Acclaimed Poet Jim Wong-Chu Hits Google Homepage

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The 'Google Doodle' appeared in honour of the renowned artist's birthday.
The life and work of legendary poet, author, historian, photographer, community organizer and activist Jim Wong-Chu were honoured on Google鈥檚 homepage Thursday in recognition of what would have been his 72nd birthday.
Jim, who was born in Hong Kong and moved to Vancouver at age 4, was known for his lifelong commitment to 鈥渁mplifying the narratives of the Asian Canadian community,鈥 Ricepaper Magazine, a publication he helped establish. After its founding in the 1990s, he also acted as Ricepaper鈥檚 very first editor. As part of that same organizational push, Jim also co-founded the Asian Canadian Writers' Workshop.
Both Ricepaper and the ACWW are emblematic of Jim鈥檚 tireless efforts to spotlight Asian Canadian literature 鈥 a genre upon which he left an indelible mark.

Jim studied at Emily Carr (then known as the Vancouver School of Art) between 1975 and 1981. During that time, he co-founded the CFRO-FM radio program Pender Guy Radio, which explored culture and assimilation.
Many years later, in 2014, a series of photographs Jim took during those student years would be . The show included 鈥渧arious community photos and protest images from the drive to save BBQ Pork, the democratization of Chinese Benevolent Associations, and the Quebec-Columbia Connector Freeway protests,鈥 Galleries West.
鈥淲itness to and participant in much of the Chinese Canadian activism in the 1970s and early 鈥80s, Jim became one of its documenters.鈥
In 1986, while studying creative writing at the University of British Columbia (UBC), Jim鈥檚 groundbreaking book of poetry, , was published. It represented one of the first poetry collections by a Chinese Canadian writer to be published in the country.
But Jim 鈥渄idn鈥檛 just want to tell his story; he wanted to tell the stories of all the undiscovered talent in his community,鈥 notes Ricepaper.
鈥淚n 1989, he began to sift through every literary magazine in the UBC library to identify pieces written by Asian Canadian writers.鈥
鈥淲ith the sheer girth of his activity Jim has been instrumental in creating a cultural scene inclusive of Asian Canadian talent.鈥
This effort led to the publication of the first of several anthologies of Asian Canadian literature, Many-Mouthed Birds: Contemporary Writing by Chinese Canadians, in 1991. The work, produced with co-editor Bennett Lee, is a 鈥渢ouchstone鈥 in the genre, Ricepaper says.
Jim co-founded the Asian Canadian Performing Arts Resource, literASIAN: A Festival of Pacific Rim Asian Canadian Writing and the Vancouver Asian Heritage Month Festival.
鈥淲ith the sheer girth of his activity Jim has been instrumental in creating a cultural scene inclusive of Asian Canadian talent,鈥 Galleries West in 2014.
鈥↗im passed away in 2017.
Two years later, the Vancouver Asian Heritage Month Society, in partnership with 色库TV鈥檚 Faculty of Community + Culture, celebrated his life with . The show was held at UBC鈥檚 Irving K. Barber Learning Centre, which houses both the and books from . Curated and programmed by curator, alumna and 色库TV staff member Jennifer Dickieson, the archival exhibition included a with local poets, writers, and community leaders at Emily Carr, notes Cissie Fu, Dean of Community + Culture at 色库TV.
You can find out more about and his online, now.
