YUFA Awards Challenge Grant to Save Historic Joy Kogawa House
Anton Wagner
awagner at YORKU.CA
Tue Feb 14 00:21:39 EST 2006
YUFA Awards Challenge Grant to Save Historic Joy Kogawa House
The York University Faculty Association is issuing a challenge to other Faculty
Associations across the country to match their $1,000 pledge to the Historic
Joy Kogawa House campaign. This $1.25 million fundraising drive, spearheaded
by The Land Conservancy of British Columbia, will provide the funds to save the
childhood home of poet and novelist Joy Kogawa in Vancouver from demolition, do
historical renovations and provide an endowment to offset the costs of a major
writers-in-residence program.
The West 64th Avenue house became a symbol of lost hope and happiness after
Kogawa, then six years old, and her family were removed from their home in 1942
as part of the forced evacuations and internment of over 21,000
Japanese-Canadians during World War II. The house is the central image in
Kogawas award-winning novel Obasan, one of Canadas best-loved works of
fiction that is taught in schools and universities throughout Canada, its
sequel about the redress movement, Emily Kato, and the childrens story Naomi's
Road, which is now touring as a Vancouver Opera production to 140 schools and
community centres throughout B.C.
The writers-in-residence program at the Joy Kogawa House will enable new writing
about human rights and Canadas evolving multicultural and intercultural society
that may be unique in the world.
In announcing the $1,000 contribution, Dr. Joseph Levy, YUFA VP External, stated
that universities are one of the primary means through which our history is
passed on to succeeding generations. The strongest response to saving the Joy
Kogawa House has come from professors who have taught Obasan and seen its
effect on their students. The Joy Kogawa Writers-in-Residence Centre will
continue this creative stimulation by assisting Canadian writers to observe and
write first hand about our multi- and inter-cultural society and how different
values and traditions can peacefully interact. Levy added, We are challenging
other faculty associations to match our contribution.
Kogawa has been awarded honorary doctorates from the University of Toronto,
Queens, Ryerson, Guelph, Waterloo, Lethbridge, the University of British
Columbia and Simon Fraser University.
The York University Faculty Association, under its mandate of social justice,
has contributed $1,000 to the Joy Kogawa Fund and a challenge to other faculty
associations across the country to do the same, Kym Bird, also a member of the
YUFA Executive, stated. In my view, saving Joy Kogawa's house is an enormously
worthy cause and Canadian Universities across the country, as guardians of
history and as places where our common past and our communal stories are told
and cherished, have a vested interest in preventing its demolition.
The Land Conservancy of British Columbia is a non-profit, charitable land trust
working to protect BC's natural and cultural heritage. Since 1997, TLC has
protected almost 100,000 acres of sensitive and threatened land in BC,
involving more than 100 projects. Donations to the Joy Kogawa House campaign
can be made through the TLC website at http://www.conservancy.bc.ca or by
calling (604) 733-2313.
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Contacts:
York University Faculty Association: Dr. Joseph Levy, 416-736 2100 Ext. 33898
TLC The Land Conservancy: Tamsin Baker (604) 733-2313
Save Joy Kogawa House Committee: Ann-Marie Metten (604) 263-6586; Todd Wong
(604) 240-7090; Anton Wagner (416) 863-1209 http://www.kogawahouse.com
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