From The Courier
CRESWICK cemetery was briefly transformed into a Confucian shrine on Saturday, as more than 400 Chinese buried in unmarked graves were finally given a memorial.
A traditional Chinese offering ceremony was performed to officially unveil the memorial, erected by the Victorian Chinese Memorial Foundation to honour their ancestors.
Foundation treasurer Hong Tan was one of a large Chinese community contingent who travelled to Creswick to take part in the ceremony, which recognises those buried there after dying on the gold fields in the late 1800s.
An estimated 250 people attended.
"The Chinese miners interred there are essentially lost,'' Mr Tan said.
"We cannot possibly find who is buried there because they are all lost, so the memory is now formalised by the building of this memorial.
"It is very important to us because ancestral worship is a key tenet of Confucian culture and this is a way to respect our ancestors.''
The Chinese community members who travelled to Creswick enjoyed roast pork, vegetables and fruit after offering it to their ancestors, along with burning incense.
An estimated 4000 Chinese are thought to have populated the Creswick area at the height of the gold rush in the 1850s and 1860s.
Creswick Cemetery Trust secretary Wendy Ohlsen said it was nice to have a permanent memorial that recognised the contribution of Chinese members of the gold rush era in the historic town.
"We are trying to clean up the cemetery to make it more inviting to encourage people to look after their ancestors and to determine exactly where they are so we can commemorate the fact they were there,'' she said.
"We were thrilled to bits with the Chinese ceremony, it was fantastic and a lovely day."
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Thursday, April 29, 2010
Tuesday, April 27, 2010
Rice Chasin' Chair Sniffer resigns from Parliament
I love Troy Buswell. Chair sniffing, bra snapping and now an affair (which also involved misusing government funds), he sure knows how to party. Unconfirmed reports are that his wife Margaret (pictured below) has (finally) walked out on him. Good on you if you have Margaret and don't bother going back to this pathetic loser. Find yourself a REAL man, an Asian man ;)
More on the chair sniffing story
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More on the chair sniffing story
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Some Gumtree Gems
Just got back from a camping trip at Jurien Bay for the ANZAC day long weekend. Met up with a whole group of friends from all sorts of backgrounds and it was quite good to not have AA stuff clogging my mind for a while.
Gumtree is a classifieds site (a bit like craigslist in the US) and usually there are some really funny posts, especially in the confessions section. Of course some of the posts are made up but they are still fun to read nonetheless.
Gumtree is a classifieds site (a bit like craigslist in the US) and usually there are some really funny posts, especially in the confessions section. Of course some of the posts are made up but they are still fun to read nonetheless.
Below are two ads that I came across in the Community and Real Estate section, these are real ads AFAIK. I find them hilarious albeit really creepy. The race of the guy (white) for the first ad is implied while the second one states it within the ad. Lol @ "I would love to learn more about your culture", yeah right *rolls eyes*
Tuesday, April 20, 2010
Tina begged for death, court told
From The Mercury
MURDERED university student Zhang "Tina" Yu was subjected to a horrific attack that ended only after she begged for death, a court has heard.
One of the men accused of her killing told his mate: "I want to kill a bitch tonight" just hours before they picked up Ms Yu from a Sandy Bay restaurant.
The 26-year-old was bashed with a brick, punched and strangled with wire before being drowned in the bath of a New Town flat on June 25 last year, the Supreme Court was told today.
Her battered and naked body was found dumped in a river five days later.
Daniel Joseph Williams, 22, of Channel Highway, Kingston, has pleaded not guilty to Ms Yu's murder.
His trial began yesterday before Justice David Porter, a jury of five women, seven men and one reserve juror.
Another man - Stavros Papadopoulos, 22, of New Town Rd, New Town - has already pleaded guilty to Ms Yu's murder.
In his opening address, Director of Public Prosecutions Tim Ellis SC told the packed courtroom that as the men cruised Hobart looking for women on the night of the killing, Stavros Papadopoulos told his friend: "Tonight is one night in a million. I want to kill a bitch tonight."
He said the pair had picked Ms Yu up at a Sandy Bay restaurant in the early hours of June 25 and taken her to Papadopoulos' New Town unit where she was killed.
Mr Ellis described a protracted and horrific chain of events leading up to Ms Yu's death.
The court heard Papadopoulos told Williams to wrap an electrical cord around the woman's neck, but it snapped.
Mr Ellis said Williams told investigators the student eventually begged for her ordeal to be over.
"In the end, she just told Stav to kill her,'' Williams allegedly told police.
"And they proceed to do just that,'' Mr Ellis said.
The jury was yesterday shown photographs of the unit where Ms Yu died, of the Tyenna River and Ms Yu's battered body.
The trial - which is expected to last up to five days - continues tomorrow.
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MURDERED university student Zhang "Tina" Yu was subjected to a horrific attack that ended only after she begged for death, a court has heard.
One of the men accused of her killing told his mate: "I want to kill a bitch tonight" just hours before they picked up Ms Yu from a Sandy Bay restaurant.
The 26-year-old was bashed with a brick, punched and strangled with wire before being drowned in the bath of a New Town flat on June 25 last year, the Supreme Court was told today.
Her battered and naked body was found dumped in a river five days later.
Daniel Joseph Williams, 22, of Channel Highway, Kingston, has pleaded not guilty to Ms Yu's murder.
His trial began yesterday before Justice David Porter, a jury of five women, seven men and one reserve juror.
Another man - Stavros Papadopoulos, 22, of New Town Rd, New Town - has already pleaded guilty to Ms Yu's murder.
In his opening address, Director of Public Prosecutions Tim Ellis SC told the packed courtroom that as the men cruised Hobart looking for women on the night of the killing, Stavros Papadopoulos told his friend: "Tonight is one night in a million. I want to kill a bitch tonight."
He said the pair had picked Ms Yu up at a Sandy Bay restaurant in the early hours of June 25 and taken her to Papadopoulos' New Town unit where she was killed.
Mr Ellis described a protracted and horrific chain of events leading up to Ms Yu's death.
The court heard Papadopoulos told Williams to wrap an electrical cord around the woman's neck, but it snapped.
Mr Ellis said Williams told investigators the student eventually begged for her ordeal to be over.
"In the end, she just told Stav to kill her,'' Williams allegedly told police.
"And they proceed to do just that,'' Mr Ellis said.
The jury was yesterday shown photographs of the unit where Ms Yu died, of the Tyenna River and Ms Yu's battered body.
The trial - which is expected to last up to five days - continues tomorrow.
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Saturday, April 17, 2010
Jack Wong Sue remembered
A really good, detailed interview on video with Jack's son. The audio quality is poor in certain sections.
Jack Wong Sue remembered | Anzac Day 2010 | BigPond News
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Join the Asian ANZACs facebook page.
Jack Wong Sue remembered | Anzac Day 2010 | BigPond News
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Join the Asian ANZACs facebook page.
Kiwi Asian gets camera stolen...
...by an octopus!
See the full story and video footage at Stuff.
OK I don't think Victor Huang is Kiwi Asian, check out the following morning tv show:
See the full story and video footage at Stuff.
OK I don't think Victor Huang is Kiwi Asian, check out the following morning tv show:
Why does Russell Crowe go for the Souths?
Not that I give a stuff about League or Russell Crowe.
From SMH
''It started in the late '60s when I was four years old,'' he recounts. ''My Dad had a muffler shop in Beaconsfield, the heart of Souths territory, in the last of the golden age of Souths, where the streets were decked in red and green week in, week out. Now, my Dad was a St George supporter and would talk to my brother and I about St George, and they just thought I would come along - a mistake I won't make with my boys - but he had a workmate, a Chinese Australian bloke, who would always talk to me about Souths. So by five years old, I'm a committed Souths supporter, and so from then on we were a fractured family that only came together when the All Blacks were playing …''
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From SMH
''It started in the late '60s when I was four years old,'' he recounts. ''My Dad had a muffler shop in Beaconsfield, the heart of Souths territory, in the last of the golden age of Souths, where the streets were decked in red and green week in, week out. Now, my Dad was a St George supporter and would talk to my brother and I about St George, and they just thought I would come along - a mistake I won't make with my boys - but he had a workmate, a Chinese Australian bloke, who would always talk to me about Souths. So by five years old, I'm a committed Souths supporter, and so from then on we were a fractured family that only came together when the All Blacks were playing …''
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Interview with Gabrielle Wang - Author of Little Paradise
Little Paradise is the true story about Gabrielle's parents and how they came together. It is set during the White Australia Policy. Read the whole interview here. Is it just me or does the shadow image on the cover of the book look like a white couple?
In LITTLE PARADISE, award-winning author Gabrielle Wang takes us on an emotional journey with a young girl, Mirabel, living in 1940s Melbourne. A first-generation Chinese Australian, Mirabel is caught between two worlds. Though entrenched in the local culture, her parents are traditionalists and expect her to be a good, obedient daughter. But Mirabel, a talented artist, has a stubborn, independent streak. She denounces her birth name, and this enough to drive her insulted mother to warn: “Changing your name will change your whole destiny.” And you can bet she means not in a good way!
Fate and chance are recurring themes in LITTLE PARADISE. At a cousin’s birthday party, she locks eyes on JJ, a Chinese soldier stationed in Melbourne. Instantly, she knows he’s The One. But it’s not until her father’s friend brings him home for dinner that she speaks to him for the first time. After a rocky start, they begin an illicit affair. When Mirabel falls pregnant, there’s no going back to being a good, obedient daughter. When JJ is ordered back to China, Mirabel is heartbroken. All contact between them is severed. Then she makes a decision that again changes her destiny: she sets off for Shanghai in the midst of a civil war, infant in tow. Everyone else is trying to flee the city. Not Mirabel. She’s on a mission to find a little paradise with JJ.
LITTLE PARADISE will transport you to a time where you had to be resourceful in order to survive daily life. It’s an emotive, powerful story that comes from the heart. First-gen Australians like myself will relate to trying to reach into the family’s adopted country while maintaining old traditions, all the while wondering where you truly belong.
Tuesday, April 13, 2010
Tourist's death was freak accident, court told
I've been waiting for news on this case.
For the ABC
A committal hearing in Alice Springs has heard conflicting evidence about whether a helicopter pilot was drunk when he spilt aviation fuel, causing lethal burns to a Canadian tourist.
Cynthia Ching, 29, had aviation gas spilt on her at a party on a remote Central Australian station in 2004.
She was severely burned and died six weeks later.
New Zealand man Edward John Woodhouse Lee is charged with two counts of doing an act causing death while intoxicated.
The prosecution said Lee was refuelling a makeshift candle with aviation fuel when it caught alight and started burning him.
It is alleged he threw or dropped the fluid which landed on Ms Ching, causing the burns.
The prosecution alleges Lee was intoxicated at the time.
The owner of the station, Ian Conway, told the hearing it was a freak accident but alcohol was involved.
Mr Conway said at times in the past he had not mentioned alcohol in order to protect Lee.
The defence said Lee was not intoxicated but in shock and injured.
The hearing continues.
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For the ABC
A committal hearing in Alice Springs has heard conflicting evidence about whether a helicopter pilot was drunk when he spilt aviation fuel, causing lethal burns to a Canadian tourist.
Cynthia Ching, 29, had aviation gas spilt on her at a party on a remote Central Australian station in 2004.
She was severely burned and died six weeks later.
New Zealand man Edward John Woodhouse Lee is charged with two counts of doing an act causing death while intoxicated.
The prosecution said Lee was refuelling a makeshift candle with aviation fuel when it caught alight and started burning him.
It is alleged he threw or dropped the fluid which landed on Ms Ching, causing the burns.
The prosecution alleges Lee was intoxicated at the time.
The owner of the station, Ian Conway, told the hearing it was a freak accident but alcohol was involved.
Mr Conway said at times in the past he had not mentioned alcohol in order to protect Lee.
The defence said Lee was not intoxicated but in shock and injured.
The hearing continues.
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