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For Immediate Release, Dated February 2009:

The books are available through your local library, by ordering through your local bookstore, or directly from Evanishen.

Where are the Pioneers?

There are people of Ukrainian descent in pretty well every community in Canada, but are there any pioneers left?

Danny Evanishen has been searching for them since 1991, in order to record their stories.

Since Evanishen is of Ukrainian descent himself, he has been searching mainly for Ukrainian pioneers, as he is working on a collection of all the Ukrainian folk tales. But by now, he feels that there are no more pioneers of any nationality left.

"I can't even remember the last time I talked to a real pioneer," says Evanishen. "Now I am concentrating on the children and grandchildren of the pioneers, hoping they might remember some of the stories their parents told."

"The stories are important to us as Canadians, as they tell us about where we came from, and if we know where we came from, we will have a better chance of understanding where it is that we are going," explains Evanishen.

Since starting his search for stories, Evanishen has collected enough of them to fill ten volumes of folk tales translated into English, and two of humorous stories about the old days.

In addition, he has published another ten books of material he has collected. Some of the books are Ukrainian-related, some are purely Canadian, and some have been written by other authors.

"All of the books we have published so far are of interest to the general public," says Evanishen. "Everybody loves to hear a good folk tale or a funny story well told."

If you have stories to share or would like more information about the works published so far, Evanishen can be reached at:

Danny Evanishen

Box 234, Summerland, BC, V0H 1Z0

250-494-3205

Email: danny@ethnic.bc.ca

Website: www.ethnic.bc.ca

 

For Immediate Release, Dated November 2006:

(The books are available through your local library, by ordering through your local bookstore, or directly from Evanishen.)

Unexpected Results of Search

Danny Evanishen has been searching for stories about Ukrainian pioneers in Canada since 1991.

"Even though there aren't many pioneers left, I am still trying to find them," says Evanishen. "It's getting to the point where I am now looking for the children of the pioneers, hoping they might remember some of the stories their parents told."

"The stories are important to us as Canadians, as they tell us about where we came from, and if we know where we came from, we will have a better chance of understanding where it is that we are going," explains Evanishen.

In his search for pioneer stories, Evanishen often runs into other items of interest to Canadians and historians in general.

In 2004, Evanishen was honored to have worked on two projects initiated by previously unpublished author Gloria Atamanenko of 150 Mile House, BC.

Ms Atamanenko and Evanishen met at a Ukrainian festival several years ago, at which time she proposed a translation of a book written in Ukrainian, and asked Evanishen for assistance. The result is a book called 14 Months on Franz Joseph Land, which was written by Mykhailo Ivanychuk in 1934.

Ivanychuk was a brilliant Ukrainian scientist and Arctic explorer, whose misfortune was to have lived in and worked for the Soviet Union. He was eventually murdered by the regime, but the story of his exploration lives on.

The other project in 2004, which was also initiated by Ms Atamanenko, is an ancient Ukrainian board game known as Sheep and Wolves. The game seems to be almost unknown today, but it is certainly worthy of a revival. It appears simple, but can be played using strategies similar to those used in chess.

In 2006, Evanishen contributed to an anthology called Kobzar's Children: A Century of Untold Ukrainian Stories. This book tells many stories of importance to everyone who has an interest in the immigrant experience over the years. The stories range from the old days to the present.

If you have stories to share or would like to see the works published so far, we can be reached at

Box 234, Summerland, BC, V0H 1Z0

Phone (250) 494-3205 Fax (250) 494-3205

danny@ethnic.bc.ca

Web Site: http://www.ethnic.bc.ca

Email: danny@ethnic.bc.ca

Website: www.ethnic.bc.ca

 

For Immediate Release, Dated May 2004:

Unexpected Results of Search

Danny Evanishen has been searching for stories about Ukrainian pioneers in Canada since 1991.

"Even though there aren't many pioneers left, I am still trying to find them," says Evanishen. "It's getting to the point where I am now looking for the children of the pioneers, hoping they might remember some of the stories their parents told."

"The stories are important to us as Canadians, as they tell us about where we came from, and if we know where we came from, we will have a better chance of understanding where it is that we are going," explains Evanishen.

In his search for pioneer stories, Evanishen often runs into other items of interest to Canadians and historians in general. Examples of these are the books he has published about Louis Riel, and a fictional Canadian airplane crash, as well as several children's books written by other Canadians.

This year, Evanishen feels honored to have worked on two projects initiated by a previously unpublished author named Gloria Atamanenko, of 150 Mile House, BC.

Ms Atamanenko and Evanishen met at a Ukrainian festival several years ago, at which time she proposed a translation of a book written in Ukrainian, and asked Evanishen for assistance. The result is a book called 14 Months on Franz Joseph Land, which was written by Mykhailo Ivanychuk in 1934.

Ivanychuk was a brilliant Ukrainian scientist and Arctic explorer, whose misfortune was to have lived in and worked for the Soviet Union. He was eventually murdered by the regime, but the story of his exploration lives on.

The other project this year, which was also initiated by Ms Atamanenko, is an ancient Ukrainian board game known as Sheep and Wolves. The game appears to be almost unknown today, but it is certainly worthy of a revival. It appears simple, but can be played using strategies similar to those used in chess.

If you have stories to share or would like to see the works published so far, we can be reached at

Box 234, Summerland, BC, V0H 1Z0

Phone (250) 494-3205 Fax (250) 494-3205

danny@ethnic.bc.ca

Web Site: http://www.ethnic.bc.ca

Email: danny@ethnic.bc.ca

Website: www.ethnic.bc.ca

 

For Immediate Release, Dated April 2003:

Search Results

Canadian writer Danny Evanishen is still searching for stories of Ukrainian pioneers in Canada. "There must be a few still alive," says Evanishen. "We had better record their stories while we still can."

Evanishen's writing and publishing projects involve collecting all the Ukrainian folk tales as well as funny stories of the pioneer days in Canada. The stories are all retold in English, so that everyone has access to this exciting part of our Canadian heritage.

"Stories are important," says Evanishen. "It is through them that we learn about our culture. In the old days, most knowledge was passed on orally, but this tradition is being lost, now that we have television and radio. Where are all of our storytellers now that we really need them?"

The stories in Evanishen's new book, Durak and Other Ukrainian Folk Tales Retold in English, were gathered from a variety of sources. "I was lucky enough to find people who know stories," says Evanishen. "I give full credit in the books to anyone who is willing to share their knowledge."

Some of the people who shared their stories are no longer alive, but their stories will live forever. "To me, it's a tragedy when someone dies before their stories are recorded," says Evanishen.

Evanishen's second book for 2003, The Magic Dust, is a wonderful picture book containing a single unusual folk tale. The story was told to Evanishen by Taras Oleksiw, who heard it from his father, who came to Canada from Ukraine.

"My father heard the story from his father, who got it from his father, and so on," says Oleksiw. "As I was growing up in Montreal's East End, I was reluctant to accept any of the stuff my parents brought from the Old Country, but I was mesmerized by the stories. I eventually came to understand how important they really are."

Oleksiw is an artist now living and working in Waterloo, Ontario. It took almost eleven years for Oleksiw and Evanishen to assemble the pictures and other material for the book, but the results are stunning. "This is a very special book," says Evanishen. "I'm thrilled that the person who told me the story is also an artist who is capable of such wonderful work. It's a beautiful book."

If you have stories to share or would like to see the books published so far, we can be reached at

Box 234, Summerland, BC, V0H 1Z0

Phone (250) 494-3205 Fax (250) 494-3205

Email: danny@ethnic.bc.ca

Website: www.ethnic.bc.ca

 

For Immediate Release, Dated April 2002:

Tell Me a Story!

Danny Evanishen's ten-year-long search for Canadian pioneers of Ukrainian descent is continuing, but with diminishing results. "There aren't many Ukrainian pioneers left," says Evanishen. "As a matter of fact, I have a feeling that there are very few pioneers of any national origin still alive."

Evanishen is collecting stories from and about the pioneers of Canada's West. In the absence of the pioneers themselves, he is hoping to find their descendants, and encourage them to share the stories their parents and grandparents told them.

One project Evanishen is working on is the collection of all the Ukrainian folk tales. Very few people tell folk tales any more. Thus, it is so important to find those who remember them and record the stories.

Evanishen has been lucky enough to collect stories that are not found anywhere else. When someone dies, they take all their knowledge with them, unless it has been recorded.

"I have several stories that are not found in any written collections," says Evanishen. "I have spoken to people who have told me stories, and they are amazed that I find them valuable. Everybody knows something that nobody else knows, and we can all learn from each other."

Evanishen has been collecting the stories, and rewriting them into a series of books that will contain all the Ukrainian folk tales he can find.

Evanishen is also collecting humorous stories about the pioneer days. "Nobody has ever collected the funny stories," says Evanishen, "and I don't know why not. This is more fun than I've ever had before."

This year, Evanishen has published Volume Number 9 in the folk tales collection, titled "Yalynka and Other Ukrainian Folk Tales Retold in English," as well as an airborne adventure novel titled "The Khaki Angel," written by Dave Williams of Revelstoke, BC. "I sometimes run into really good books that don't fit my collections of Ukrainian stories," says Evanishen. "But they are worthy of being published, so I do it."

If you have stories to share or would like to see the books published so far, we can be reached at

Box 234, Summerland, BC, V0H 1Z0

Phone (250) 494-3205 Fax (250) 494-3205

Email: danny@ethnic.bc.ca

Website: www.ethnic.bc.ca

 

For Immediate Release, Dated March 2001:

Pioneers Gone

Danny Evanishen has been searching for the few remaining Canadian pioneers of Ukrainian descent since 1991, and he feels he has come to the end of the road.

"I haven't talked to a pioneer for a couple of years," says Evanishen. "By the time I started my story-collecting projects, there were very few left, and now, I am afraid they are all gone."

The stories these people told are the stuff that Evanishen's books are made of - the Ukrainian folk tales retold in English and the funny things that happened in the old days.

Evanishen has been collecting the stories, translating them, and rewriting them into a series of books that will one day contain all the Ukrainian folk tales he can find.

"The oral tradition ended with the pioneers," says Evanishen. "They were the last generation to tell folk tales. Now we have TV and computers to entertain children, and they hear very few stories from the older members of their families."

"In the old days, most of what children learned as they were growing up came from the stories their grandparents told them. Now, most often, visits with grandparents are rare, and we are losing a method of teaching our young that is thousands of years old," laments Evanishen.

"When I hear that an older person has died and nobody has recorded their knowledge, their stories, I consider that to be a tragedy. There is an old African saying: 'When an old man dies, a library goes with him.' I find this to be so true," says Evanishen sadly.

Evanishen suggests: "Let's do what we can to preserve what is left of the wisdom of the ages. If anyone remembers all or even part of the old stories, I want to hear them."

This year, Evanishen has published Volume Number 8 in the folk tales collection, titled "Feet on the Pillow and Other Ukrainian Folk Tales retold in English," as well as a charming picture book for children titled "A Cottage for Kip," which is about an elf and his friend, a dear little mouse.

If you have stories to share or would like to see the books published so far, we can be reached at

Box 234, Summerland, BC, V0H 1Z0

Phone (250) 494-3205

Fax (250) 494-3205

Email: danny@ethnic.bc.ca

Website: www.ethnic.bc.ca

 

For Immediate Release, Dated March 2000:

Stories Now Appearing

Danny Evanishen's search for stories is finally beginning to bear fruit. While the targets of the search, the few remaining Ukrainian-Canadian pioneers, are almost all gone, their descendants are finally starting to share their stories with us.

"In most years," says Evanishen, "I collect two or three stories. In 1999, I collected close to forty. At Dauphin's Ukrainian Festival alone, I got fifteen stories. It's finally starting to happen."

Attributing this success to his perseverance, Evanishen says, "The more noise I make, the more people know about my story collections. And I like to make lots of noise."

Evanishen has been searching for stories since 1991, and has been travelling to the Ukrainian and multicultural festivals since 1994. "I have to go where the people are who know the stories," says Evanishen. "I couldn't possibly contact as many people by visiting them individually."

The aim is to collect all the Ukrainian folk tales in Canada and funny stories of pioneer days.

"These stories were never collected," says Evanishen, "and someone has to do it. It might as well be me." Now, after eight years of collecting, Evanishen has found about two hundred and fifty folk tales, and hundreds of funny stories.

"There are many more folk tales to be collected," Evanishen says. "I just hope that I can find them before they are forgotten. If they are not written down, they will be lost, not only to me, but to all Canadians, and to all people everywhere who like a good tale or a story well told."

Evanishen's book for 2000 is called 'Carrots to Coins and Other Ukrainian Folk Tales Retold in English.' It contains twenty different folk tales which have not appeared in the previous books.

This year Evanishen also published a book in the field of Canadian history, written by political scientist David Doyle and titled 'From the Gallows: The Lost Testimony of Louis Riel.'

If you have stories to share or want to see the books published so far, we can be reached at

Box 234, Summerland, BC, V0H 1Z0

Phone (250) 494-3205

Fax (250) 494-3205

Email: danny@ethnic.bc.ca

Website: www.ethnic.bc.ca

 

For Immediate Release, Dated March 1999:

Pioneers Pretty Well All Gone

Danny Evanishen's search for the few remaining Ukrainian-Canadian pioneers is as good as over. By now, there are very few remaining, and those who are still alive are pretty old and not remembering many stories.

"My hunt for the pioneers and their stories has been a lot of fun," says Danny, "but there have also been many experiences of frustration, missed opportunities and lack of time to do the job properly. Everyone has a story, but it's not easy to get them out of some people."

Now that the pioneers themselves are gone, Danny's quest for their stories must take a different turn. "It will be less hectic, that's for sure. Before, I was rushing around, trying to get to these people before they forgot their stories or died, taking them along with them. Now I will have to see if I can get any of their stories from their children or grandchildren."

Previous collection efforts already targeted the families of the old-timers, as their children and grandchildren were much closer to the source of the stories, and they did not have to spend great amounts of time getting to know the pioneers.

"That was always one of my big problems," says Danny. "I would spend considerable time with someone, getting them comfortable with my presence, and then discover that they didn't remember any stories like those I wanted. That got pretty frustrating."

"It should be much easier to get stories out of people who were born in Canada. So let's see how many stories we can get from the descendants of the pioneers. Once again, it must be done before the stories are forgotten or lost."

This year's books include Number 6 in the folk tales series, Oil in the Borsch and a wonderful picture book for dreamers of all ages, Dream Star Stories. "I hope these books will be successful. Then I can afford to come closer to completing the collections," says Danny. 

If you have any stories for Danny Evanishen, or if you would like to see the books published so far, he can be reached at

Box 234, Summerland, BC, V0H 1Z0

Phone (250) 494-3205

Fax (250) 494-3205

Email: danny@ethnic.bc.ca

Website: www.ethnic.bc.ca

 

For Immediate Release, Dated March 1998:

Tell me a story!

Danny Evanishen's quest for stories is still on the road. On the road is correct - since he began his story collections, he has driven well over 200,000 kilometres across Canada to find the people who know the stories.

Danny is collecting all the Ukrainian folk tales in Canada, as well as humorous anecdotes and stories from the old days in Canada. His aim is to document parts of the Canadian heritage that are in danger of being lost forever.

The collections, in Danny's hands, form the basis of a series of books written in English, which preserve the knowledge and wisdom of our ancestors in permanent form.

To date, Danny and his publishing company, Ethnic Enterprises, have published five volumes of folk tales, two volumes of short stories about the old days, a trilingual picture book by Anne Everatt of Prince Albert, Sask, and a translation of a war novel written by a Ukrainian woman who survived not only Stalin, but Hitler, as well.

This year's offerings are The Worry Imps, which is number five in the folk tales series, and a unique cook book called Baba the Cook, which was written by his mother, Natalka Evanishen.

"Mom's cook book is quite different," says Danny. "It contains not only her favorite recipes, but also little stories about where, when and from whom she got the recipes. Then there are photographs of her throughout her life and of the people who gave her the recipes."

Natalka died in August of 1997, and Danny finished the book with help from his family. "It really is a lovely celebration of the life of a beautiful person," says Danny. "Plus, we are preserving some of the stories she liked to tell."

"This year, I will again be travelling to most of the Ukrainian and multicultural festivals in Canada," says Danny. "Come and tell me a story!"

If you have any stories for Danny Evanishen, or if you would like to see the books published so far, he can be reached at

Box 234, Summerland, BC, V0H 1Z0

Phone (250) 494-3205

Fax (250) 494-3205

Email: danny@ethnic.bc.ca

Website: www.ethnic.bc.ca

 

For Immediate Release, Dated April 1997:

It's Up to the Family

Danny Evanishen's continuing search for living pioneer stories is slowing down, not because he has collected all of the stories, but because the remaining pioneers are disappearing quickly. They are the ones who know the stories.

Since the fall of 1991, Danny has been scouring the country for stories from and about the Ukrainian pioneers who helped to build Canada. The stories Danny has been collecting are of two types: 1. Funny stories about the old days, and 2. Ukrainian folk tales.

The object is to preserve the stories while we still can. When the storytellers die, their stories die with them, unless we record them. Danny is collecting the stories, retelling them in English, and publishing them in a series of books.

"These stories are a large part of what makes us Canadian," says Danny. "That is why I am doing this. The stories are being lost, and I consider that to be a tragedy, not only for Ukrainians, but for all Canadians."

"The biggest problem I have is in finding people who know the stories, and then getting them to share them," says Danny. "It takes a lot of time and money, neither of which is in great supply."

"I am, instead, encouraging families to sit down with their elders and record the stories, either on tape, or by writing them down," he says.

The best situation is for the whole family to sit down and start telling stories, with a tape recorder hidden nearby. The oldtimers soon come to realize that someone really does care about what they know, and they will be encouraged to share their knowledge.

In a lot of cases, the children have never heard the stories. And it is, after all, for the children that we are doing this. They learn from the stories, and what better way is there to share the knowledge of the ages than through storytelling?

If you have any stories for Danny Evanishen, or if you would like to see the books of stories he has published so far, he can be reached at

Box 234, Summerland, BC, V0H 1Z0

Phone (250) 494-3205

Fax (250) 494-3205

Email: danny@ethnic.bc.ca

Website: www.ethnic.bc.ca

 

For Immediate Release, Dated March 1996:

The End of an Era

The oral tradition is dying. Since history began, people have been telling stories to their children, and to anyone else who wanted to listen. Now, very few people tell stories, and even fewer people remember them. We are witnessing, right now, the end of a significant part of history.

Throughout most of history, knowledge of any kind was passed on orally. The old stories were told from memory, since in the old days very few people could read. Most people these days can read. When you can read, you don't have to remember, and after a while, the ability to remember is lost.

Very few people tell the old stories any more. The main reason is that very few people know the stories. The last generation to tell the stories to any extent is the pioneer generation, who came to Canada in the early part of this century, and they are disappearing.

The pioneers came to Canada so that their children would have a better life than they could have had in the Old Country. In order to fit into their adopted country, the children of the pioneers learned English, often forgetting their mother tongue. Since the stories were mostly told in the mother tongue, they were lost.

Danny Evanishen is one Canadian who is doing something to preserve these old stories.

The stories I am collecting are the Ukrainian folk tales and the funny stories of Ukrainian pioneer life in Canada," says Evanishen. "These stories were disappearing on us, so I decided to do something about it."

Evanishen has devoted the rest of his life to preserving the stories. "These stories are important, not just because they came from my Ukrainian ancestors, but also because they tell us a lot about who Canadians are. It is important to know where you came from, because then you will have a better chance of knowing where you are going."

The stories Evanishen is collecting are being published by his own little company, Ethnic Enterprises. So far, the company has published three books in the folk tale series, one in the humorous pioneer series, a delightful picture book, and an English translation of a Ukrainian World War II novel.

Evanishen encourages everyone to have a look at the books he has put out. "Once you see the stories I am collecting, you may remember some similar ones and send them to me," he says. "The important thing is to get the stories written down or tape-recorded. Let's preserve our heritage and have some fun doing it."

If you know anyone who has stories for Danny Evanishen, or if you would like to see the books he has published, he can be reached at

Box 234, Summerland, BC, V0H 1Z0

Phone (250) 494-3205

Fax (250) 494-3205

Email: danny@ethnic.bc.ca

Website: www.ethnic.bc.ca

 

For Immediate Release, Dated April 1995:

Race Against Time Yields Results

Danny Evanishen's desperate race against time continues, with some results to show. He is collecting folk tales and funny stories from Ukrainian pioneers while they are still available. "There aren't many pioneers left, and we have very little time to reach these people," he says.

On the road again, Evanishen is spreading the word about his collections. He is visiting Ukrainian and multicultural festivals and is also doing signings at book stores and libraries. He hopes to show as many people as possible samples of his work. "When people know what I am doing, and see the quality of the books I am producing, I hope they will be willing to share their stories with the rest of us," he says.

"What I can show people this year is the picture book we have published. In 1994 I sent a Letter to the Editor requesting stories, to hundreds of newspapers across Canada, and the first story was from Anne Everatt in Prince Albert, Saskatchewan." This reply had Evanishen so excited that he couldn't sleep. Now, his publishing company has turned Anne Everatt's illustrated story into a charming picture book.

The book is called I Can't Find the Words to Tell You, and it is the simple little story of Anne's father coming to Canada in 1898 when he was four years old. "Anne has retold her father's story and has illustrated it with beautiful cloth collages," says Evanishen. "We have printed the book on special textured paper to simulate the cloth she used for her art work. That makes it look as close as possible to her originals. The illustrations are just wonderful."

Going one step further, Evanishen's father John W Evanishen translated the story into Ukrainian, and his niece Melesia Kasha provided a French translation. "Each page is trilingual," says Evanishen. "This book, since it is easy and fun to read, will help children who are learning all three languages. Also, when people see what we have done, they will realize that their own stories are extremely valuable."

Evanishen has also released the second volume in his collection of folk tales. "I called the book Zhabka and Other Ukrainian Folk Tales Retold in English because one of the stories is about a little frog, a 'Zhabka,' in Ukrainian." Evanishen is also still distributing his first two books: The Raspberry Hut and Other Ukrainian Folk Tales Retold in English and Vuiko Yurko The First Generation, which is a collection of humorous short stories about the old days.

All of the books are available at many book stores right across Canada, or from Evanishen himself. "If your local store doesn't have the books yet, tell them to contact me. I'll give them a deal," Evanishen says.

If you know anyone who has stories for Danny Evanishen, or if you would like to see the books he has published, he can be reached at

Box 234, Summerland, BC, V0H 1Z0

Phone (250) 494-3205

Fax (250) 494-3205

Email: danny@ethnic.bc.ca

Website: www.ethnic.bc.ca

 

For Immediate Release, Dated October 11, 1994:

Writer on Desperate Mission

Danny Evanishen is on a mission which has him pitted in a desperate race against time. He is collecting folk tales and funny stories from the few remaining Ukrainian pioneers who helped to build Canada. By his estimates, there will be no pioneers left by the year 2000. "The stories must be gathered now, while it is still possible," he says.

In town recently on this leg of his second cross-Canada tour in three years, Evanishen was spreading the word about his work and promoting two books he has written as part of his project. "Once people see the books, they will know what kinds of stories I am after. Then, I hope, they will send their own stories to me."

Evanishen is hoping that people will send their stories to him, since he has neither the time nor the resources to do all the personal story-collecting he would like to do. "If I were to go and visit the pioneers personally, I would reach very few of them, so I am spending my time and energy encouraging others to write down or tape the stories their elders know," he says. "If we were to lose those stories, it would be a tragedy."

The object of the whole exercise is to preserve our Canadian heritage in a way that has never been done before. "No one has ever collected all the Ukrainian folk tales in Canada, and I have never seen a book of humorous stories about the old-timers," says Evanishen. "It's very exciting to be doing something nobody else has done."

Evanishen is writing in English, for a number of reasons. He would like his work to reach not only those of Ukrainian descent, but everybody everywhere. "Our culture is a vast and rich one, which I would like to share with everyone in Canada and the world. Working in English gives everyone access to the material. Plus, everyone enjoys a good laugh or a tale well told."

The two books Evanishen has published are: The Raspberry Hut and Other Ukrainian Folk Tales Retold in English and Vuiko Yurko The First Generation. They are available either from Evanishen or from a number of book stores across Canada.

In May of 1995 Evanishen's publishing firm, Ethnic Enterprises, intends to launch two more books. One will be the second volume in the Folk Tale series, and one will be "…a wonderful picture book written and illustrated by Mrs Anne Everatt of Prince Albert, Saskatchewan. When Mrs Everatt sent me this book in the mail, I was so excited I couldn't sleep," says Evanishen. "Wait till you see it; you'll love it!"

If you know anyone who has stories for Danny Evanishen, or if you would like to see the books he has published, he can be reached at

Box 234, Summerland, BC, V0H 1Z0

Phone (250) 494-3205

Fax (250) 494-3205

Email: danny@ethnic.bc.ca

Website: www.ethnic.bc.ca