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Sliced Mango Collective provides an inclusive environment for Filipinx-Canadian youth to explore their heritage

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Members of the Sliced Mango Collective promoting local Filipinx businesses. Photo courtesy of @slicedmangoco via Instagram

By: Charlene Aviles, Peak Associate

A conversation between friends led to the creation of the Sliced Mango Collective (SMC), an initiative to celebrate Filipinx culture. Realizing there were few resources for young Filipinx-Canadians to learn about the cultures of the Philippines, Claire Baguio and Kathleen Zaragosa wanted to provide youth, mainly those 1625, an environment to learn about their heritage. In an interview with The Peak, Zaragosa described SMC’s history, goals, and initiatives.

By studying language, an important aspect of culture, Zaragosa learnt the significance of representation and nurturing adolescents and young adults within the Filipinx-Canadian community. To address the lack of Filipinx representation in academia, Zaragosa gathered data on Filipinx-Canadian youth. Zaragosa’s research found: Tagalog is the most common Filipinx language taught, most Filipinx-Canadians are not fluent in their native language, and Metro Vancouver lacks language programs to educate Filipinx-Canadians.

“Whether you were born in Canada or born in the Philippines and then moved [to Canada] at an early age, Fil[ipinx]-Can[adian]s are generally understanding a lot more from their heritage language than they can actively express. I use a term called ‘passive bilingualism,’ in that they have the makings of a bilingual brain,” said Zaragosa.

Acknowledging the diversity among various groups in the Philippines, SMC aims to work with participants to celebrate that diversity.

“In promoting diversity, we’re just trying to promote exploration and curiosity about heritage and about identity as a whole, and our hopes are that with how multicultural and how diverse the Philippines already is, that we’re able to nurture that in people through our work and various initiatives,” Zaragosa said.

At the heart of SMC’s work are values of “decolonization, anti-racism, and intersectional feminism.” Zaragosa explained that a common theme among these values is inclusivity. “Respect and the openness to learn and the openness to continue that conversation [ . . . ] is why we put those values to the highest precedent,” she said.

Zaragosa also explained that anti-racism involves holding people accountable for their actions and increasing public awareness of the injustices that BIPOC communities experience, and intersectional feminism supports SMC’s goal of creating a non-judgmental environment for its participants.

Illustrating the role that colonization plays in Filipinx-Canadian lives, Zaragosa provided this perspective: “Our homeland was set on hundreds of years of colonization, but [ . . . ] as Canadians, and as Canadian settlers, we’re also just settler immigrants on this land, whether we’re born or raised here.”  

One of SMC’s first initiatives centered around the 5163-5187 Joyce Street rezoning application. Their campaign, #SliceofSupport, amplifies local Chinese and Filipinx businesses’ concerns about how the rezoning project will result in the displacement of marginalized groups and gentrification of cultural spaces. The campaign has encouraged those in the neighbourhood to engage with the issue and provide feedback to the City of Vancouver. While waiting for further updates regarding the rezoning application, SMC remains in contact with community organizations and leaders.

SMC is also designing their first zine issue, using the prompt “What’s your slice?” The issue will encourage the audience and contributors to self-reflect on their ancestry, culture, and identity. Zaragosa said that the zine’s theme reflects a Filipinx proverb that states, “You don’t know who you are, or you don’t know where you’re going, unless you know where you come from.” Through this creative outlet for contributors to express their identity and culture, SMC promotes cultural diversity and celebrates Filipinx heritage.

While reflecting on what she learned from creating SMC, Zaragosa recognized the potential impact of empowering and mentoring youth. 

“If we see anything that we’re super passionate about or anything that we want to speak up on, then we shouldn’t be afraid to raise our voices and be heard, because the community’s got our backs. Even if one person hears and someone takes value away from that, at the end of the day, that’s truly what matters,” she said. 

When asked about how the SFU community can support SMC, Zaragosa noted that SMC is searching for other Filipinx-Canadian organizations to partner with and hiring new members to help prepare their zine. Prospective contributors can also submit their work — including but not limited to essays, poetry, and art — through Google Forms. Supporters can stay updated with the Sliced Mango Collective’s work through their website, slicedmangocollective.ca, and Facebook and Instagram, @slicedmangoco.

Downtown Eastside Women’s Centre increases safe spaces for women

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PHOTO: Gudrun Wai-Gunnarsson / The Peak

Written by: Jaymee Salisi, News Writer 

The COVID-19 pandemic has limited women’s access to shelter and increased their potential for abuse. Further, physical distancing to reduce COVID-19 transmission has led to isolation and restricted support for victims of abuse. As a result, Downtown Eastside Women’s Centre board member Andrea Glickman said the COVID-19 pandemic has seen an increase in gender-based violence and overdoses. To mitigate these effects, the DEWC has plans to increase services and accommodate more women. 

Currently, their drop-in centre operates from 10:00 a.m.–4:00 p.m. on most days. The DEWC also has a 24-hour emergency shelter. All women (cis and trans) and their children are welcome to use these resources.

According to the DEWC, “75% of women in the downtown eastside do not feel safe in the streets and in public.” The centre aims to protect these women by providing spaces where they can seek refuge from violence and harsh conditions. They also provide essential services such as food, shelter, and hygiene products to women who are homeless, at risk of homelessness, or at risk of violence. 

The drop-in centre’s former administrative office was recently renovated to hold 15 women at a time. The DEWC also opened another shelter to act as a living area for women with amenities including couches, camping beds, a kitchenette, internet, and toiletries.  

Due to COVID-19 protocols, the centre has reduced the number of people who can be housed in the shelter from 55 to 30. 

In an interview with The Peak, Glickman said the centre plans to open a third drop-in location near their other centres in the downtown eastside.

“We haven’t identified a location yet but we are hoping to have a new and larger space that would be more permanent,” Glickman said. 

Centres are organized based on specific necessities such as sleeping areas or food resources. She said having several locations throughout the downtown eastside, instead of one large location, aligns best with social distancing protocols. Once it is safe to do so, Glickman hopes the new locations will ultimately be able to accommodate women at full capacity. 

“A lot of [clinics] are not as open now, or capacity numbers have to go down in order to follow COVID-19 protocols and deal with transmission issues.” With health services shifting online, “it means people are effectively cut off from accessing things like telehealth [and] video health because they don’t necessarily have access to WiFi or even phones.”

Glickman added that washrooms have become less accessible as most stores and cafés have closed their public washrooms to reduce occupancy in public settings. 

“No money is required for any services,” she said. The centre does not require women to be sober, of a certain religion, or to fill out paperwork to access its resources.

“The goal of these items is to have [easily accessible] sites to help DEWC provide more women with essential services during a time of required physical distancing,” Glickman said. 

The centre accepts financial donations as well as general donations including hygienic products, reusable masks, and clothing. For more information about the Downtown Eastside Women’s Centre and how to donate, visit their website.

Monday Music: Frolicking under cherry blossoms in the sun

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"Monday Music" in giant yellow block letters with a red background
Monday Music: your weekly themed playlist. Image courtesy of The Peak.

By: Petra Chase, SFU Student

After months of gloomy weather — and so much time cooped at home slouched in front of a screen that the real world has started to look pixelated — spring has finally arrived. The baggage of due dates has been lifted off my shoulders and I’ve been feeling serene. There’s something about how sunlight slips through the branches of cherry blossoms and how pink petals pepper the ground like confetti that makes me want to bask under the ethereal ambience. These songs are the perfect soundtrack to help you find some comfort and calm in nature during spring.

“On a Weekend” by Haley Blais

Image courtesy of Tiny Kingdom Music Inc.

Vancouver local Haley Blais provides this song as a gentle reminder to “do what you wanna do” and that alone time does not have to be lonely. Because of COVID-19 restrictions, you may not be able to go to the movies or talk to a stranger like Blais does in this song, but there are plenty of quality solo activities you can embark on this spring. If you’re like me, you find opening all the windows on a hot day, tending to your plants, and puttering around the house to be the perfect way to spend an afternoon. Put this song on in the background and the synth-vocals, upbeat rock, and playful tone might bring you the same joy it brings me. It’s the kind of pure joy that makes me want to frolic around the neighbourhood, stopping to smell every flower I lay my eyes on.

“Love Me Anyway” by Chappell Roan

Image courtesy of Atlantic Recording Corporation

At first listen, “Love Me Anyway” comes across as the epitome of a cheesy coming-of-age romance story: it’s a happy-ending tale told with cliché recollections of childhood, like summer camp and school dances. But the song’s genuineness and giddiness make it enchanting instead of cheesy. Roan’s majestic vocal range paired with her Missouri twang are gorgeous in this track and are bound to make you feel dreamy. This song resonates perfectly with a sunny afternoon in rosy Queen Elizabeth Park.

“Should Have Known Better” by Sufjan Stevens

Image courtesy of Asthmatic Kitty Records

I couldn’t not include a song from Sufjan Stevens in this list. His album Carrie & Lowell is my go-to whenever I need to feel calm, and it’s perfect for reflective strolls. “Should Have Known Better” is about the tension between regret and acceptance, making it a perfect muse during the changing of the seasons. With soft vocals and light instrumentals, this song is sunbeams embodied in musical form — just listen, you’ll understand. Steven’s acceptance of the past through an optimistic revelation about the future is the reassurance we all need to hear during uncertain times.

“Isombard” by Declan McKenna

Image courtesy of Sony Music Entertainment

Fast-paced. Chaotic. Rebellious. The bold drum beats and synth arpeggios in this track are perfect for humming along and strumming the air. This is a song you listen to while going on an adrenaline-induced outdoor adventure or dancing weirdly around your room like no one’s watching. “Isombard” is a word McKenna made up, and I think that whimsical energy perfectly matches the song.

 

 

 

 

SFU Student Updates: May 10–16

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"Student Updates" text in SFU red
You’ve already made it farther through the article than 97% of the student population. ILLUSTRATION: Siloam Yeung / The Peak

By: Clarence Ndabahwerize, SFU Student

Key Updates

We’re making the Burnaby campus a bit greyer

SFU is committed to being one with nature, and we like the fact that most of our buildings mimic our most beloved sombre weather throughout the year. However, we recently decided that was not enough. All buildings will be repainted a shade of grey greyer than the exposed concrete that is a hallmark of our Burnaby campus. Talk about “cementing” an overall aesthetic!

All buildings going forward will have several underground levels and labyrinthine layouts

    We heard Robert C. Brown Hall gets students talking, so we thought to ourselves, “Why shouldn’t we make all campus buildings like it?” Too dreary to go outside? Have fun finding your bestie’s room in residence. And if you want to get there in time, plan your route! It’ll either be good practice for driving with your N, or you’ll get lost and only emerge from the building after seven years have passed— only to find that construction has begun on SFU’s first-ever residence building for raccoons.

Announcements

We heard construction is a noisy affair for you, so . . .

We are most committed to your safety, health, and wellbeing. We recognise that frequent noise stemming from construction may be rather detrimental to that. This is why we’re launching SFU-branded ear mittens for all students affected by construction noises. Worry not: like you, we’re thinking ahead about the weather. Summer ear mittens will be lighter than winter ear mittens. Wondering how we’ll finance this? We won’t, but you will. Please expect a tuition-related announcement soon.

New ‘Raccoon Therapy’

Dog therapy’s been getting a bit old, we heard, so we thought that we ought to change things up. We’ve been lurking in your online meme forums and we’ve seen that there is a particular liking for our beloved campus raccoons. We’ve installed cameras in the AQ so you may have some serotonin in the form of raccoons usurping the owner of the campus Menchie’s and creating an oligarchy in its place. We’ve also hired David Attenborough to narrate this feed between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. PT during exam season.

Employment and volunteer opportunities

Volunteers needed!

We have the honour of being ranked Canada’s most comprehensive university; however, questions have been raised about what exactly a comprehensive university is. Well, we too do not know, which is why we are looking for volunteers to explain to us and our students what it means. Necessary qualifications include: the ability to dim the sun, experience parting the Pacific Ocean and creating a dry path to Australia with a diversion to Hawaii, as well as alchemy. We’re looking forward to your responses.

Researchers needed!

Given that the gondola is gaining some steam, now would be a good time to go ahead with an idea that’s been sitting at the backs of our corporate minds for a while. We believe that a gondola should equal a ski resort, which is why we are considering opening Canada’s first university-owned ski resort at Burnaby Mountain. We’re looking for entrepreneurial minds (read: Beedie students and girlbosses) to look into this. Science majors are also needed to figure out how we can get a whole dump of snow on the mountain since it doesn’t get any most of the season.

Quiz: Which SFU entity is your soulmate?

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Courtesy of the Toronto Zoo

By: Carter Hemion, Staff Writer

It’s the second biggest question on everyone’s mind at SFU right after “when will we get a tuition freeze?”: which entity at SFU is your soulmate? SFU’s timeless concrete walls are home to some of the most romantic construction views, with loose tile walkways that inspire even the most cold-hearted students to check their email for Joy Johnson’s lifeless smile. As we wait to return to in-person schooling, find out which SFU entity you should be fantasizing about seeing again.

Question 1: When was the last time you went outside?
A. Last night! I climbed a tree just to screech at a passerby who didn’t see me.
B. Ahaha . . . the better question is when I last went inside.
C. Of my own volition? Or because I had to?

Question 2: What Beedie-branded SFU accessory would you wear?
A. A stolen fanny pack — for snacks.
B. An obnoxiously red scarf that my mom makes me wear all winter (send help).
C. I’m not even sure what Beedie students study. Graphic design? Pyramid schemes? Late-stage capitalism? The psychology behind why Robert Pattinson is the way he is?

Question 3: What would you be caught singing loudly in the shower?
A. “I’m hungry for cheese like Hungry, Hungry Hippo,” from “Ballers” by Project Pat.
B. “There’s a picture on the wall of Kanye West / He’s staring at me, he’s staring at me,” from “Freaking Out” by The Wrecks.
C. “I have never known peace,” from “In a Week” by Hozier.

Question 4: What was your worst first date like?
A. They said we were going to their favourite restaurant, but it was just stale bagels at their place. They put ketchup on theirs. I cried.
B. We went on a walk — which would’ve been fine if he didn’t just keep walking. I lost track of him in Langley, but I hear he’s still out there somewhere.
C. I never wanted to know that she could play “My Heart Will Go On” on the saw, but, uhh, I guess it was cool?

Question 5: What’s your go-to comfort meal?
Literally anything. Yesterday I got sad and ate the spaghetti I’d already spilled in the sink and left there for an hour.
Comfort meals? No, I just vibe.
I’ve packed a PB and J lunch every day for 23 years. I don’t think I could taste anything else if I tried.

Question 6: Would you ever shave your head?
A. I’ll do anything, bro. Don’t even test me. I’ll do it right now. Just watch.
B. I did not go through four tubes of Manic Panic within an hour just to shave off my 2000s-scene-kid hair now.
C. I’m trying to grow my hair back from a buzzcut, but people tell me it’s looked exactly the same for the last four years.

Question 7: What are you secretly doing just off camera in your lectures?
A. Hitting a vape every time my biology professor shortens the word to “bio.”
B. Just standing there. Watching. Waiting.
C. Wait, you had synchronous lectures? With organized professors?

Results

If you answered mostly As . . . your soulmate is the dog-sized raccoon who takes automatic doors into the AQ every night. You, too, can bask under buzzing overhead lights next to an under-watered plant instead of going outside. And besides, the raccoon will never judge you for the dark circles under your eyes or the late nights eating garbage just to get through the term.

If you answered mostly Bs . . . your soulmate is the statue of Terry Fox. This statue will never give you up, let you down, run around and desert you, or, quite frankly, do a single thing. He’s literally a statue. He even has the same cold, dead eyes that Andrew Petter always gave you. What’s not to love?

If you answered mostly Cs . . . your soulmate is the construction worker who has been working on the same part of the AQ for a decade. I’m not even sure what they’re doing anymore, but at this point, I’m too afraid to ask. Making eye contact every Tuesday at Renaissance Coffee is bound to lead to something! Even if they’re not as loud and dirty as their work, they’re probably good with their hands (nudge nudge, wink wink!).

SFU’s enrolment process is unfair to student groups

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The enrolment process doesn’t support all students equally. PHOTO: Tim Gouw / Unsplash

By: Nancy La, Staff Writer

SFU’s enrolment process, especially the availability of classes and enrolment dates, has been a hot topic of debate and criticism for a while now. Various online forums and social media posts point to the flawed system and its repeated failure in helping students get the classes that they want or need, and with so many complaints of closed classes and late enrolment dates, this cannot be a coincidental one-off event.  

With enrolment dates playing a pivotal part in students’ success, the system must work efficiently and equitably, yet despite its importance in a student’s academic career, SFU’s enrolment system creates an environment of discontent among students. Problematic prioritization of student-athletes, poor logistical planning, and supposed lack of funding all play an important role in the creation of an inefficient and unfair enrolment experience.

An aspect that highlights the arbitrariness of the enrolment process is the priority varsity-athletes have over almost every other student group at SFU. While sports add school spirit and play a part in student life, it is unfair to consider them in higher regard, particularly when this privilege impacts the availability of classes for the rest of the student population. Giving student-athletes priority over any other students is unreasonable, but it is especially problematic that even students with disabilities are not deemed a higher priority. 

Students with disabilities face different challenges that varsity-athletes do not, and the priority system does not take that into account in its enrolment order. This action from the school prevents equal access to education for students who need extra consideration when it comes to course scheduling. Despite all the bells and whistles regarding SFU being an NCAA school, SFU is still an academic institution, and I do not see why sports should be placed above other student groups.

To make the enrolment process equitable, there needs to be a serious reassessment of the current priority level. Right now students with disabilities are being offered accessibility tools such as the Center for Accessible Learning (CAL) while being placed below student-athletes in terms of enrolment priority. SFU needs to ensure that it is paying attention to all students’ needs, not just the ones that play sports. 

Another side to this enrolment issue is the lack of seats in classes. As a third-year student myself, I have had my fair share of required classes fill up with no waitlists available. Had they been elective classes, I would be more understanding, but these are classes that SFU dictates I must take to graduate. If the administration already knows that students have to take these classes, then the low seat numbers do not make any sense. 

Having the student body take a course planning survey for the upcoming semester could be a solution to this demand-and-supply problem, while also helping SFU determine how to divert resources to classes that have high enrolment demands.  

While a survey can fix some aspects of the problem, there is a more serious underlying issue. The school’s inability to meet its students’ most basic educational demands is out of place with the annual tuition hikes that are supposed to be “significant investments” for both staff and students. While the increase in school revenue is achieved, class offerings continue to decrease in size and quantity, especially during summer semesters. Students have paid for their side of the bargain, but SFU remains absent in its deliverance.

SFU needs to go back to the drawing board and come up with a better way to ensure equitable enrolment for students. Elements of the issue such as the lack of student input on course offerings and an increase in the investment of teaching staff are important first steps in ensuring that SFU is a fair and efficient educational institution for all of its students. The school needs to take its head out of the sand and start acknowledging that the system it offers does not work from both the standpoint of efficiency and equity. Taking these suggestions into account is the first step of many towards a better educational experience for everyone.

DIY boba: recipe for tapioca pearls

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Take your home cooking skills to the next level. Photo courtesy of The Spruce Eats

By: Nancy La, Staff Writer

Don’t want to leave the comfort of your own home for a cup of bubble tea? Do not fret, for pearls are actually quite easy to make at home. During the earlier phase of the pandemic, I would make boba pearls while taking a break from baking sourdough bread, and the results were surprisingly good. It may take longer than you would think, but you can make a big batch, freeze them, and then you’ll have pearls ready anytime you have a craving for some bubble tea! 

Bubble tea pearl recipe (adapted from Nino’s Home YouTube video)

135g or 1 cup tapioca starch (don’t replace with any other starch, it will not work)

70g or ½ cup dark brown sugar

80ml or ⅓ cup water

Additional tapioca starch for dusting and rolling

*Make sure all ingredients are weighed out before you start cooking

 

  1. In a small saucepan, add 80ml of water and stir in the 70g of dark brown sugar. Mix well.

2. From your 135g of tapioca starch, take out a tablespoon’s worth of starch and add it into the pot. Mix until homogeneous.

3. Put the pot on low-medium heat and cook the mixture, stirring constantly to prevent burning. Mixture will thicken up quickly. Once it is thick enough for you to draw a line through the mixture and you can see the bottom of the pot, take it off the heat.

4. Dump the remaining tapioca starch into the pot. Mix the starch and the sugar mixture together. It will look very pasty and crumbly, and that is okay. Just keep mixing until the mixture cooled down enough for you to touch with your hands.

5. Turn the entire mixture out onto a work surface and knead. It will be quite dry, but that will go away once the starch is hydrated by the water. Dust the surface of your work surface with starch as needed. Knead until the dough is smooth. 

6. Using a bench scraper (or a knife), cut the dough into four sections. Take each section that you just cut out and roll into a long rope. Keep the ropes at about the same length and place them next to each other.

7. Cut the ropes into little pieces. Keep the pieces small, at around 0.5cm, otherwise you will have a hard time cooking the pearls.

8. Take a couple of pieces of dough into your palm and roll them into little pearls. Do this to all the pieces, while keeping them under a damp towel or plastic wrap to prevent drying out.

9. Once all the pieces are rolled out, coat them in tapioca starch. At this point, you can take the pearls and freeze them in a Ziploc bag for later use. Just follow the instructions below to cook them.

10. Put a pot of water to boil. You need over half a pot of water to cook the pearls.

11. Add the pearls into the pot and cook for 20 minutes, stirring once in a while to prevent clumping. After, take the pot off the heat and cover it with a lid for 30 minutes. This cooks the insides of the pearls thoroughly.

12. After 30 minutes, drain the pearls. Rinse them under cold water for a minute to cool down. Tadah! You just made pearls! Now you can put the pearls into a milk tea of your choice, or even a smoothie!

Local bubble tea stores you can turn to amid the boba shortage

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Homemade toppings will elevate your bubble tea experience! Photo courtesy of SHOTT Beverages

By: Nancy La, Staff Writer

Remember the Suez Canal (and all its good memes) that stuck with the internet last month? Well, after this delay in international shipments, there’s simply not enough boba to fuel Vancouver’s desire for chewy tapioca balls.

Thankfully, we need not look far for solutions. I present to you: Vancouver bubble tea stores that make their own boba!

OneZo Tapioca 

Photo courtesy of OneZo Tapioca

A quick scroll on OneZo’s website proves that they are serious about the craft of tapioca. The brand has stores across Canada and they are leaders in the fresh handmade boba scene. Before their arrival in the bubble tea world, most stores would only sell the standard dark brown boba pearls. With OneZo’s diverse selection of boba flavours like mango, sesame, and even cactus, they will surely keep you on your toes when it comes to both taste and sight. Their Burnaby location is open for takeout and delivery.

Xing Fu Tang

Photo courtesy of @nomsyyc via Instagram

If you have been around the Vancouver food and drinks scene for the past couple of years, then the name Xing Fu Tang is a familiar one. Known for their signature pearls that are stir fried in a wok with brown sugar, Xing Fu Tang definitely lives up to its name as the “Hall of Happiness” by serving up warm, syrupy tapioca in its signature brown sugar pearl milk. If you want to take a break from the pearls and try something new, their bunny jelly mango smoothie is a refreshing option for the hot summer days. They are open at multiple locations in Metro Vancouver for takeout and are also available via delivery apps.

The Alley

Photo courtesy of See the City

The Alley’s signature deer logo is a popular sight around Vancouver — and with good reason. Their drinks range from the classic brown sugar to newer mixes such as “Apple of My Eyes” and “Penguin on the Ice,” giving a twist to well-known fruit drinks. The Alley’s dedication to the bubble tea definitely shows, since they make their pearls — adorably named Deerioca — and their own cane syrup in house. One of their most popular drinks is the Deerioca Puff. The crunchy topping plays off of the soft chewiness of the pearls. It is definitely a fun textural experience. The Alley is open for delivery and takeout, and their online shop is also available if you want some deer-themed bubble tea merch.

Need to Know, Need to Go: May 10–16

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Illustration of a blue calendar, with "Need to Know, Need to Go" written on top
Arts & Culture events to catch around the city. Image courtesy of Brianna Quan

By: Gurleen Aujla, Peak Associate

prOphecy sun: GSWS Acts Artist Workshop | May 14, 12:00 p.m.–1:30 p.m. | FREE | Online

The SFU gender, sexuality and women’s studies department is celebrating its 50th anniversary with the GSWS Acts series, highlighting those advancing “causes for social justice, meaningful community development, and solutions to the challenges of our time.” Their next event is Sonic Compositions for the Fraser Lowlands featuring Dr. prOphecy sun, a queer interdisciplinary artist, scholar, and ecofeminist. Her work explores the overlap between “new technologies, humanity, and the environment.” The event will feature several compositions of urban and rural environmental sounds coupled with smartphone technology and voice. Eventbrite registration is required.

Seeing Anew: Earthly Presence | Runs until May 12 | FREE | PoMoArts | Online and In-Person

The Port Moody Arts Centre is currently presenting the work of Garrett Andrew Chong, a fourth-generation Chinese-Canadian media artist. His photographic collages depict iconography and the landscapes of his travels. Chong has spent a considerable amount of time journeying through Southeast Asia, Peru, and Mexico. He invites viewers to “witness our majestic earth anew by remaining present, by quieting their mind and by reflecting upon our human search for being.” Viewers can check out the complete exhibit and the gallery’s hours on PoMoArts’ website.

Sur/Veil: Who’s Looking, Whose Watching | Runs until May 12 | FREE | PoMoArts | Online and In-Person

Valerie Pugh, a Coquitlam-based visual, ceramic, and mixed media artist reflects on communication in a subtle yet startling manner. She exposes the difference of communication in a self-determined manner versus being surveilled by others. In this exhibit, Pugh focuses on the “subjectification and/or objectivization involved in the ‘act of seeing’” through paintings and sculptures. Viewers can visit the PoMoArts Gallery website for operating hours or to view the exhibit virtually.

Independent theatres left out of the picture in Canada’s 2021 budget

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Local venues like the Rio Theatre are voicing their concerns. Photo courtesy of the Rio Theatre

By: Marco Ovies, Features Editor

Movie theatres have been hit hard during the pandemic, and most have been forced to shut down entirely under current public health orders. Some local cinemas have redesigned their businesses to operate and generate some sort of income — like the Rio Theatre, which is now temporarily known as the Rio Sports Bar. Unfortunately, while creative measures like the Rio Theatre’s are resourceful, many independent theatres remain in dire need of financial assistance. It came as a shock to venues across Canada when it was revealed that they had been left out of Canada’s 2021 budget.

The budget does go into detail about how Canada will be “supporting Canadian TV and Film Productions through COVID-19” and outlines that they will be “funding up to $100 million so that, during the peak spring and summer production period this year, filmmakers and producers have access to this critical backstop that reduces the financial risk productions face amidst ongoing COVID-19 shutdowns.”

While the support for local TV and film productions is a good start, the question still remains: where will we be able to watch these once COVID-19 is over?

The Network of Independent Canadian Exhibitors (NICE) has similar concerns. In a blog post, they said that “Too often, cinemas are lost in the conversation between commerce, and publicly funded cultural projects. It is time for that to change.”

Venues like The Cinematheque, located on Howe Street in Vancouver, have been around since 1972, while others like the Rio Theatre have been around since 1938. Not only are these venues pillars of their communities, but they are also vital for showing local Canadian art.

Independent cinemas play a critical role in ensuring the public has access to a diverse range of Canadian and international stories, highlighting marginalized artists like those who identify as BIPOC or as LGBTQIA2S+. And as neighbourhood attractions, these venues continue to foster a sense of community. Sadly, more and more theatres are being forced to close their doors. Most recently in BC, Vancouver’s Kino Café shut down; and theatres like Powell River’s historic Patricia Theatre, the oldest theatre in Canada still in operation, are struggling to stay afloat.

“Venue closures to reduce community transmission of COVID-19 have hit cinemas hard this past year,” said NICE. “Canada is at risk of losing its independent cinemas if directed support is not provided. We are an important Canadian sector, and it is time we are recognized.”

You can donate to help keep the Patricia Theatre open online at https://patriciatheatre.com. You can also support the Rio Theatre online at http://riotheatre.ca.