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.N E W S LETT E R 401 Main Street, Vancouver. V6A 2T1 (604) 665-2219 A Pretty Private Reason Why Gord Campbell Quit: "I swore on the Holy C-Note to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, and then you ask me a question Like THAT?!!" NOVEMBER 15,2010 flJ
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Page 1: November 15, 2010, carnegie newsletter

.N E W S LETT E R 401 Main Street, Vancouver. V6A 2T1 (604) 665-2219

A Pretty Private Reason Why Gord Campbell Quit:

"I swore on the Holy C-Note

to tell the truth, the whole truth,

and nothing but the truth, and

then you ask me a question

Like THAT?!!"

NOVEMBER 15,2010

flJ

Page 2: November 15, 2010, carnegie newsletter

(After due consideration. the following gem says what it'd take me a page to imply ... PRT]

Walking Eagle

Premier Gordon Campbell was invited to address a major gathering of the Indian Nation last weekend in Ahousahl. TI1e Premier spoke for almost an hour on his plans for increasing evel)' First Nation's present standard of living. He referred to his career as Mayor of Vancouver, how he had signed, - "YES"- for every Indian issue that came to his desk for approval. At the conclusion of his speech, the Tribe presented the Premier with a plaque inscribed with his new Indian name - Walking Eagle. The proud Campbell then departed in his motorcade, waving to the crowds.

A news reporter later inquired to the group of chiefs of how they came to select the new name given to Campbell TI1ey explained that Walking Eagle is t11e name given to a bird so full of shit it can no longer fly.

Displacement and Gentrification Events

WORKSI IOP: SATURDAY NOVEMBER 13, 2-4 pm. Carnegie Centre 3rd floor "Gentri fi cation and Displacement Keywords, courtesy of Woodward's" Please bring your own keywords, experiences, sto­ries, poems, images, analyses ....

. [The Workshop is over but read on ... ]

There are lots of words, concepts and practices which are used regarding gentrification an influx of middle-class people into a lower income area. and the resulting transformation of working class and poor city spaces to serve the needs of the middle+ upper class-es- which is causing displacement of Downtown Eastside (DTES) residents; they are used in many other cities as well, and in this workshop we'll go through them by talking about Woodward's and its implications on our DTES community. After this workshop, we may be clearer about how these words, concepts and practices are being used, and more informed about ways of responding, advocating and educating others. There are three readings for this session ...

Some of the keywords are: City Planning, develop­ment, property values, tax base, zoning, development permits, heritage buildings, community consultation, poverty, social housing, affordable housing, non­market housing, SROs, market housing, incentivizing (i.e. increased building height in exchange for includ­ing social housing units, tax holidays), conversion or anti-conversion by-laws, 'the value of a provincial social housing funding component to developers.' small units/mini-lofts, "social mixing," "social bal­ance," "diversity," "renewal," "revitalization," "abandonment quality'' buildings, health and safety by-laws, unceded First Nations land, displacement, homelessness, human rights and social justice (i.e. United Nations Declaration o f Human Rights), legal rights (Canadian C harter of Rights and Freedoms (Section 7); proposed Bi ll C-304 "theSe­cure. Adequate, Accessible and Affordable Housing Act"; Adams vs. Victoria, private security guards, BIAs (Business Improvement Associations), Homeown­ers' Associations, Residents' Associations, artists,

Page 3: November 15, 2010, carnegie newsletter

students, middle class, low income residents, struc­tural/systemic poverty, 'employment for DTES resi­dents building and working in new DTES businesses. tenants' rights, t icketing, policing, racist sexist vio­lence, neo-liberalism , globalization, Woodward's .... TEAC H-IN: TU ESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, on cam­pus from 3-6 pm on the Knoll (aka the Grassy Knoll) outside the SUB bui lding. Lots ofUBC people don't know about how G&D are being done in the DTES, so let's tell them about it! From our own first-hand informed perspectives, let's just talk with our UBC community about what's going on! This will be edu­cation by llu m students, and alumni, volunteers, teachers and staff. We' ll have Pivot's Red Tents to

catch people's eye, information to give out, invita­tions to sign petitions, attend events and actions ... and we hope to meet people who can help implement CCAPs 12 Action items for the stellar DTES Com­mun ity Vision. FILM: SATURDAY NOVEMBER 27,6 pm in the Carnegie Auditorium We' ll be showing footage from the "Right to the C ity" conference that happened last weekend - it was a rea lly good conference, and for the people who couldn' t be there, we're bringing it to the DTES on film.

ANew Roost:

TheDUNLEVYSNACKBAR Coffee I tea I baked goods & <bagels

with lunch coming soon!

433 Dunlevy the illustrious THEO LLOYD KEITH

CARNEGIE RENOVATIONS BEGIN 3 The renovation work at Carnegie has begun. The -­scaffolding is going up on the north side of the build­ing and the construction crew trailer is now in place. Over the next while the construction team will be starting their work throughout the Centre.

The work on repairing and restoring our beautiful ~·ood heritage windows will be one of the first pro­Jects to be started . The work will progress wall by wall, with temporary windows being fitted while the original windows arc removed and refurbished. Stonework will be cleaned before the scaffolding is moved. While the work on the spiral stairs will mainly happen in the New Year, preparations for the restoration ar7 u~derway with the goal of improving safety, refurbtshmg the stonework and tiles and en­suring that they will be functional and beautifu l for years to come. The replacement of flooring through­out most of the Centre will be a big project and will start in late November or early December.

Carnegie Centre wi ll remain open throughout the r~novations. We will do our best to minimize disrup­t ton to our programs and services, though there will be some changes and temporary interruptions. We will g ive as much notice as possible of any changes. All work will be completed by the end of March, '1 1.

Dan Tetrau lt, Assistant Director

Humanities: Writing 101 Intake

We are looking for students fo r the Writing course starting in January 20 II . Please come if you're inter­ested in applying, & tell your friends and family too.

The Gathering Place, 609 Helmcken St. Tuesday November 23 @ 11 .30a.m

Carnegie Centre, Main & Hastings Wednesday November 24 @ 11 .30a.m

Vancouver Recovery Club, 2775 Sophia St Thursday November 25 @ I I a.m

Crabtree Corner, 533 East Hastings St Thursday November 25 @ 1.30p.m

Downtown Easts ide Women's Centre (WOMEN ONLY), 302 Columbia St Friday November 26 @ 2.30p.m

Page 4: November 15, 2010, carnegie newsletter

A Huge THANK YOU to Everyone Involved!

Producing a festival on the scale of our community's Downtown Eastside Heart of the City Festival is a huge undertaking. It is also a unique endeavour unparalleled not just in here but in Canada.

We couldn't produce this festival without the vast support of community individuals, organizations, sponsors and audiences. Your participation is greatly appreciated and valued!

Thanks to the many individual artists and organizations in the community who present their work during the festival with such commitment, passion and generosity. Your strong voices are essential to the success of the festival, and to our community.

And thanks to all the community members, organizations and businesses that welcomed the Festival into your spaces, parks and onto our sidewalks. Thank you for collaborating with us to present a spectacular festival of music, poetry, visual and media arts, dance, processions, song and projections in that reflects our neighbourhood and home.

To continue to enjoy the 2010 festival please visit the blog site of AHA Media at www.ahame­dia.ca. Here you will find lots of photos and videos of a large number of festival events.

If you have any ideas or events to contribute or suggest for next year's 2011 Festival give us a call 604-628-5672, or talk with Rika 604-665-3003.

Thank you! The Festival program and production team www.heartofthecityfestival.com

Page 5: November 15, 2010, carnegie newsletter

Remembering Sandy Cameron By Rolf Auer

Sandy Cameron loved Nature. And I loved that about him. Because I love Nature too.

Soaring eagle over the Downtown Eastside picking up on rights and wrongs with his super sensitive vision.

Rising majestic evergreen tree symbolizing the stead­fastness of human rights.

Looming large mountain range symbolizing the enormity of his fight for social justice.

Tenacious badger never giving up on the rights for Aboriginal peoples.

Work-the-<lay-away beaver forever hunting for facts to shore up his arguments.

The metaphoric animals I've mentioned are often part of Aboriginal Totem Poles.

One of Sandy's many, fine poems is called, "The Oppenheimer Park Totem Pole."

Here is a quote from that poem: " It seems to me that when someone dies it is the responsibil ity of those of us who are left to offer caring for that life for that death in the intensity of the love that reaches out from the unendurable loneliness of our separation."

I can always say that I am proud to have been able to call Sandy "friend." ~

~ ~ .. /~P ~r -. r,~ '" ~-- ;ifj~ ~~

-~;l: Sandy would have been humbled and happy that some individuals have made donations to here in his name. Thanks to Margaret, Ginger and Tom.

The Raising of the two new poles Oppenheimer Pa rk. November 6, 2010 5

The Mother Bear caring for her cubs is the latest theme of the new poles in our park. Like a mother bear looks after her cubs, we in the downtown east side look after one another. A most fining theme for our newest poles in the park. These poles got their start hundreds of years ago in Stanley Park, however a big wind storm a few years ago in the park blew down the trees. They were then sent to be carved at Brittannia but someone decided to burn one of the trees that was in the processed of being carved. A third tree from the same source was required tore­place the damaged pole. It was carved by Henry Robertson and Henry Robertson Junior. Cold and chilly, we all gathered at I I AM in the park to witness the ritual of the pole raising. It was first required that Witnesses for the procedure be ap­pointed. Theirs was the duty to pass on to other generations the record of this event. In this way gen­erations into the future will know how this pole was raised and the protocol for the proper raising of the pole. Named as witnesses were Louise Profeit­LeBianc. a Yukoner from the Canadian Counci l of Arts, Sam George, Sandy MacKeigan, Carnegie staff from Oppenheimer Park, and Marguerita Rob­inson. Henry Robertson and Wes Nahanee, the two carv­

ers, were awarded blankets which they wore. The poles were put out and the carvers stood at the east end of the west facing poles. While Eagle Song was drummed and sang, Terry llunter held a red bucket · filled with water from Capitano Canyon while four young girls dipped cedar boughs into the water and ci rcled the poles four times -each time redipping the boughs into the water. Both water and boughs arc to be returned to the Canyon they came from after the ceremony. Along with songs and prayers to the Creator, life

and breath were breathed into the poles. Thus the carvers and their fam ilies -the Mclnna's and the Robertson's -were honoured. The poles both are carved in the tradition of northern poles, bringing the cultures of north and south First Nations together. Just for the record, I related witnessing this beauti­

ful experience to a friend in the States yesterday and they asked, " Is this a flag po le you are talking about?" "No," I qualified, "it was a totem pole."

-Colleen Carroll

Page 6: November 15, 2010, carnegie newsletter

Dear Editor: PULLING RANK Being born and raised in the Greater Van_couver area, at times 1 feel qualified to point out certam mistakes our leaders are making. In this case, the Vancouver

C ity Counc il. When 1 heard on the news that Counci l was enter-

taining thoughts o f bringing back the Indy races to Vancouver. 1 im mediately flashed back to the rash of illeoal /streetlrac ing deaths that occurred after Indy

0

came to town. Before the Vancouver Indy, street rac ing was fa irly

rare. During the Vancouver Indy, street racing was common. After the Vancouver Indy left town, street racing once again became rare.

What does this tell us? Either it's coincidental, o r, enough people who attend these races are greatly influenced by what they see and want to ape it on our

public streets. Is th is the kind of life we want to live in the Lower

Mainland . when we wait at a bus stop or simply walk down the wrong street, as some ego driving a "fastest

car" meets another such ego? The blood will be on your hands Council. Value life

over money. Garry Gust

YIN AND YANG

Sweet whispers, gently soothe my broken heart 1 find time stopped, perfect in the essence My soul doo med, a lifetime falling apart 1 heed to my breath, does death g ive presence?

Emotions sloth imagination Make haste with perfect creation today It takes two to cause participation L ike a scene out of life's stage from a play

Was love, but now a hedonistic dream Was rapture, but the fee lings do wither fiove is clue less; love is a flash of beam Lei loose this feeling, the snakes run slither

The whole world runs fast, the rest of life slows 1 do hate love, but it 's just highs and lows

Ivan Townsend

HOUSE Of' COMMONS MrSpcaker,

November I, 2010

The many people who knew. respected and loved Sandy Cameron, mourn his death and the loss we will experience. I l is decades of leadership, compassion, and hard work in the Down tO\\ n Eastside helped countless people. Sandy's numerous, enduring and thoughtful co lumns in the Carnegie Newsleller, his books of poetry, his work at the Carnegie Learnino Centre as well as his kind and gentle ways ofhelpi~g people, are things that inspired a whole community.

lie told us and recorded our history: he was a won­derful teacher; a mentor and a guide, who, a long with his partner of25 years, Jean Swanson, helped forge a strength o f community that is legendary i a ll Canada. Most of all, Sandy worked for social justice and

peace. li e be lieved and lived that it came from the people. His unwavering belief in our own ability to create a better world, without violence and inequal­ity, is what he le ft us. The best thing we can do is carry on that work because that's what he would ex­pect us to do. Thank you Sandy, fo r the gifts you gave us. Your

words live on. Libby Davies (M P Vancouver East)

FJ~Cm Pam fQ F~m When I was younger I knew where I was, yet as t ime moved on all memories were lost. Not knowing which way is east o r west, just knowing inside I have

to try my best. With all that I've been through and all that I' ve seen, I've always known this was not my dream. Emotions ins ide with pain that is deep, yet for some reason I cannot weep. I look fo r a friend who can understand me. and the only frie nd I find is my enemy. No sense in dreammg for I think it's gone by, yet I dream o n .. hoping it ' ll fly. Day becomes night and night becomes day. I look in the mirror: This can't be the way! Looking to the sky I watch a bird fly. wishing to find that freedom inside. The sun bcins to set towards the west; I finally know I've met my final test...

Leon Mark Isaac Wuttunee

Page 7: November 15, 2010, carnegie newsletter

Gentrification in the Downtown Eastside what•s happening & what we can do about it

Merciful Minerva! Look at all these

Friday, Nov. 19 11am-1pm

Carnegie Centre Theatre, 401 Main St at Hastings Refreshments & childcare support available on request

~---~ ' (G G A~ . ~ CCAP is a proiect of the Carnegie Communit1 Centre Association · - - 401 Main St. Vancouver, Bt V&A 2T7

Caii5D4 839 0379to get on the UAP email list II vou have a computet Or come to CUP's olllce and get a copv oi"Pushed Out" CUP's report about Increasing rents In the DUS. You can also get a copy ol CWI's VIsion lor the D1ES, " Assets to Actlon, communltv vision lor change In the D1ES.''

For more lnlormallan. check CCAP's website at ccapvancouver.wordpress.com design: flux evtoons: Dian•

1

Page 8: November 15, 2010, carnegie newsletter

They laughed as we walked by.Thosc three that pushed her seeing if she could fly. Boasting too much over who would swim or sink. All the while I could feel my sto mach shrink. Another baby gone to addiction. Was it something she said to cause fric­tion? That's no way to go dying on the floo r, while those three go on yet another day more. My people came to me with a ll the words in the ir heads. Yet when asked they said nothing, them also being afraid of coming up dead. Walk with me I have once to ld em', to get away from the drug that still holds them. You can point at the ones and it will be over. No rats here, no police to cover shoulder. And then out of the shadows a man who saw the whole thing. Sa" her last breath, her las t chest rise and the last word she would sing. "Scared am 1," he said "Rattled to the bone,'' I take. " I don't want to be a rat, squeal or a flnk!?" Justice comes to us in small doses, no flashy gimmicks, cameras or poses. I stood there with her family c lose by, all the while they were wondering why? Alii could think was of what the man said , "I still can't get the image out of my head," II ide in plain sight until you a re ready, come back to me with your thoughts clear & steady. Justice comes to us in small doses, police even think those three should be shot! "Years in prison wouldn't do them any good. It would just take them away from the "lowly easts ide hood,'"' Then they wo uld come back with grudges on their shoulders and the com­munity would forget them th ink ing their time was over! So is hers a baby with an addiction was it something she said to cause frict ion. No need for pointing I saw it o n their faces while we walked by those three standing proud faces. As if they had won some kind of battle. "Yeah I know what you mean when you sa id bone rattled." What can be more pre­c ious than a baby girl' s life she could have cared for you all , you cou ld have callen' her wife. Those three won't get it no matter how hard they try. And no one wi ll care or even cry if they d ie. Justice comes to us

in small doses, too small for the ones that lose their c losest. We all walked by that baby girl's killers, suspense all gone it gave me the quivers. I knew right away it was in their eyes, police have stood back waiting to s ift out the lies. Like it or not it was a sui­cide. The man who saw that baby girl's last breath would he tell me a lie? Nothing to fear from a man with a smoke, talk in' the breeze, tellin' a joke. 1 said to him better to hide in plain sight, he said yeah thanks you know what's for dinner tonight? That's when I realized the conversation was over, he stamped out the cigarette pulled his bag over shoul­der. Justices comes to us in small doses we take what we can get no regrets, qualms or remorses. Those three who pushed a baby girl over the edge I hope your hearts sink when it's yours who are dead!

[An amazing new book is being released in the next few weeks. It is written by Bonnie Fournier, who was a nurse on the DEY AS Health Van and in the Downtown Eastside for over 25 years. It is published by Trafford and called Mugged, Dmgged nnrl Shrugged

The Wrong Sidefo the Eastside Following is the foreword by Elaine Allan.]

Mugged, Drugged and Shrugged The Wrong Side of the Eastside

Foreword by Elaine Allan

I met Bonnie Fournier in 1998 wh ile working at the W.I.S.H. Drop-In Centre on Vancouver's Downtown Eastside, in the country's poorest postal code, a block up from the notorious open drug market on the corner of Main and Hastings. The Drop-In Centre (inside the First United C hurch) provided d inner, respite from the street, hot showers and access to the DEY AS I lealth Van to the neighbourhood's sex trade workers. Bonnie Fourn ier had her hands full when the DEY AS Health Van pulled up to the side doors at the WISII Drop-In Centre each night at 6:30 PM. The women who needed her help wou ld wait patiently to see her, knowing that they would never be turned away. The Health Van had been customized with a special

Page 9: November 15, 2010, carnegie newsletter

Families and kids at the OTES

Neighbourhood I louse: Parents and children welcome to come to the Neighbourhood I louse at 573 f:.ast llastings (at Prin­ces.,) for afternoon Family Drop In weekdays 3-6pm. Children dcYelop nutritional confidence during our w~:~:kly Kids Community Kitchen , Saturdays 2-4pm.

Gi\ ing gills at the holidays? Why not donate to the D ITS I'. II in their honour, instead? S I 0 I 0 Smoothics $50 I week's Grocery Coupons for I 0 Volunteers S I 00 = 300 pieces of fruit for the Banana Beat $300 = I week's worth of food •a Programs $500 = I ,200 hard boiled organic eggs

PACE Society is our Charitable partner. For a I ax Re­c~:ipt please make the cheque to PACE with DTL S Nil in the f'vlcmo ! inc and mail it to 50 I East llastmgs Vancouver V6A I P9.

Melanie Spence l·ood Activist. DTES Right to Food Thursdays through Saturdays Downtown Eastside Neighbourhood House 60-t I 215.2030 \\WW .dtesnh. word press. com

Administration: 50 I E Hastings ((1 Jackson V6A I P9 Program Venue: 573 E Hast ings (a Princess V6A I P9

Om\ ntown Easts ide residents working together since 200-t to build a grassroots, secular NH.

AptUs ©

Page 10: November 15, 2010, carnegie newsletter

community rising

I rolled into vancouver on a greyhound bus in 1986

just after expo evictions from the hotels executed oiur martyr

olaf solheim whose death was officially auributed

to eviction from the room he had lived in for decades and at that time the poverty agencies were in constant conflict

with each other city hall and its developers

reduced low-income housing throughout the city

deliberately forcing poor people into the downtown eastside

from where we arc to be driven elsewhere I nowhere and city hall refused to enforce by-laws

and so the hotels parks and alleys became festering cesspools for pandemics

hiv/aids hepatitis a b and c tuberculosis and overdose deaths

the highest in the western world and the money/power people call it revitalization

when our situation by definition was genocide meaning

withholding the necessities for life of a targeted group -

primarily the very ill street addicts there were no demonstrations or protests in the streets then

but dead bodies disappeared women serial killers police thugs

and a health board having spent more money on an outbreak of bumble bee stings

infecting a dozen students at ubc than on a health epidemic

in the downtown eastside and while I early recognized signs of the violence of gentrification

I was told to just wait until the next provincial government was elected

and when they were welfare rates were cut

meanwhile a few poverty agency directors claimed to speak

to the media and politicians for thousands

of suffering people but finally a small group

of downtown eastside residents

organized <'I

and made signs hit the street

and spoke loudly for health ar

and the promises ma to help deml

the mentally traumati and missing

disappeared after grandi

and we learned bitterly

that our government~ often govern

rather than human re; and now

22 years after I arrive only home I'

where housing-the central d

is disappearing

Page 11: November 15, 2010, carnegie newsletter

housing ~ from victoria nized addicts r.ed vomen -

;e and fake announcements

by political announcement lity

l at the ve ever known

'tenninant of health

the hiv/ids rate is now close to botswana's according to the united nations and life expectancy

is closer to haiti's than the rest of vancouver's

yet there is again an active inspiring hopeful

unity among agencies and organizations and there are accomplishments

once thought impossible and a ll ies

alongside us fighting in many ways

to support our continuing existence as an extraordinary

unique community exploding with beauty and knowledge

and what we have is a powerful history

of resistance reminding us each time we see

the face of bruce eri ksen on the building honouring him

and everytime we hear libby davies advocate so tiercel y for us

and everytime we see jean swanson whose presence empowers us

and sandy cameron whose writings celebrate and safeguard our history

and what we have more than ever

at this c ritical and desperate moment

is self-sacrifice and care for one another

and a multitude of our voices now speaking fiery powerful truth

to lying destructive power and we have a remarkable

amazing sustaining deep and impregnable spirituality

of strength joy hope and determination

tearing apart trauma and liberating courage

Bud Osborn

Page 12: November 15, 2010, carnegie newsletter

Dear Friends,

c o M ~n · :-.; 1 r Y

An T s

COUKC l L 0 1

VANCOUV I: R

You're invited to the Community Arts Council of Vancouver Annual General Meeting

Thursday, November 25, 7-9pm Chapel Arts, 304 Dunlevy

I very much hope you will join us for the 64th annual general meeting of the Community Arts Council. Yes, 64! The evening promises to be informative and engaging Great strides have been made this year in the Council's leadership m the community arts in Vancouver and in supporting community arts activities in the Downtown Eastside. Similarly we continue to expand our role in the environmental arts.

The program includes Yulanda Faris, Chair of the Vancouver Opera Foundation speaking about the importance of the community arts, a panel of people committed to the partnership of community arts and the professional arts and opportun ities to experience the arts in action and time for our members and friends to get up to dale on mutual interests. Our AGM will follow - an important event in confirming our leadership as we enter our 65th year in Vancouver's 125th anniversary year.

Sincerely,

ichael Clague President, C!I.CY [email protected]

early and enjoy music, visual art and meeting the CACV board and volunteers. Hope in Shadows will have a display as well as various DTES arts organizations

,After a short welcome at 7pm, we'll show a presentation of projects from last year includin~ Nest enwonmental arts project at CRAB park and Creative Pathways Artists 1n the

which brought great DTES music to Heart of the City this year.

speaker Yulanda Faris will talk about "The Importance of the Community Arts" and a panel of three will respond before opening up the discussion to everyone in the room. First responders include Savannah Walling of Vancouver Moving Theatre and Heart of the City Festival, Hank Bull of Centre A and Western Front and Chris Tyrell, author of The Artist's Survival Guide.

Around Bpm, we'll switch gears and ask you to create a postcard on the importance of the community arts to send to the BC or Federal Government. Neither the feds nor province actually have the word 'art" in any ministry. In BC, it's now the Ministry for Community, Sport and Cultural Development and federally, the arts fit in under Canadian Heritage and Official Languages. 'Where's the Art?' you may ask. Let's send some postcard art to our politicians!

At 8:20, President, Michael Clague, will call the AGM to order. On the agenda are committee reports, board elections and presentation of financial statements. Your part is important. To vote you have to be a member and can jo1n at the door.

The Snowy Owl Traditional Singers will be performing outside of Chapel Arts, 304 Dunlevy Avenue, from 6-7pm a1 the Community Arts Council of Vancouver's AGM on Thursday, November 25th. Come out to this free performance brought to you by Creative Pathways, a CACV initiative, and the BC Arts Council as part of the Artists in the Street project.

A note of gratitude to Carnegie: Our board and committees meet regularly at the Carnegie Centre and appreciate thE use of space and the welcoming atmosphere.

Want to know more about Community Arts in Vancouver? www.cacv.ca [email protected] or 604-617-0142.

Page 13: November 15, 2010, carnegie newsletter

ceiling that provided headroom and shelving and doors that could hold medical supplies. Regardless of how long the line-up outside the llealth Van could get, Bonnie made time to see each woman who needed to see her and she always knew how to make them feel special before the Van had to leave for an­other location Once inside the DEY AS llealth Van, the women of

WISH were treated to first-rate medical care. Most would simply feel better just being in the company of a warm and caring professional nurse.

Bonnie worked hard dispensing Tylenol, lozenges, multivitamins, laxatives and Epsom salts. She also gave flu vaccines, bandaged wounds and did her best to soothe battered women. Sometimes WISII patrons lined up just to talk to Bonnie and get one of her fa­mous hugs. Bonnie had many nicknames but she was often called "Mom"-the highest compliment that could be paid to a woman by the sex trade workers at the Centre. Bonnie knew many of the women who frequented the WISII Drop- In Centre from her days working as the nurse inside the city cells. The city cells, or the "city bucket" as it was often referred to, were located underneath the courthouse at 222 Main Street. Pris­oners were kept in cells while they waited to bees­corted upstairs by the sheriffs. Upstairs housed the courtroom where prisoners would make court ap­pearances in front of various judges. The cdity bucket was known for being a cold, damp space with harsh lighting. Bonnie, known for her years working with the city bucket population, had developed excel­lent diagnostic ski lls and was adept at identifying the illnesses that plagued the women of WISH. Most of my clients battled serious addiction issues.

Heroin and crack cocaine were the drugs of choice and many of the women I knew used both. Working in the sex trade and being a drug addict is a high-risk lifestyle. Women who worked the streets of the Downtown Eastside contracted IIIV, hepatitis C, S.T.Ds, endocard itis and lung infections at an alarm­ing rate. They were also subjected to "bad dates," men who posed as customers but were really violent predators in disguise. It wasn't uncommon for the women Bonnie encountered outside the doors of the WISH. Centre to be in need of some serious medical treat­ment for things like stab wounds and broken bones. For fear of being disregarded as mere drug addicts, women who frequented the WISI I Drop-In Centre were often reluctant to seek health care from tradi-

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PROBASI.~CAlL 1ll£00S.

tiona! service providers. Bonnie Fournier, or "Nurse Ratched," (another of Bonnie's many street monikers, based on the dictatorial nurse in the 1975 film One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest) did not fit into the street population's perception of a traditional health care provider. Bonnie had a fun, casual side that was underlined by a serious, calming nature. The women of the Downtown Eastside knew that Bonnie would tal..e their concerns seriously and would do whatever she could do to help them. If Bonnie believed a women to have an illness that required hospitaliza­tion, she would arrange fot them to be transported to St. Paul's llospital. Bonnie would then follow up on the women she referred to St. Paul's with phonccalls to triage nurses, doctors and social workers. None of Bonnie's actions guaranteed that a woman from WISH would receive the treatment she needed but it usually meant that she would not be turned away by hospital staff at the receiving doors. Any doctor who dismissed a referral from Bonnie Fournier and the DEY AS Health Van could find themselves in the undesirab le position of talking to Bonnie Fournier about the ll ippocratic Oath.

Sometimes I could make out Bonnie's strong, grey­haired, slender shape from a block or two in the dis­tance while driving myself out of the Downtown Eastside after closing the centre at night. Bonnie al­ways wore a bright blue Gore-lex jacket with NURSE written in reflective tape across the back.

Page 14: November 15, 2010, carnegie newsletter

The Health Van, too, was blue with D.E.YA.S. writ­ten in reflective lettering across its sides.

Bonnie and I often talked about the women that we knew from the Downtown Eastside neighbourhood who were going missing. Women had started to dis­appear from the neighbourhood at a disturbing rate. Together we would talk to police officers, politicians, social workers, you name it, trying to raise awareness about some of the sex trade workers who were van­ishing, seemingly without leaving a clue as to where we might find them.

I left the WIS H Drop-ln Centre in 200 I. A year later, in 2002, Robert Pickton was arrested and later charged with the murders of many of the neighbour­hood's missing sex trade workers. While in police custody, Pickton would admit to murdering forty­nine women. Bonnie and I had shared many laughs over the years, but sadly, we have shared many more tears . Bonnie was the last person to see Sereena Abotsway- a woman who accessed both the WISII Drop-In Centre and the DEY AS Health Van, and one of the women Pickton was convicted of killing. As the years rolled along and ensuing court proceedings revealed horrif)ring details of the murders of women we knew, Bonnie and I would cling to each other, fighting tears and promising ourselves that we would continue to work to create services for and awareness ofmarginal ised women. Without question, Bonnie Fournier's work as a regis­tered nurse touring the streets of Vancouver's Down­town Eastside in the DEY AS Health Van will not be forgotten in my lifetime. Throughout my life I will forever remember Bonnie and the D.E. Y .A.S. Health Van as a beacon of humanity that faithfully came at 6:30 each night, a nd parked in front of the doors of the W.I.S.Il. Drop-In Centre.

Vancouver July I4, 2010

Exploring Cybercu lture: Influence, Impact and Rele­vance to Contemporary Society · When: Every Second Sunday l-3p.m. Next meeting November 7, 20 10. Where: The Gathering Place Education Centre (Hclmcken and Seymour) Facilitator: Wil Steele

·Any religion that professes to be concerned about the souls of men and is not concerned about the slums that damn them, the economic conditions that strangle them and the social condition that cripples them, is a spiritually moribund religion awaiting burial.'

--Martin Luther King Jr.

News From -the LibrarY Thanks to everyone who came out to the Launch of

the new Downtown Eastside collection on Nov 4th.

About 45 people showed up to hear poets George McWhirter, Stephen Lytton, Maxine Gadd and Diane Wood read, as well as to hear librarian John Cull talk about the collection. If you're interested in learning more about this great collection of DTES library ma­terials, come on by and ask at the librarian's desk.

Aspiring or established writers may want to spend some time with Betsy Warland's Breathing the Page: Rending the Act of Writing (808 .02). War­land's book is a collection of brief essays on all as­pects of the act of writing, literally. Everything from tools ("The Pencil", "The Computer") to techniques ("Scaffold ing", "Locating the Reader") to The Intan­gible ("Spatiotemporal Structural Strategies")

With Remembrance Day fresh in our minds, it's appropriate that the library should have j ust added Fighting fo r Canada: Chinese all(/ Japanese C(ma­dians in /Hilitnry Service (971.004). Commissioned by the Department of National Defence, this account goes back as far as World War I to document this little known facet of the history of military service in Canada.

Well, it may not be the best time of year for plant identification, but in any case, for those of you who are botanically incl ined, Tire Gardener's Essential Plant Guide (635) is the book for you. It has 400 pages of basic information about garden plants, com­plete with full -colour photos. Bert Dodson's Keys to Drawing (741.2) is an excel­

lent guidebook for anyone wanting to improve their illustration skills. Dodson draws on the techniques of some of the great artist/illustrators - people like Van Gogh, Matisse and Kat he Kollwitz - to inform the drawing lessons that fill this book. All of these books are in the library display case, and arc available to borrow on Monday, November 22"d

Randy, your librarian

Page 15: November 15, 2010, carnegie newsletter

WINTER. SONG (To the tunc of'My Bonny Lies Over the Ocean')

It's freezing and four in the morning It feels like irs 20 below I'm lying here waiting here for dawning Because I have no place to go I'd a man and a son and a daughter A car and a house with nice views He left us though he didn't oughter The kids cried and I took to booze. CHORUS Please sir, please sir, I just need a bed for the night, tonight. Please sir, please sir, I just need a bed for the night.

A Cold Scrammy Day in November

On a cold and scram my day in November I went to the courtyard and

threw some bread crumbs No birds sang No birds new or sat on the high rooftops A rain full day in the wet northwest Ole Vancouver town Remembrance Day dark and quiet Like Goode Friday or Ash Wednesday This was on a Thursday no thunder

Some birds did appear Crows or ravens small dark and shiny Hawk-like eyes hooded heads cocked Aggressive and competitive as seagulls Society breaking down in the hungry cold.

I counted the crows One sorrow, two joy Three five seven Story that's never been told Seagull suddenly scoops up all the bread A pair of plump pigeons peck small crumbs Try to shake apart the bigger pieces

Hailing Starlings and sparrows those opportunities Cheeky and quick dart about A lone woodpecker does not leave his tree Maybe he has left for sunnier climes ...

Wilhelmina Miles

Me3

A lifetime of selfishness Empty, lonely old age Dull and grey, the kind of Grey you can smell, taste. Bland, smokey, aching, Empty, suffering ... Weeping a dry mist upon the blank page. Nothing to show but a translucent dried bag of bones A nameless tomb, dust in the wind, never to settle, always floating on the lifeless breeze. Me, me, me Careful of what you ask Nobody cares OLD MAN.

Henry George

I soon lost my job and my housing So we stayed in a shelter all day We constanlly needed delousing Then they took my poor babies away. My stay at the shelter was over I'd nothing but anguish and woe So I upped and came out to Vancouver I didn't know where else to go. CHORUS

You shouldn'l sleep out in Toronto It's too cold lo sleep out in Moose Jaw It's unwise to sleep out in Prince Albert Tuktoyuktuk or Chibougamau. So Vancouvers the place we all comes to At least you can sleep in the day Folks think we're all druggies and bums, too But most of us just lost our way. CHORUS

I rented a room in a hell-hole $400 a month and quite small My neighbours were noisy and violent And the bathroom was way down the hall As housing, it just wasn't funny With crack-heads and bedbugs all day But what else can you get for the money That welfare allows you to pay? CHORUS

I found me a young handsome lover With two rooms and cash to his name It didn't take long to discover He wanted me out on the game So I went to a place on Cordova With a black eye, all tearful and meek. They said, 'We're full up, suppers over. Go elsewhere, and come back next week.' CHORUS

The shelters are full, or they're useless And if you get a foot in the door Some watery soup and a sandwich And a mattress from midnight to four. You might think this song is depressing You might thmk irs all rather strange But instead of just sitting there stressing Lers all work together for change

by Gian Ward

Page 16: November 15, 2010, carnegie newsletter

NO STRANGER TO BLINDFOLDS Been in this situation before, lots to get done as I sit staring at my door .. so individuality & Sony Walk­mans are now obsolete, one morning I'm going to wake up to the fact that that's the last morning - no repeats. I'm in no hurry for the sun to shine, that is until they announce this is to be the last time, I try not to worry about the hours that turn to months & then in turn to thin air, I am no stranger to blindfolds my incurable a ilments remind me once again I have not gotten or gone anywhere. Every channel instantly mute; Every futuristic gadget does not compute; Every dial in my s ink is so so cold; If I were a teacher, Everyone would fail - allow me to be so bold: So you' re enjoying this dotcomland with its e-coli mai l? I hear Colonel Mustard is going to jail , has the word consecutive been left back on the trail, man this j ud ic ial system has become so stale •r is fo r fai l Fail FA IL; one more cigarette before I light up the next, hands arc shaking yet no nuclear baking starting to attract tension (this is not correct); kids are crying as people walk by them singing "They are not !!.!!!. problem!" Think what you wi ll, every new strolle r puts Earth's core to the test; sew­ers are bubbling the law and enfo rcement is bungling AGAIN don't worry you'll probably be dead as they start picking peop le at random to clean up this mess In conclusion I have no illusions our time line will be chosen worst, pick a channe l any channel and watch the teardrops burst and they didn't even have tore­hearse the end of the last verse.

By ROBERT McGJLLIVRA Y

Carnegie Theatre Workshops Back for the Winter Season!

I 51 two classes: Friday, Nov 26, I - 4pm

Monday, Nov 29, I - 4pm [in the Carnegie Theatre]

Two more classes in December, with a Public Performance on

Wednesday, December 22

For more info: Teresa 604.255.9401 thirteenofuearts@hotmai !.com

Elders

In my eyes, my ideal Elder is an honest person. To get respect is if he or she is respectful towards the younger people.

My grandparents honour their role by teaching us how to care for people's feelings. If one disrespects someone in public, they had to honour the person in a potluck, giving them a blanket for security reasons. 1 believe in caring for elders. Elders are role models

for the ch ildren and their children's futu re. So, my dear elders, I salute you for all your knowl­

edge and wisdom. All my relations,

Bonnie E Stevens

Bedbug Killer: This is I 00% effective and cheap, too. The mixture is V. bleach and 3/. water. Spray or saturate the bed (boxspring &/or mattress) three times a day. Repeat on the 2nd day and no more bugs. The smell evapo­rates too.

Bleach is tox ic (dead ly) to most creatures on this planet.. humans too!

If you have problems with bedbugs on your favour­ite chair or so fa (for all you couch potatoes), this treatment is equally effective.

By Larry Mousseau PS: Did you know that chlorine is added to bleached white flour. This is done because it increases the vol­ume of the dough. More volume = More profit. Yech!

Page 17: November 15, 2010, carnegie newsletter

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Page 18: November 15, 2010, carnegie newsletter

McMurphy Cracks Off

Mad hatters are peculiar men We sleep all day and wake at ten Folks say were lazy Dad says were crazy I say we're just eccentric mad lunatics then

In Gone With The Wind , who goes? Who flew over the cuckoos nest? In 'Stranger in a Strange Land", who's the stranger? Who was the mad monk?

Sarah was asked if she knew Mr. Harper, she replied, "He's the king of Canada" Harper corrected her, "I'm the dictator of Canada" Sarah said she would, then she said she wouldn't, now she might, but who really cares. Sarah went to a tea party, and ordered a double double

Harper, is that a wig or a helmet? Harper, those jets, way to expensive for one guy. Harper, start looking for a new job, hair stylist.

Ignatius, a good academic, a bad politician Ignatius, go back to school, it's embarrassing· Ignatius, we like you, but not as P.M.

Where did the Carnegie Mummy go? What's the name of the Carnegie Angle? How many men in the stained glass windows, take a good look. Who was the mad monk?

There oughta be a law, against lying politicians There oughta be a law, legalising drugs, Portugal has one There oughta be a law, enforcing present laws, about selling drugs in front of Carnegie There oughta be a law, against crazy shrinks. Translate this, I discombobulated his acey ducey mojo in a haze of cold fusion

I told a friend I was taking a course at Carnegie He said 'you're crazy going down there" I said, "so I'm crazy" He said "you'll end up dead or worse' I said " the foods great, let's go for lunch' He wasn't really a friend.

Through A Child's Eyes

What does a ch ild feel or think when he hears the word "war"? Especially back in 1914: when someone in the adult world who was running a country got a little mad at someone else who was also running a country. The words army, soldiers, tanks, ... By this time the child is confused and bewildered, and how come Dad 's suddenly dressed in a funny suit, and he

thinks, 'Why is he carrying a gun and wearing a funny hard helmet?' He looks at his Mom and wonders why she is crying.

Mom and Dad s it quietly at the table, reaching out for each other 's hands, siting and whispering just out of ear range. The child is lost, as if something terrible is go ing to happen. With the sun high in the sky, the grass is green and the nowers are at their peak of colour (so beauti fu l); inside the child's mind a darkness is coming forward. Be it from east, west, north or south he does not understand what has happened.

Suddenly, all around him, the men from the vi llage come out of their homes all dressed the same and walking in line like a machine. As the thudding of the march comes closer and louder, he runs toward his home. !lis father and mother stand outside together, hand in hand, as hi s father gets ready to fa ll in line.

Never hearing such an agonizing cry from his mother, he runs faster to give her comfort.

The new word 'army' comes marching by his house and the dust becomes so thick it blocks the light of the sun. With no words said from mother to child, the soldiers' beat moves onward to the west.

This is the last time the child will see his father as he disappears beyond the horizon.

By Leon Mark Isaac Wuttunee

Page 19: November 15, 2010, carnegie newsletter

FREE ~ "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful

C r g• e committed citizens can change the world. lndeed, it is a n e I the only thing that ever has." · Margaret Mead~

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AHH, REGAR.l>uJr,. 11/e uNFoA.TvNATE INCil>E-Nr,

A1' THE:. C~ICKE.N CooP ...