June 15, 2010, carnegie newsletter

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JUNE 15, 2010

NATIONAL ABORIGINAL DAY

Remember 500+ years, Ancestral Wisdom, recent tragedies, present struggles & fostering hope for all our futures.


Celebrate National Aboriginal Day in Oppenheimer Park Four days! Friday-Monday, June 18-21 51 Theme: "Healing" Performances, a Kids Day, Pow Wow, Teepee Storytelling & more! Info: Marlene George (604) 665-3005

and: g'mama granddaughter friend sis cuz daughter auntie ally niece ex

and ... just ma just me... ka1

llycltka siem to the Creator.. llflllltl ay squeyul It's my birthday today & I just wanted to thank you all for being such wonderful friends, & to my women fr iends .. lening you know I respect your warrior spi rits, to my guy friends for being there for me .. to my family .. for trying so hard & being such hard working people and so good to your friends .. To celebrate the day one was born is taking on a new meaning for me .. as I am now a grandmother & I realize that I'm the same person but with self-work & counseli ng over the years to today .. realizing & accepting, more importantly. acknowledging that I've sure come a long way on my healing journey.

The road ever changes & some days it's all uphill. .. or feels that way til I realize that I am the one to instill a change in myse lf & my heart. Life has become so much more important & just as importantly, so are my friendships, & my relationship to family. Rez school affected my ability to allow people to get too close & my way has been to be ... loving n friendly but surface "hey!how'si tgoinseeyou later! " To protect myself & my soul, for many reasons ..l've learned. But I want yo u to know that inside ... you've always been in my heart & I truly do care. miss you when I don't see you and I've also watched your accomplishments & your life changes. ... I've stepped back from a lot of my activities .. to wo rk towards bonding with my adult chi ld ren & my grandchi ldren & family. I've kept busy as I know I should for the good.. but maybe it's been a bit too much to avo id what I'm not sure yet.. possibly the closeness that I've never got used to .. but I don't want to miss any more . Resenting these rez school life impacts won't do me any favors .. but working towards mending the holes n tears..(tares and leers) and not against.. can only serve towards a more whole purpose and heart .. & hopefully heal and fill the holes that have impacted my chi ldren. I know I've done the best I can ... as we all truly believe .. and say. but.. I know I can do better now ..for them .. for me .. for the hearts and well-being of my grandchildren. so that they can too. one day be there fo r my beloved people. They should not have to learn about li fe the hard way that I've had to, like many of us have had to .. to pay for the si ns of co lonization. it's still one step at a time ... but as long as I'm workin it.. life's gonna be okay and .. better! Love to you all. .. Zuco mulwa t..Kat No rris Coast Salish. Lyackson First Nation Nez Perce, Colville Confederated Tribes.


TELLING QUOTES

In Honour of Phillipa

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It was the deliberate practice of our friars to take the savage babies and baptize them. whereupon their little 0 warm-hearted angel heads and brains were dashed upon the ground, so that You are now spirit -guide for us all they would immediately reach heaven and not backslide into heathenism. The days once spent Fra. Bartolomeode Las Casas, A an路er Account of the Devason earth are tation of the Indies, 1542 more than a fad ing meory It is exped ient that there be no peace at all between Establ ished was your time our Huron brothers and their neighbors, for this is as a testament what is required by the Faith and the fur trade. for j ustice, concern, - Jean deBrebeuf, Jesuit missionary, New France, 1642 friendship and passion If the unbeliever still does not repent, it is the task of As here your material being the church to save the comm unity by expel li ng the we have mourned in passing heretic fro m the world by death. Let us all then hope for - Thomas Aquinas, 1267 help into a brighter future, There is but one Holy Catholic Church, outside of < -So thank you, Phillipa. which there is no salvation. Both the spiritual and the and love always. material swords are in the hands of the Church. The K'May Luder spiritual is wielded by the Church, the material for the l!!l;;;;;~p=====~ Church. It is thus necessary for salvation for every ~ creature to be subject to the Roman Pontiff. - Pope Boniface Vlll, 1302 To invade, search out. capture, vanquish, and subdue all Saracens and pagans whatsoever, and other enemies of Christ wheresoever placed ... and to reduce their persons to perpetual sl avery .. . who put the poison in my baby bonle? - Papal Bull Romanus Pontifex, 1455, authorizing why do you want to get rid of me? the conquest of the non-Christian world an innocent tike like myself, smothered without love I'm Irene Fa vel. I' m seventy five. I went to residenBig smile - happy as can be, hate to die tial school in Muscoweq uan in Saskatchewan from Ind ian Residential School stole my spi rit away 1944 to 1949, and 1 had a rough li fe. I was mistreated in every way. Locked me up in a box, only to be forgone n mine heart turned to stone -scared out of my mi nd There was a young girl, and she was pregnant from a priest there. And what they did, she had her baby, and . Couldn't walk or run away - I'm hog-tied forever. they took the baby, and wrapped it up in a nice pin k Mine older days awaken .. . no longer asleep outfit, and they took it downstai rs where I was cookstilll'm lost, can' t find my way out of intoxication ing dinner with the nun. And they took the baby into a day wi ll pass when my drunken mind wi ll sober up the furnace room, and they threw that linle baby in when that comes, perhaps I'll be a bener person. there and burned it al ive. All you could hear was th is It's a dire shame to look at me some days linlc cry. like 路'Uuh!" and that was it. You could smell drunk n shabby as a cursed bottle of stale wi ne that flesh cooking. Couldn't help but real ize I stagger -still overdosed C BC Town Ha ll Forum, Regina July 3, 2008 Oh stupid individual, you tried to kill me th other nite Lying in a coma can't respond- almost died overdosed! overdosed! overdosed! All my relati ons, Will iam Arnold Combes


Downtown Eastsicle Photography Contest if I lost you

COMMUNITY VOTE Where to see photos and vote: Outsid e Ca rn egie: Monday, June 28, I lam - 3pm Tuesday. June 29, I lam - 3pm Oppenheimer Park: Wed nesday, June 30, 10 :30 - I :30 Pigeon Park: Monday. July 5, noon - 3pm If you participated in the contest you can pick up your

photos from Pivot, 678 E Hastings; 604- 255-9701

PI

OT

HOPE IN SHADOWS

equality lifts everyone

Portraits of our Commzmit_Y

www.pivotlegal.org

\Vww. h opc i nsh<~dows.co m

I might find you I would hold you

in my arms I will always remember because I can never fo rget Hara


Ca rnegie Community Centre Association Annual Genera l Meeting ELECTION RESULTS Of the 42 ballots that were cast. 36 were good and 6 were spoiled.

Carnegie Community Centre Association Board and Committee Meetings Education/Library Committee

Wednesday, June 16'" 3 p.m., Seminar Room

Community Relations Committee

Thursday, June 24"' 4 p.m., Association Office

Program Committee

Tuesday, June 291" 4 p.m., Association Office

Candidates

Votes Received

Result

Colleen Carroll Gena Thompson Priscillia Tait James Pau Phoenix Winter Adrienne Macallum Lisa David Sandra Pronteau Craig Hathaway Pat McSherry Magnolia Villalobos Douglas Dunn Ben Rampre Diane Tobin Ann Livingston Scott Gentes

35 34 34 33 33 32 32 32 30 29 28 27 25 24 21 19

elected elected Finance Comm ittee elected elected elected CCCA Board Meeting elected elected elected elected elected elected elected elected elected elected not elected

BOARD EXECUTIVE President: Vice-President: Secretary: Treasurer: Member At Large:

Gena Thompson Sandra Pronteau Adrienne Macallum Colleen Carroll Craig Hathaway

Thank you to all the Carnegie members who participated in the AGM and helped to elect the Board of Directors for the comi ng year. The next Carnegie Board meeting is scheduled to be he ld on Thursday, July I" at 5:30p.m. in the Theatre. All members are welcome to participate. Respectfully submitted, Lisa David

"

Wednesday, June 30'" 4 p.m .. Association Office Thursday, July Is 5:30p.m., Theatre


Small Arts Grants Celebration A multi..cfisciplinary arts event to celebrate the works of some of the

News from the LibrarY New Boo l<s Did you ever look at a Vancouver landmark and wonder what it looked Iike 30 year, or 50 years. or I00 years earlier? Francis Mansbridge did. and produced a book, Vancouver Then and Now (97 1.1 3) that shows side-by-side photos of the way th ings look now. and the way things looked back then. T here are some great photos of Carrall and Water _S treets in 1886. before the fire that destroyed much of Vancouver, of Woodward's in 1903, and the Beacon Theatre (now site of the Portland l lote l), where unti I the 1950s acts included Frank Sinatra. Roy Rogers and Trigger and the "Boy Mental Wizard''. Fro~ 13russels sprouts to Bullock' s heart. from rice to rhubarb, Th e New O.>..ford Booli of Food Plants (633) is a beautiful ly illustrated guide to the plants we u se for cooking. salads. navourings and drinks. Two-third s of the Middle East is under 25 years old. and there's been an explosive growth of college

g raduates. Still, there aren ' t enough jobs to _go rou~1d, and they' re all having a co llective q uarter-life cns1s. In the months before turning 25 herself, BBC producer Allegra Stratton set out to meet them. She visits Beirut, Amman, Cairo, Dubai , Kuwait C ity and Damascus looking for youth culture in the Lebanese versio n o f American Idol and trying to get into a meno nly Starbucks in Egypt. The result is Mulmjaba~es (305.69). a book that will shatter your preconceptions of the Middle East in genera l. and its women in particular. What ''ould it be like if you could remember everything? Jill Price was diagnosed with a condi tion called "hyperthymestic syndrome¡â€˘, the continuous, auto-. malic autobiographical recall of every day of her life since she was fourteen. Th e Woman Who Can't For<>et (921 PRJ) is the moving story of Price's journey to ~nderstand and come to terms with her cond ition. Beth. your librarian


7 Earth Mother Supreme

'Hazel' I " U, I miss U, I'm empty without U! But now you are free, free of pain, of all human confusion and negativity. So, my loving sister, this is your time to shine. I can truly say today "You're all that and a bag of chips with dip too!! So you go girl !!! Hazel and I spent special sister time together, before she got really sick an' couldn't talk any more. I found out she loved bunertlies and so did her granddaughter Martha. With this knowledge I say to I laze! my love, Fly Fly as high as those beaut iful wings wi ll take you I can only imagine the beautiful colors on your wings that would be symbols of your personal ity. They'd be bright and brilliant with cheerful undertones. Remem bering your calm but oh so joyful and beautiful was your smile that you spread all over he downtown eastside community, makes it easy for me to pass on the Love and Joy and the happiness you have shared with me. I wi ll try to do the same with honor and respect. I ., U Hazel. [Thank you so ve1y much to eve1yone who al/ended Hazel 's memorial or jus/ knew her & sent your love.]

Mother Earth goes on forever - long, long time at1er we are gone. Stay grounded, protect and wish and hope The sun shines upon her through rain and snow Beat by bombs and drought, what else who knows? Can' t stand the abuse, she's been tom asunder yet She radiates peace and love and we admire, Our eyes full of wonder. She cares, creates, empowers for all to smell, To hear, to see Forgiving, remembering, sharing so unselfishly ... How do you react when she is hammered , and plundered, and shot to pieces? Will you put her back together; to reconstruct, To maintain. to enhance her wide expanse. And do your part as you know you should. Are we not duty-bound, in a most sacred, profound, and spiritual way to cause no harm as we wonder? To be entranced forever more, beyond a mythic appocolypse ... Who knows, beginnings, or only an absolute end That's not to ponder or worry about because today is all that really maners. What's the rush? What is the hurry!? Robyn Livingstone


everything's getting worse. I a lways wondered what would happen when days like these came, nushing rainbows down the drain again & again ; is there such a crime as Oceanicide? Acid ifica~ \ I tionally speaking, what' s going on up there - you' re I trying to save the oil more than mankind 's lifeblood Yes! It's still leaking but there 's money to be made in horrificness like this stop asking if I'm the one who's ok OK? Li ke playground pick-up lines I've heard 'em all on Love American Prison Style granted that was back awhile but you' re still dressed up in Red & White & Black & Blue & we' re already ahead of the end of time j ust waiting atop murky rainbows hows about you The Gulof ofTexico/Mexico (take your pick) has so many silent voices I mean silence louder than church bells going under for that final toll. I wonder aloud whether these words create yet another hole let alone putting scary people in charge o f very scary roles; I'd much prefer Strawman from the Wizard of Oz at least he could take out useless pieces of himself & use them to plug some of those holes & so it goes j ust another cliff of adversity to climb or jump off one more question before I go when you put these obstacles together - BP, global warming, Jean air let alone MURKY RAINBOWS water in a blender turn it on there they go either you Pump that oil pump that oil bump & toil a new definihave just found the cure for cancer or a new order of tion ofvlad.face lows arc in tow, come on in the boil- thoughts, not even Evil itself could have forewarned ing cau ld ron we call an ocean just about time to start what we just bought, again., bubbling 'That she blows! like helping to feed the rich Acidificationally yours, (first thing on my NEVER To DO List) poor little The ocean. overnourished bottom of the oil barrel your bankabilBy ROBERT McG ILLJVRA Y ity -as the Corleones would say- is now sleeping with '路It's a shallow life that doesn't give a person a few scars... these dead fish. Oying by with co lours so dead-like -Garrison Keillar. it' s the past we never get to finish, a little taste of hell before you go now as you may know escape was always within reach catastrophe need not be in foreign form Everyone can figure it our when it's spelled in Engli sh; like I said a safer world was within reach until you drenched every single beach thanx for this ' lesson路 teach now every retirement plan is I'm sure a little more special cuz 'cause all that 's lefi are these dead crimson red tidal pools on your 'get away from Downtown Eastside Neighbourhood Council everything personally picked out then named after JULY GENERAL MEETING you' island I guess it's true life is a bitch. they're saySaturday, July 3rd, 2- 4prn ing worse than the Exxon Valdez we shall build new Carnegie Community Centre, 401 Main Street oceans with better fi sh but you get to tell Mother Earth we broke the bank & that's the reason she'll never need to know (she knows) her purse is lighter &

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Wh ining White Boy Sometimes it shames me to be white this morning after sleeping in a dry doorway a man nam e of lvleyat nice enough to let me have a combo french vanilla/hot chocolate to warm these old bones - Meyat don't care about company profits, he just sees an old man with a white beard co ld and asking his human si de sa id go ahead l asked the Lord to bless and protect Meyat as l shufned off into the grey dawn name is Brad Firth and on May 2, 20 I 0 I ran the 26.1 mile BMO Vancouver International Marathon in 3hrs 07 minutes. I placed I 02nd out of 3300 racers. Top 5%. As a result of this I am now qualified to run the prestigious BOSTON MARATHON. Not too bad for a former hard core addict who spent the last 16 yrs running away from himself and fa mily in the DTES back alleys and streets. !made the lifesaving decision to learn the language of recovery and by joining the winning team, which consists of other former I lasting addicts in recovery. It was the best decision l have ever made. By dropping the violent street customs of yesterday l became willing and eager to learn healthy behaviours that give me the courage to continue on my journey of the spiritual red road. l am surrendering more of mysel f each day to this wonderful program of recovery by going to many varieties of 12 step meetings, sweat lodge ceremonies and the Empowering Warriors Against Violence program -all of which keeps me focused, calms my mind, humbles mysel f and teaches me non violent solutions. l continue my studies at Native Education College where I'm working towards the FCC program in the fall. Each morning l run the north shore bridges which takes approx. 2 hrs. Running offers me a healthy choice and provides a therapeutic va lue (for which 1 am so gratefu l), celebrating movement in a good way. As a resu lt of this, my goa l is to run the 2800 mi les to lnuvik in the Northwest Territories next s um.m~r -to prove to myself that l can overcome my add1c11on and aspire to new heights through abstinenc.e from drugs and drug behaviour. Anything is poss1ble when you make a decision to walk away from the drug-using lifestyle and into the world of a supportive recovery community. M)

next thing I'm in a line for coffee l let this tiny Chinagramma into line 'fore me only to draw fire, raise ire o f a crybaby redneck who got riled at me for letting an 80 year-old in line befo re the throng he thought it was all wrong - 'these Chinesegive 'em an inch ... " on and on he railed. ranting out his hatred as if one lady in front of him in a line for free coffee is really gonna bust his balls ... little prick got no human kindness in him at all he went on to other topics, whining away Makes me sad, and kinda mad fools like this dude makes us all look bad by the grace of God we all get fed we all get by one way or the other we all are brothers but some people just \\On ' t see beyond their own ass. to see humanity we all bleed red. we all need bread and l feel sorry for this honky candy-ass l pray one day his sort of stupidity will pass when your ass is eighty I hope you find me Jetting you in line. those who ain't busy livin' are busy dyin' .. l hope one day he'll see if he' s lucky enough to have the time AI


839-0379

Contact 6?4-proJ路ect brings you . Actton The Carnegte

Leal':


mabout the City's Gent:rification Plan: rancouver.ca/co:nunsvcs/planninq/hahr/index.htln


Group home cuts grim.news for.· disabled. .

As for how I felt personally about the closure of 'fran'quille- well, I hadn't really wondered to ask myself about that. But then came the day when I happened to be stopped on a Kamloops street waiting for a young. mentally handicapped boy to cross at the crosswalk. He appeared to be on his way horne from school, walking along in JODY PATERSON the sunshine with a schoolmate and patersoncommunications.®gmatl.com swinging his lunch kit in that bigarmed way that every kid in the world · is probably fani.iliar 'with. reme~ber the exact moment I And it was all so normal. A 30-secstarted to look at people with men- ond scene, yet it clarified for me in an tal handicaps in a eornpl~tely difinstant why we had to put the days of ferent way. giant institutions behind us. Normat Is It was 1985, not long after the a pretty nice pLace to be. · province bad closed the h\)ge instituAU these years on, much has tion for "retarded" people at Tl:an- . changed for people with mental handiquille, an old tuberculosis sanatorium caps. They have the. right to go to outside Kamloops. I was working at a ·, ·school. To l,ive a real life in a real comKamloops newspaper at the time and · rnunity, near to.friends and family. 1b the closure was big news, so I'd been be paid a fair wage for a job well 'part of documenting the hope, fear, done. Th have some say over their own anger and anticipation that the closure . lives. Those.are meaningful achieve- '• .' ha:d sparked. . · ments. . ··fanillies had been working· for life- .. ,.• As for the families- well, let's just tiines by·then tO" move things forward say it's been an interesting 25 years. for· their rnental1y handicappe;d .chil- • Their children's basic needs · dren, 'who were all,ages. They liad few, haven't changed in that time, because choices in those years when it can;te to a mental haridicap is forever. But f.iitding services or schooling for their everything about the way the governchildren in their oWn hometowns, and ment operates its services has been in . often had no option but to send their' . : a ·near-constan(state of flux. Somechildren hundreds of kilometres away times that was due to shifting philosoto institutions such as 'franquille, . .pliies or new research, but more often Woodlands and Glendale. it·was because somebody in governThe famil\es ~vere mostly over the ment.thought ther~ were savings to be moon at the thought that 'franquill~~s .... had by doing things differently. closure would allow them to bring • The langul!ge changed: Mental . t heir childien horne to get all the suphandicaps became developmental dis- · port they needed in their own cornmuanilities and the associations an<! pronities;which is wh:it the government· grams serving that population took to was promising. But they were t~rri- . referring to theirservices as "comfied, too, because 'it's very hard to give . muruty living." When the government up a sure thing for a promise when it's' created Community Living B.C. in your child's life at stake. 200S,.a new governance authority that

I

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wouid give families more say over services, many of those families felt they were realizing a dream. But it's the year of broken dreams. ·CLBC is now preparing to shut down group homes - the four- and five-bedroom·staffed homes that people were moved into after the·institutions closed. The move has been portrayed as being about choice for families, but it's mostly about saving $22 million a year. , Many fan1ilies have lobbied hard to give their ailult children more housing . options beyond just moving into a group home. Independent living is one more step toward normal, and l'in all forit. · But everything changes when the primary goal is cost Savi.rigs. If families aren't yet alarmed by what they'n; .hearing fi:ol]i CLBC, t}!ey . might want to ponder what i~ wo.uld . really mean to eliminate the only'des: ignated housing supports in B.C..for people with developmental disabili-... ties. Once all the group homes are 'gone, families will be left to fight it out with everybody else' for low-income hous~ ing for their aduit children. The support to help people fmd and keep housing will be there initially, because government needs' to make the changes palatable. But for how Jon¥? And then what? · This government in particular has a history of being deceptive, ruthlessly ideological and dangerously illinfortned around social spending. CLBC.may havehonoll.(.able.inten-· tions, but it's a good soldier. It's no· more likely than the health' authoriti~ to chiillenge government demands for cuts. · ·· Families, you've ,been here before. lt's'wrong that they're comirig' for you again, but so it goes in this often · . unjust world. Fight. ,_......,..._.-t


CRUNCH


The privme sector has been increasingly focused on the potential market that a public sector pro\路ides in countless service areas.

Common Practices The Public Sector is already very lucrative for corporations that have found ways to privatize parts of it. Following are the more obvious ways the transfer of our tax money from our government and public agencies into private pockets is already taking place. OUTSOURCING, CONTRACTI NG OUT

A contract to do public work is given to a nongovemmental entity, with its nonpublic employees. Public money is used to pay for the work done under this contract. Corporations benefit greatly, but there are also nonprofit organizations, including religious ones, that get their pieces of public fundsand profit from them (meaning that they make more money than it should cost to do the work, as evidenced, for one thing, by the corporate CEOscale salaries some pay). Nonprofits, religious and secular, also enter into contracts with for-profits. Sometimes corporations set up nonprofits to get their tax breaks, and then get contracts from them. It's a cozy world of blurry boundaries, all fue led by public money. Contracting out govemmem work has a long history in the United States and has supported many small businesses that do responsible work. But it is quite another thing when public work is privatized, wages are cut substantially and the profits made by raising prices to whatever the "market" will bear go into fewer and fewer hands. Consider nature. Whether in the wild (to the extent that there are wild chickens) or in the henhouse, the fox and the chickens are in competition to meet their goals. However, they have very different goals. They both need to eat to live. But while the fox can, and truly desires to, eat the chickens, the chickens can't eat the fox, and have to spend a lot of energy to avoid becoming fox food. The chickens' goal is to stay alive, which involves staying as far away from the fox as possible. TI1e fox's goal is, quite litera lly, to swallow the competition. Fanners who raise chickens for eggs and meat build henhouses to keep them close to hand-and to protect them from those foxes. But then the foxes get smart. They hire marketers and public relations people. TI1ey contribute to the animals that are running for those offices that decide how the chickens will be kept secure and protected from outside invaders seeking to destroy the happy farmyard way of life. Reinvented as guard ians of the farm

and its system, the foxes get themselves a contract to guard the chicken coop. And then, promising to provide the best and cheapest care for those chickens. they move on inside. The rest, as they say, is history. The foxes get fatuntil there are so few chickens left, they get hungry all over again and start fighting each other. The farmer goes broke, the bank forec loses, and the farmer goes to work at Wai-Mart . Pretty soon, the foxes have to travel on to new lands. new farms and farmers, new henhouses wherever in the world they might be. Th e Soup wrinen by Detroit labor lawyer Maurice Sinclair, is a great song from some seventy years ago- before all the regulations and "safety net" provisions we now take for granted were established because we saw what a Great Depression can do. The song captures the lessons learned about loya lty when it is required only of workers. In a nice piece of musical irony in this age of corporate global colonization. it's sung to the

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tune of My Bonnie Lies 01•er tlte Ocean : I'm spending my nights at the nophouse I'm spending my days on the street I'm looking for work and I find none I wish I had something to eat Soo-oup, soo~up, They give me a bowl of soo-oup Soo-oup, soo~up. They give me a bowl of soo-oup I spent twenty years in the factory I did everything I was told They said I was lo) al and faithful Now even before I get old I saved fifteen bucks \1 ith m) banker To buy me a car and a yacht I went down to draw out my fortune And this is the ans\\er I got

..

I fought in the war for my country I went out to bleed and to die I thought that my country would help me But this was my country's reply I 11 ent on my knees to my Mal..er I prayed every night to the Lord I vowed I'd be meek and submissive And now I've received m) reward

The Soup Song was wrinen in the early 1930S, before President Franklin De lano Roosevelt created the New Deal, which put the government more squarely on the side of the majority of th is country's people and against the corporations. Still, now as then, people complain about government telling them what to do. They rail against government. They make cynical jokes about it. Right a"itude, wrong target-except from the point of view of the privatizing corporations and rightwing think tanks, which have been work ing hard to direct our legitimate anger towards governments that are increasingly in their service, rather than at them. It's interesting that we have words for many forms of government, but not (yet) for what happens, as David Korten put it in his book title, Wil en Corporations Rule tlte World- although Mussol ini, taking power at the same time as Hitler and Stalin. said that the form of government that he invented shou ld be called "corporative" as well as fascist because it merged the powers of the corporation, labor, and the state. Fascist remains a label of insu lt: corporatil'e never caught on. What we are facing today is de facto merger of the corporation and the state. Privatization is both its method and its purpose.

I UBC LAW STUDENTS \ LEG~L!.'DV~CE CLINIC Starting Monday. May 24 Ends Thursday. August ~9

Drop -In M ondays & Thursdays 9 - 5pm Tuesdays ~ - 9pm

3'd Floor - Art Gallery

LAW STUDENTS' LEGAL ADVICE PROGRAM The Un iversity of British Columbia Law Students' Legal Advice Program ( LSLAP) is a non-profit organization run by UBC law students 1.1;110 volunteer their time to staff free legal clinics fo r people who cannot afford to hire a lawyer. Currently there are 18 legal clinics open throughout the Lower Mainland. In many cases students are able to represent clients before tribunals and in Provincial Court. Students have access to a supervising lawyer for guidance. support and advice. Areas of law we cover include: criminal. small claim~. residential tenanc), WCB, wills. consumer transactions, employer-employee relations. human rights. and immigration. Unlortunately we do not cover family law. real estate matters. personal injury, malpractice. BC Supreme or Federal Court. Un ion issues. business law. and driving offences. For the areas of law \\C do not cover. we are often able to give summary advice and referrals. To book an appointment call 604 822 5791. Please bring all relevant documents to your appointment.


DOWNTOWN EASTIDE RESIDENTS' ASSOCIATION ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING JULY 15,2010

6PM

ST. JAMES' CHURCH PARISH HALL 230 GORE AVE. NORTR

Despite the widely publicized false allegations of wrong doing of the Downtown Eastside Residents' Association !lousing Society ( D E RAf~I S )- DERA itself continues as the agent of ad vocacy that it has always been and will continue to be. A court agreement was reached that the Housing Society would return Pend era Place, Tellier Tower and So lheim to the control of BC Housing. Fundi ng provided for operating Social Housing has been inadequate for many years. With that separation complete, DERA announces its Annual Genc1路al Meeting on July 15,2010. Residents who are members in good standing* of DERA who are interested and have skills to offer, are in vited to let thei r names stand for election to the Board of Directors. Nominations close on June 30, 20 I0. Please write a Jetter to the Pres ident, DERA with your DERA membership number and date, your name and contact in formation, stating the reasons you think you would make an effective Board member. Please leave the letter with the Carn egie Centre front desk before the end of the day, June 30,20 10. Voti ng for members of the Board of Directors will take place at the AG M. Reg istration is from 6-6:30 pm. ONLY members who are in GOOD STAN DING with the Society are invited to attend.

*memben in GOOD STANDING are: supporters of the DERA constitution am/ bylaws; at least 16 years of age; am/living within the area bounded by Seymour St., S myth e St., am/ the Cambie S t. Bridge to the west, Clark Dr. to tl1e em路t, Great North ern Way and 211{/ Ave. to the south, and ha ve a DERA membership card, new or renewed, dated behveen July I 5, 2005 am/ June I 5, 20 I 0.

Our Agenda So remember Our relationship was born o ut o f compassion That is com panionship and passion for love We wish to reach out to the world finding these spirits of compassion that dwell in every corner of the earth And re lease this energy in g reat abundance creat ing a chain reaction to bring peace, caring, and sharing to William


let's all salute the crooked man on the corner he stands turtling in the rain making impossible contortions with his funny face here's to the effects of crack-induced dementia makes clowns out of clowns and monstes out of monsters and fools out of everyone "hat happens when all these people and their feeble minds become unsprung and even more impossible to deal with since they shut dov.n the asylums we sec the products of chemical bioengineering gone splatter on the sidewalk iS the last brain cells go up in smoke 1ey buddy can you spare a dime? tet buddy can you spare a toke? ain't lyin· this time 1is here ain't no joke AI

Friends I got friends

'' ho speak Spanish, EngIish. French too ''ho are black & white & red all over "ho give me cover. brother O\'e me- like no other got friends ain't met yet -iends I never forget ·iends I never regret iends ''ho feed me icnds "ho need me ·ends I can't lie to en if I '~anted to 1usc they're true blue 1d of friends" ho see you thru ;on"t go on and on about it 1st wanna shout it !nds I got friends RJ 13ean

l<PP-CitY Even tho I am a white nigger my friends wouldn't call me a wigger ·cause maybe they figure I'd get man and pull the trigger but I kno\\ that they kno" my skin might be the colour of snow but in my real soul the ones they can't control I'm a rainbow with haifa million hues I'm so old I start again being young ·cause it's more fun to be one one of the boys makin· noise out in the streets playing'' ith real toys so I hope you ''on·t mind me ''hen they find me all that bad shit I put behind me the light shining s hot it blinds me so in case I forget you gotta remind me that I'm not a '~hite nigger I'm the one yo9u never figure the truth too hot for me to give her give of what I got to del ivcr we are all the same colour you arc me I am you I'm your father you're my mother '' e are brothers. all the others punks & lovers all the same under the covers. under cover brother I give you ''hat you can't give back back sprain or heart attack brought on by too much bunk-crack cooked up in the dirty red shack so if you see me you gotta set me free 'cause you can be me and I can be you together brother ain't noth ing \\C can't do I'm scllin' you tcllin· you I hope you heard brother this is my last word The Sno\\ \-1an


"Never doubt that a small gro up of thoughtful committed citi zens can change the world. lndeed it is the only thing that ever has." -Margaret Mead~:

102.1 FM Co-op Radio THIS NEWSLETIER IS A PUBLICATION OF THE CARNEGIE COMMUNITY CENTRE ASSOCIATION Articles represent the views of individual contributors and not of the Association.

Next issue is Wednesday, June 3dh

SUBMISSION DEADLINE Monday, June 28th, rloon. We acknowledge that Carnegie Community Centre, and this Newsletter, are occurring on Goa~ ~alish Territory.

WANTED Artwork for the·Carnegie newsletter Small illustrations to accompany articles and poetry. Cover art - Max size: 17crn(6 Y.')wide x 15cm(6')high. Subject matter pertaining to issues relevant to the Downtown Eastside, but all work considered. Black &White printing only. Size restrictions apply (i.e. if your piece is loa large, it will be reduced and/or cropped to fit). All artists will receive credil for their work. Origmals will be returned to the artist after being copied for publication. Remuneration: Carnegie Volunteer Tickets

Editor: PauiR Taylol"; cover art by TORA l Collirlion & distribution new: Bill, Liu Lin, Harold, Ada, Videha, Mary Ann, Miriam, Kelly, Lisa, Robyn, Nick. 2010 DONATIONS: Libby D.-$50, Rolf A.-$50, Margaret D.-$4• Jenny K.-$25, Sue K.-$30, Michael C.-$50, Jaya B.-$100, Christopher R.-$180, Barbara & Mel L -$50, leslie S.·$50. Sheila B.-$25, Wilhelmina M.-$10, CEEDS -$60, Laurie R.-$6C Vancouver Moving Theatre -$100, Sarah E.-$46 The Edge -$200

Please make submissions to Paul Taylor, Editor.

Carnegie Services for Members include: Basketball; Tai Chi; Yoga; Shiatsu; Dance; Run Club; Soccer; Nature Hikes; Floor Hockey and more. See Monthly Program Guides Membership is $1. Open to all!!

GET CLEAN! Shower up at the Lord's Rain 327 Carra II Street (just off Pigeon Park)

camnews@shaw.ca

HOT SHOWERS

(towels, soap, s hampoo, the works! & coffee) Monday llam-3pm; Tuesday 7-8:30am; Tuesday 1-4pm and LADI ES Only! Friday llam-3pm; Saturday 7-lOam l ei on parle Fra ncais

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Working for You 1070-1641 Commercial Dr, VSL 3Y3 Phone: 604-773-0790 ·

··i have the audacity to believe that people everywhere can have three meals a day for their bodies, education and culture for their minds, dignity, equality and justice for their spirits. I believe that what self-centred men have tom down, other-centred men can build up.' Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

Solder & Sons Used books-

Colic<: .~

Tea

Curious iJUdio rccordin:,s &. cquipmc · 247 M~in SIRo[:t - liS-71911



T h is is a graphic speak ing volumes. It's in a paper called BALACLAVA ! and tells a lot a bout the tornado of an economy based on high ro llers. gambling, loan s harks and the scene already swee ping us - having to sell. pawn or pedd le anyth ing/eve rything just to get a temporary roof. Its caption of Demand Nothing is a paradox- by making no demands you get nothing, but the constant demand for safe, decent, affordable housing has resulted in more than a few crumbs. Soc ial housing is a label getting co-opted as developers keep trying to sq ueeze the ir obscene scams under its umbrel la. O lympic Vill age '路affordab ility"" the tiny percentage of units being rented out at the ' low end of market' go to those making $35-$50K /year. Woodward 's low-cost housi ng has 2-bd units starting at $1440 a month and in all cases the subsidized housing is less than I0% of un its bui lt & avai lable. Constant facts, figures, reports, indepth analyses and more may embarrass middle-class managers. but we have to keep in m ind who pulls the strings . Witness T erry Hui , owner & C EO o f Concord Pacific, talk ing for over an hour to community activist Wendy Pedersen, but incapable of understand ing w hy she doesn 't real ize why no one wants low-cost, social housing?!?!? PRT

Th e kindness of s trangers... Special tha nks to the fine woman working at the Powe ll Street Chevron. She kindly saw to a nasty gash I acquired Friday night, saw that I had a clean bandage and sent me packing o ff to St. Pau l's. S incere best wishes to this kind woman who took care of an injured old man. (I 'd been hit with a 2x4 for breathing. ]

R.L.

Special thanks to Diane Wood for her continuous stream of unique creations, art and sen-ice to us all. Both the cover art and '\Voodwards' are hers.


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