14 February 2008

israeli woks

The Israeli government has limited the number of visas for foreign restaurant workers to 500, and will reduce this number to zero next year. seems to be targeted mainly at asian workers, particularly thai, chinese, japanese and indian restaurants… and the Israeli Ethnic Restaurant Association is trying to appeal this decision to the supreme court.

“We feel an Israeli can hold a wok as well as a Thai or a Chinese person,” said Shoshana Strauss, a lawyer at the Trade Ministry, which regulates work permits for foreign workers. (MacLean’s)

3 February 2007

modern airports unite

hong kong — airport, or shopping mall?

airport of the year from 2001-2005 (with a mere second place in 2006). fastest way to get there is taking the subway. you can check your luggage at Hong Kong station in Central, maybe shop a bit at the swanky IFC mall, then take the 23-minute ride to the actual airport… and shop some more.

airport-hk

kuala lumpur — airport, or shopping mall?

fastest way into town is to take the 28-minute KLIA express train to KL Sentral station. the airport looks eerily similar to HK’s airport: shopping shopping shopping. just with more muslims in headscarves walking around. according to wikipedia, the airport was designed by a japanese architect with the concept of airport in the forest, forest in the airport. It also has the world’s first six-star animal hotel for pets.

airport-kl

singapore’s budget terminal

the 2006 “airport of the year” is a 30-minute subway ride from City Hall station. plus an extra 5-minute shuttle ride to get to the budget terminal (yes, it’s actually called the “budget terminal“, as opposed to Terminals 1 & 2). they only tell you which gate your flight is at 30 minutes before departure, and last call is 10 minutes later (the terminal is small though, so this is not a problem)–which means most passengers wait in the large common hall instead of at each gate. I flew tiger airways, which was fun (and cheap). no assigned seating. all flight attendants and staff wear cotton tees and pants by giordano with tiger-striped belts.

airport-sg

3 September 2006

a story about chinese in-laws

an american writes about cultural differences when visiting another country: but when you’re older, chinese, and are his in-laws visiting the US for the first time.

granted, it’s mostly just complaining about in-laws, but the best are the parts about food, particularly the Mealtime Conversation at the end (can’t…stop…laughing — but for more sobering context as to the possible origins of this all-too-common phenomenon, check out comment #61).

and the winner for best in-law goes to…

31 July 2006

外国人 (wai guo ren)

a bus from montreal to toronto is sixty bucks.

a sri lankan van, which costs $40, drops you off at your door.

me: “ah, hello, is this the number for rides from Montreal to Toronto?”

them: “No.”

damn, if only I spoke tamil. good thing there’s the chinese carpool, going rate at about $25.

on the way to t-dot

I’m two minutes late. Everyone’s already there. We leave right away. Efficient.

One girl is from Sichuan province. I ask what city, but she thinks I probably wouldn’t know it. I mention I’ve been to Chengdu. She’s amazed, and says that’s the one. (Nevermind that it’s the capital and one of China’s largest cities.) The other girl is from Wuhan, on the Yangtze river. I ask how they decided to move to Montreal, since it’s not the easiest place to go to with the French language and all. All because of a friend who had settled here beforehand–but of course it would be easier to live in Toronto. They import winter coats from China.

I don’t end up talking to the guy sitting in front, but the driver looks at me and laughs, “when I first heard your english on the phone, I thought you were a 外国人.”

wai guo ren means ‘foreigner’ (literally “outside-the-country person”). the funny thing about chinese people is that they could be clear across the world from china, and the only chinese people for miles, but still everyone else is a wai guo ren. Even though I was born in Canada, I am not a laowai (well, depending on the situation–as far as I can tell it has to do with a certain combination of language and ancestry). But nobody seems to notice the illogic of this.

My Chinese is faltering. I am spiraling down the wai guo ren path. We arrive at Don Mills subway in exactly 5 hours. Fast.

the way back

Driver is a Chinese guy who’s lived in Canada over 15 years, and commutes to Toronto on the weekend to see his wife and new baby. Passengers all women, all with northern chinese accents. One is a tourist. The other two doing advanced degrees at McGill.

The driver is really chatty, but when the conversation stops I finally hear more closely the music he is playing. “Chairman Mao… communist party…” All choral, with no soloists (of course).

which reminds me of my first haggling experience
…involving buying a certain little red book.

革命不是请客吃饭,不是作文章,不是绘画绣花,不能那样雅致,那样从客不迫,文质彬彬,那样温良恭俭让。革命是暴动,是一个阶级推翻一个阶级的暴烈的行动。
A revolution is not a dinner party, or writing an essay, or painting a picture, or doing embroidery; it cannot be so refined, so leisurely and gentle, so temperate, kind, courteous, restrained and magnanimous. A revolution is an insurrection, an act of violence by which one class overthrows another.

–Mao Zedong, “Report on an Investigation of the Peasant Movement is Hunan” (March 1927), Selected Works, Vol. I, p.28.

7 June 2006

because the world should be black or white

compare this ad, of a typical variety found all over asia:

…with this one, which is currently displayed in most metros in montreal:

tan

it’s really funny, the poster says, “picture yourself tanned!” and includes a mirror that’s tainted very very yellow. but more like a dirty colour rather than anything remotely pleasant.

from the new york times: a vision of pale beauty carries risks for asia’s women