Shane Ramsey, CEO of BC Housing BC Housing has started demolishing the homes at Little Mo untain, with no demolition permit. There are no plans or dates for new construction, no dates for re-zoning consultations, no plans or dates for com munity consultations and it does not look as if the deal with the developer is even still o n. It is
very clear that no new construction will happen for years to come. Th is week, demolition crews came in without warning, right next door to where tenants are still li ving, took chainsaws to the interiors of the vacant units, ripped out appliances, fixtures and pipes. Pe rfectly habitable homes are being destroyed. We, the tenants who are still at Little Mountain, remain here for compelling personal, fami ly, economic and social needs, not because we are being difficult tenants. We require the following immediate measures: Reinstate security on the site; repair outside lights; and secure uninhabited buildings. Relocate all tenants within close proximity in the South-East area of the site. Stop the destruction and dismantling of those units outside of the fenced area. And further, stop any and all illegal demolition of homes. The actions that BC Housing has taken thi s week are tantamount to eviction by fear and intimidation. In the letter addressed to Little Mountain tenants on June I , 2009, BC Housing stated, "The application for these permits wi ll not affect your te nancy at this Lime[.] you wi ll notice that there will be increased activity on the site in the coming weeks, once the appropriate permits are issued." We submit that there has never been a good reason to displace the tenants during the redevelopment. A phased project would have accommodated all who wanted to remai n in the community and on the site. We recognize that your continued pressure on us to move has now escalated to harassment and intimidation. Si nce this site is o nl y the first of many to be redeveloped, we fear that the actions of BC Housing may set a precedent for the treatment of many o ther tenants. Displacement and intimidati on of tenants must not be repeated here or in any futu re development. Sincerely, The remaining tenants of Little Mountain CC: Rich Coleman, Minister of Housing Dale McMann, Regional Director of BC Housing Vancouver Mayor and Council Shane Simpson, Housing Critic Don Davies, MP Vancouver Kingsway Mable E lmore, MLA Vancouver Kensington Libby Davies, MP Vancouver East
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Help Transform a Neighbourhood with a Social Enterprise at Woodward's Non-profit organizations a re invited to respond to a Request for Proposal (RFP) for a social enterprise business opportunity in the exciting new Woodward's development at Hastings and Abbott Street. The RFP is open to any Vancouver-based non-profit organization with a social, cultural or artistic mandate that wishes to operate a social enterprise in a retail space. A social enterprise business is a non-profit organization which sells goods or provides services to provide both a financial and social return on investments. The final selection is subject to approval by Vancouver City Council. Details are available in the RFP package which must be picked up in person at 300-515 West 1Oth Avenue, Vancouver, BC. Deadline for RFP subm issions is Friday, July 31 , 2009 at 4 pm .
INFORMATION: 604.873.7438 or van co uver.ca/bps/realestate
W2 forced to leap through another hurdle By Nate Medd W2 Media Arts Centre--an initiative bringing together a mix of arts and Downtown Eastside service organizations under one roof for training, collaborations, events--has a new hoop to jump through. Before it moves in to the space that it was awarded in 2006 by the Woodward's Community Advisory Commillee and Vancouver city council, it has to compete a second time for a ground-level section of its floorplan. W2 is expected to move in A cafe at Woodward's that W2 created and designed is now being offered up in a public request for proposals (RFP) by the City of Vancouver as a social-enterprise opportunity. At City Hall , concern arose over W2's limited formal business experience toward managing its enti re space, a community amenity from the project's developer, Westbank. As designed, the cafe represents W2's front porch, a public entrance connecting its approved basement and second floor spaces. Over the past 14 months, the W2 Cafe was designed with the support of the City of Vancouver's real estate services department. The cafe would serve as a social enterprise, employing a minimum of 12 Downtown Eastside residents, and bringing local people into W2's interior spaces. The Cafe and the adjacent community lounge are important spaces that W2 has protected as public gathering space for Downtown Eastside residents. Importantly, the cafe would also generate revenues to subsidize W2's public programs and operating costs. In initiating an innovative, shared hub for some of the neighbourhood's important nonprofit organizations, W2 has demonstrated its pcrseverence and ability to learn on the job throug hout the development process. If we agree that W2 was awarded its place at Woodward's fairly in the first place, and that the cafe forms a vital part of its business and programming plan, let's hope this new competition conrirms it as the most-deserving tenant. The development, the DTES, and the participating organizations will all be better for it.
Vanishing Baseball Diamond In the nineteen eighties; I remember playing baseball at Oppenheimer almost every day Kids, teens, old folks even hitting, catching, throwing, running Fans filled the stands with laughter Families gathered and picnicked after But then, in the nineties; needles were found in left field Crack stench invaded the diamond Knives, police, blood Children couldn't be there The gate to the stands was locked Still we hoped for games again one day City planners developed plans presented them in "public consultations" Downtown Eastsiders said "No. That's not what we war Planners proceeded with their plans Dismantled dugouts took out the stands Cherry trees appeared in right field Weeds sprouted on the infield Another hope vanished Leith Harris
"A Changin"' A changin' - It is a time for change In a world that's riddled with lies -a world deranged Mentored by twisted religious beliefs that have brought destructive gods, false heavens - even thieves Troubled hearts whither in pain and fade away In a dim light losin' - losin' power of life Struggles blindly unshackle lost souls Of those who idolize money, power and fame Ensnared dis-ease plagues the unconscious minds Whose conscious/subconscious psyche is material-ized Their spirits wander ad disappear into a void Where revolutionary cycles search for imminent change
A changin' -it's time to move on - rearrange Too many from our earth mother have become estrang. Neglected and tom up in pieces -the land's spirit cries Elders have warned - they speak scenarios of demise Stolen lives of children taken from their own truths Must corroborate 'n reacquire innocence lost in youth When laws of Nature guided carefully in this universe Find some delicate balance to stop the evil curse Uncover lost realities of the past to make amends Heal the mind/body in pain which seems not to end In this day of urgency let knowledge awaken Ancient wisdom unforgotten for all life's worth -now rearrange All our relations, William Arnold Combes and May K.
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LITTERATURE Canada Post mo rtem. Mediabortion. Dotcompost. You ninCOMpoops. Afghanicide effect. Boozeacidc neglect. Suislidc- Playlands newest ride. Chemical plantatio n. Inanimate castration. Waiting for Parts 4 & 5 fro m Playstation. Knock knock who's therc?-Empty people plenty scared. Silting Prelly Silting Bully. All star apart. Love will tear us apartheid . Yi lilied. Hands all Lied . They promised you a ride (didn 't they) Democracy is both mocked & Crazy. Crazy Horse. South star means way off course. The New Vancouver Times on sale wherever Dotcomland is or is not in service was ... Halfmast apologies. Up Up off those bent knees. Fasten your drinking belt. Bible belt with real welts. Domino infection. In fact no directions. up. down down is up one needs support either hose or a cup. Stockade market & their digital people countdown .. it came & went without a sound. Deceit keep all receipts: Back to your cell-u-lar; lockdown before dawn. Countdown till I'm gone. 1.' Deathbed confession. Deathcoll recession. Aowerlire ahead they grow them up there ! Dripping with blindness. Beware tho e random axe of kindness. Again the square root of evil laughs at your despair. Practitioner of despair disappears into thick air. (thin ai r rides for free) "and it' s time for the Humil iation Jublice!!" like brushing death 's hair, it's time that Time gets what it deserves. This is no Bang Bang You Are Dead child's game so 1"11 be running along faster than I can ever dream Well W ell well here comes oflicer down he looks up to his enemies & down to his friends - he also !0 heads the Jubilee. HOORAY for you, coflin s for us Shaped like atrocious glillering buses with several seats thanking you ; tried looking out the back window just bedbugs, rent-a-thugs, chicks with mugs ... of beer. This Mugs hot is for you . The sellish the blemished doesn't every child hate cops, busdrivers & dentists? I didn ' t in vent this Hell you helped it along just so you'd have leverage - if the sun goes down it's my tum to drown. My future just passed before my eyes so it is time for goodbye. B y ROBERT McGILLIVRAY
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The documentary (july 2"d at Yancity theatre) was a disappointment for me as I had anticipated returning for a panel discussion that would have more anal ysis. !left at the begi nning when a heterosex ual woman was interviewed and stereotypically portrayed as a victim of childhood ra pe. This is not always why women turn to prosti tution. We know that there arc race and class differences amongst women and that lack of mo ney limits people's choices. We know that these differences (not to mention competition) often contribute to a sadly lacking solidarity. Many of the hookers in this documentary of 25 years ago were transsexual. The theme of "hookers" seemed to present us with a fa lse sense o f an allied community in solidarity. A fraudul ent image of hookers in solidarity is an image which panellist Jamie-Lee Hamilto n likes to portray. I think that Jamie-Lec likes to overplay the race and transsexual victim of discrimination card . The presence of Ellen Woods worth and Libby Davies was noted. For me, however, the ir notoriety cannot erase the hypocrisy of Jamic-Lee Hamilton. Thank you to the Georgia Straight, June 18-25, for printing the article by Joyce Arthur (cofounder of FIRST) entitled "20 I 0 sex traffi cking a myth" which had a critical analysis beyond the stagi ng of self-interested drama [a Ia Hamilton]. By Maggie Maud
No matter how vicious the System is the War on Terror War on Drugs War on the Poor are afflictions and affliction means causing pain and suffering and I am a human being like so many who have known affliction in my family in my nerves in my thoughts in my heart and in the community of the poor indeed this global economy turns its hand against me again and again all day long and it has besieged and surrounded me with bitterness and hardship with isolation and self-destruction and self-centredness this global economy has made me live in powerlessness like those long dead it has walled me in so that I cannot escape it it has weighed my heart down with chains and with thoughts it has inflicted into me so that I become this system of oppression
I make scapegoats 01 otners I hate and I resent and I fear and I am greedy and even when I have called out or cried for help my voice and my wounds are managed by the system this system of development and theft has blocked my life with meetings and techniques of exclusion and control it has made all my paths hopeless and like a rapist hiding in the shadows like a serial killer offering a hand and a smile this system drags me from the path of real life and mangles me and leaves me without help for my heart for my life for my soul this system of tourism and globalization this system of war against 'terror' and the poor bearing down where I live makes me a target for business for governments and shadow governments for news media for free trade and economic warfare the system has pierced my heart with lies and my voice and my anguish and my loneliness become as nothing I become a laughingstock to this system
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it mocks me in entertainment all day long it mocks me in newspapers magazines television movies and advertising it has filled me with self-contempt and stuffed me with resentment it has broken my teeth with indifference and crushed me into fantasies and I have no idea what true relationship is the system reduces me reduces my imagination my hopes my dreams reduces me to the size of a disappearing welfare cheque reduces me to a consumer of death but I remember my affliction I remember with bitterness and fear I well remember and my soul is knifed within me yet I also bring something else to mind and therefore I have hope because of our deep and hidden and oppressed love for one another deeper than any economics of greed and madness no we are not completely dehumanized or entirely turned against each other for true compassion never fails compassion is new every morning compassion means suffering with the one who is different than us the one who is most like us and from compassion comes hope and life is good if we seek to be compassionate if we seek to understand the other person and life is good if we seek to help each other without conditions and life is good no matter how vicious the system is if we use our own suffering to understand others who are in pain and life is good if we live to defend others who are weaker and more powerless and more afflicted than ourselves and compassion suffers together not in isolation as this system would make us believe and life is good if we become for others the brother or sister we may never have had and life is good if we realize that our lives are not all right if the lives of others whom we fear
are distressed or degraded and life is good if we can see beyond the reach of the system that our lives depend on the lives of others so perhaps it is not the worst thing that this system strips us of everything except what we have in our hearts for we are not to be without
qA-.c.Nl=fF<"' what our hearts most deeply desire love and care and though we now live grief-stricken and terrorized so powerful is compassion that it will overcome this global system this system denying us our full lives we will overcome because we live differently than the system intends for us we lie in cooperation and compassion and we have arisen and we have come alive and we are resisting BudOsbom 路Signs of the Times Anvil Press, 2005
Dear Mayor and Council: It was my honour to appear before your worship and the Council o n behalf of CFR and a lo ng li st of others on June I. After our presentation there is a growing interest in seeing New W estminster taking a constructive response to our in vitation to a process of reconciliation. Apart from out of town docu-mentary teams interviewi ng me and others within last two weeks, more have expressed interest in BC's and New Westminster's history with respect to the C hinese. The Premier also wrote on June 22 regardi ng our proposals with respect "to ackno wledging the history of the C hinese community in our Province- and specifically the City of New Westminster". Locally a class in NWSS has taken on the subject but the ensuing discussio n, while e nlighten ing to some, also upset others who felt the historical truth had been withheld from them. The Roya l City Record also did a poll on June 13 asking "D o you think the C ity sho~ld make amends with the Chi nese community for 1ts past treatment of Chinese citi zens?". I was informed by the paper the results were 69% for and 3 1% against the suggestion. With three white persons beating up a coloured person in Courtney while muttering racial slurs a week ago, we are reminded o f racism today, of the likelihood that many si milar incidents did not get caug ht on tape, and the big need for British Columbians to do all we can to exorcise the evil within our communities. As me ntioned before we did not target New Westminster, any more tha~ the o ne taping the above incident targeted Courtney. O ur attempt to reveal the historical truth is s impl y to set New Westminster and BC free via a process o f reconci liation. Despite a few voices in denial
undoubted ly fro m the 3 1% in your community, we hope you working with the Prov ince w ill provide the leadership for all cities in BC, as rac ism against Chinese and others was endemic all over BC fo r a century. For the sake o f all, that history of racis m has to be publicly acknowledged and detested so that last week's incident in Courtney will not be repeated again. We appreciate New Westminster has contributed partly towards the publishing of the book "Yi Fu". However the book has limited readership and contains no official expression of remorse. We als appreciate New Westminster, like other BC cities, for taking a cultural and financ ial interest in Chim However unless the C ity equates inviting C irque c Solei I as reconciling with Quebec, it should not view inviting Chinese cultural performers in its parade as acknowledgement o f the City's dark history toward s Ch inese. The same can be said o f the City's effort to get millions of dollars from C hinese foreign students' tuitions, establishing friendship city with city in C hina, etc ... Those are financial decisions and have nothing to do with remorse or public historical acknowledgement. Without expressing remorse and public histo rical acknowledgeme nt, those latter actio ns merely suggest the C ity acted terribly towards Ch inese when C hina was poor, but became suddenly fri endl y to Chinese when China is rich. Is that the image you wish New W estminster to be reme mbered by the world and the 2010 Olympic visitors? On behalf of CFR, seven other Chinese Canadi. organisations and 84 individuals who endorsed c letter to your worship and Counci l on May 2 1, I would appreciate learn ing the resolutions made I Council to our request indicated via our letter an presentation before council. As mentioned befor there is still a bit of time to do something really good and transformative for New Westminster a this Province. The choice is still yours. Yours tru ly, Bill Chu C hair & Founder, Canadians For Reconciliatior Bee: Premier's office, MLA Ben Stewart, MLA Margaret MacD iarmid, MLA Dawn Black, Ml Jenny Kwan, community leaders, media, board
Hi Paul, what is the newsletter's circulation size these days - how many people and organizations is it distributed to? And how big is its circulation range? Thanks Hi Savannah,
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The current print run is 1200 copies, 23 times a year on the I" & 15'h (no paper on January I ). Distribution in the Downtown Eastside is done via leaving copies at places frequented by local people: I " Church, VANDU, Native Health, the Neighbourhood House, Sheway, the Skills Centre on Cordova across from Oppenheimer, Living Room, the Powell Street Clinic, the Lookout, Evelyne Saller centre, the welfare o ffi ces at Powell and Main, the Listening Post, Pathways, lnsite, Co-op Radio, Pigeon Park Savi ngs, DERA, the Women 's Centre, the Dugout and even the Fire Station. Robyn Livingstone has his own distribution route that includes places on Commercial Drive, Vancouver Commun ity College, ARA Mental Health, Simon Fraser, UBC profs and places he's discovered during Hum I 0 I, the Rhizome cafe and :>ther places. Bundles go to the Gathering Place, the Roundneuse and a steady supply to Humanities 10 I, UBC It gets mailed to Libby and her consti tuency offi ce (same wi th Jenny) and copies go to the mayor and council, Central and Social Planning departments, the VPLibrary, CEEDS farm s, Bob & Muggs and cohorts on Hornby and to the Wisconsin Historical Society in Madison - they have an archive of all 'street' and 'alternative' papers in North America. It was going to some high schools for the poetry and "a window on the Downtown Eastside" and the book The Heart of the Community: The Best of the Carnegie Newsletter has been involved in the curricula of courses at UBC, SFU, Langara and Kwantlen ... that I know of. It has gone to England, A ustria, South Africa and the Philippines and has been seen in the airport in Beijing. The websi te at www.carnnews.org gets visited 373 times a day but that number came up in conversation the day before I learned how to find out the number of 'hits' so it' s kind of dubious. What's really cool is that the head of a company called The History Group called here in 2005 and
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said her people wanted to do some volunteer work in the dtes. The lirst take on that is usually a thought on whether 'they' are dilettantes or altruistic or maybe sincere. I didn ' t know (or ask) why here but l get information calls about Carnegie in general. Anyway, her business is to do research and develop timelines and paper trails about companies, neighbourhoods, organisations, etc. And the only thing I could think of was ''I'd really like to get an index done of the Carnegie Newsletter, so people could lind stuff and get their work from whenever in a bundle and students could do research online. She astounded me by saying ''That sounds good; we can do that!" The work was to index 20 years of the Newsleuer, every article, poem, graphic, etc. We met and she brought li ve staff, each of whom have a degree in lields of Computer Science, Sociology, Political Science, Urban Geography, Social Work, Bus iness Administration ... and live volunteers, each of whom was either a senior or graduate student at UBC/SFU in the same or related fields as the paid people. Each took a year or two of my archived papers and committed to entering stuff in a database designed by their computer guy. It was identiealto the ones standard in university libraries worldwide, to e nable access by any competent inquirer with fields to overlap like newsletter articles do in regards to subjects covered in single articles. (It's part-and-parce l to talk about homclessness with poverty with hou sing with politics with neoliberalis m with classism with sexism with drug issues and mental health and artistic expressions in all of 'em and more.) .... anyway, it got done and is hosted on Simon Fraser Library's mainframe under an umbrella acronym of C HODARR. The link is: http://harvestcrs.sfu.ca/chodarr The whole last paragraph was to kind of answer the question of 'how big is its circu lation range?' With the vi rtual reality o f cyberspace, I have no idea how many or from where readers are. O ne point is that the paper began on August 15, 1986 with 12 pages in 60 copies made on an o ld photocopier upstairs. On its 23'd birthday- August 15,2009- it' ll be 20-28 pages in 1200 copies and read by thousands/hundreds of thousands/ milli.. maybe!!! PauiR Taylor, editor s ince December 15. 1QRn
GET CLEAN! Shower up at the
L~rd's
-"Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has." -Margaret Mead
Rain
There is a shower facili ty at Gospel Mission, 327 CarraUStreet (just off Pigeon Pa rk). There a re towels, soap, shampoo - the works! & Coffee Modayn: lOam - Jpm; Tuesday: 7 - 8:30am; Wednesday (Ladies' Day): lOam - Noon Friday: lOam - Jpm; Saturday: 7 - lOam
We acknowledge that Carnegie Community Centre, and this Newsletter, are occurring on Coast Salish Territory.
CFRO 102. 7FM CO-OP RADIO Next issue is July 31 51
.. SUBMISSION DEADLINE
Tuesday, July 28 401 Main SITed. V6A. 2T7
THIS NEWSLETrER IS A..PUBUCATION OF THE
C4.RNEGIE COMMUNITY CENTltE ASSOCIATION Articles rq>ramtlhe 'fio:ws or 18dirichoal Caatribotors aad DOt oldoe ~
Ed itor: PauiR Taylor ; Layout assistance, Lisa David Collation & distrib ution crew: Bill, Liu Lin, Harold, Mary Ann, Miriam, Kelly, Videha, Ro lf, Priscillia, Roby n, Nick, J ackie, Ma tth ew, Ida, Nicole, Lisa.
TIM STEVENSON CITY COUNCILLOR SERVING THE COMMUNITY WITH PRIDE
CHANGE OF ADDRESS!!! Menta l Health Action Research Advocacy As of Monday, July 6, our new address will be 163 West Pender Street (it's a storefront at the sidewalk !) Phone# 604-689-7938 remai ns the same. WANTED Artworlt for the Ozmep News~ttu
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Small il1ustralions to aa:ompany articles and
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Cover art -Maximum size: 17cm(6-314") wile X 15cm(6") ligh. SUbjed ma11er relevant to issues pertaining to the Downtown Eastside preferred, but al work will be cmsidered; Black & White pMting only Size res1rictions must be considered ft.e. I your piece is too large, it wiD be reduced and/or aopped to lit; AI artists wil receive aedil for their work; Originals wit be returned to the artist after being copied for pubficatioo; Remuneration: Carnegie volunteer tickets.
poetry •
City Hall, 453 W 121h Ave, V5Y 1V4 Phone: 604-873-7247
Jenny Wai Ching Kwan MLA Working for You 1070 - 1641 Commercia l Dr, VSL 3Y3 Ph one:604-77~0790
Law Students' Legal Assistance Program
LSLAP: Carnegie hours T uesdays: 2pm-5pm and 6pm - 8pm Wed-Fri: 10am-12pm and 1pm-4 pm
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Please make submissions to: Paul Taylor, Editor. 200g DONATIONS: Barry M.-$150, Libby D.-$70, Rolf A.-$50, Margaret D.-$40, Jenny K.-$25, Sue K.-$30, Michael C.-$50, Jay a B.-$100, Christopher R.-$180, Mel L.-$25, Greta P.-$25, Leslie S.-$25, Harvey B.-$25, Sheila B.-$20, The Edae ·$200, Wilhelmina M.-$30, Anonymous $1500 Anne P.-$50
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Festival Weekend
POWELL STREET FESTIVAL
HIGHLIGHTS
11 :30- 7:00, Saturday & Sunday, August 1 & 2
Singing a nd drumming collaboration between Sawagi Taiko and Fi rst Nations performa nce group Tiqilap * Contemporary cha mber music by Tiresias * Martia l arts de monst rat ions Screening of Empty Orches tra: video collaborations between ka raoke singers and new media a rtists * Perfo rmances by Vancouver Asian Canadian Theatre, dan ce r Aretha Aoki (BCJUSA), Kokoro Dance (Vancouver). Performa nce duo Elfin Saddle (Montreal), and conte mporary taiko perfo rmer Kenny Endo (USA) Documentari es by Tadashi Nakamura * Lite rary readin gs by Asian Canadia n wri ters * Historical Wa lking Tours
33rd Annual Powell St ree t Festival All events are FREE to the public! For info or to volunteer, please call 604.739.9388 The Powell Street Fest1val
IS
the largest Jap anese Canadian fest•val and
the longest running commum t y celebrat ion 1n Vancouver ! Enjoy traditional and contemporary Japanese Canad1an performances. includ ng taiko drumm1ng, sumo wrestling, marUa arts demos, fo'k and modern dance. alternat1ve pop/rock/urb an mus•c. v1sual ar ts, f•lm/video, as well as a fantast•c array o f Japanese food. crafts & d isplays.
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Little boy entranced by Chibi Taiko's performance at the 2008 fest ival.
FOR 2009 OriLY, NEW LOCATION: WOODLAND PARK
E Pender St
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Frances St
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TRACES: PROJECTING NEI G HBOU RHOOD STO RIES Woodland Park (700 Woodland Drive, Vancouver)
Frances St
Adanac St
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Saturday, August 1, 9:1 5pm, Free night-time screening Traces: Projecting Neighbourhood Stories is a l ivi ng history project Strathcona and Downtown Eastside (DTES) neighbo urhoods. Fusing video, animation and shadow puppetry, youth and arti sts collaborated in creating multi-media artworks based on conversations wi th long-time neighbou rhood res idents. As dusk sets in at 9:15pm on Saturday, Augusl ·1st, Shout!WhiteDragon warms up the stage w ith b luegrass tunes before the screenings at 9:45pm. Pre-festiva l screenings also held on july 24 and 25, 9:00pm, corner of Hastings and jackson Streets
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E Georgia St
\(V ) ART AGAINST BRUTALITY A rt Against Brutality was introduced into our community as a day-long multimedia celebration of the triumph of art against the brutal conditions we are forced to accommodate in the course of our dai ly lives as poor people moving through and excluded from one of the richest places in the world. T he event took place in Oppenheimer Park in September of 2005 and again in the next year. There was music and food and a huge labyrinth of oppression where people were free to di splay their artistic statements around the various themes. Community groups had their own displays; there were games and prizes and a tree hung with poems. The organisers were told, w hen 2007 rolled around, that the park was going to be closed for renovations and so would not be available that year. This was not a tragedy, as the idea had been picked up by such unlikely groups as the A nti-Poverty Commi ttee, who have held several wonderful art auctions and unleashed a whole wave of creativity in their membership. M ost communi ty groups have some sort of arts and crafts programs. T here is even a push on to have a permanent dtes art market at the weekl y M ain Street [at Term inal] farmers market. This is good, mostly, as long as we remember that
using art as a tactic of social control pre-dates even advertising. Propaganda, false assurances and Oust as likely) false hysteria are di sseminated by the media on a regular basis, along with an assuredly spu_rious and morbid interest in the personalities, antiCS, and banal (and often brutal) gossip about movie, sports and music persona. Art can be used to seduce and distract those who might be disturbed by what the images we are offered conceal, and those who might question what is really happening in our vicinity and around the world. In our neighbourhood, the fence around Oppenheimer Park has been up for weeks now. A meeting to discuss the situation with Park staff on T hursday, July 9, was poorly announced but sti ll managed to attract a number of concerned people Park programs are continuing on D unlevy and at a few other venues, but what is sorely missed is the green space. J so want to trust park staff w hen they cla1m they share our feel ings that the complete closure of the park i s unacceptable. T hey are vowing now to push back from the comer they were pushed into by the park board's inflexible schedule and to con front them with the concerns that have been brought up. Seeing that the park board has already expressed i ts disdain for our community process, even to the extent of threatening to cancel the project i f it was not carried out as they decreed, I'm not at al l confident that we w ill be able to reach any kind of compromise. I 'm certainly wonderi ng who else was involved in these decisions. The fact that permits were issued for the digging up of the park and the erection of the perimeter fence and this work carried out B EFORE the building permits had been approved is one more blot on the credibility of this project. It could be a while before the permits are in place. In fact, there is no good reason why the work needed to start now or that the park should be closed, other than the reasons of social control; to ~in ~mize po~sible sites where homeless people and d1sstdents mtght gather before the O lympics. Art Agai nast Brutality is happening again, now, with a clear focus, and the fence is huge. H ere's your chance to express your opin ion about the gentrification of our community and the imposition of the Oly mpics. I f enough of us art out, maybe we' ll be listened to. B y DELANYE AZRAEL
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