Sunday, May 15, 2016

City of Vancouver Awards of Excellence 2015

Yasutani Roshi once said, “The fundamental delusion of humanity is to suppose that I am here and you are out there.”
We do not live in a world where physical borders separate our nations and peoples. We live in a world where human rights violations and our complacency separate us as global citizens.
We are privileged to be living in a country where our lived realities are protected by laws. We have the freedom to celebrate Pride across Canada, to wear our cultural and religious garments, to simply live our lives authentically.
However, these rights did not always exist and may not always exist as we have witnessed in recent years in such places like Russia, Uganda, Brunei and just two weeks ago in Istanbul, Turkey. Even right here in the city of Surrey where after celebrating 16 years of Pride, the city of Surrey still refuses to raise our rainbow flag in front of their City Hall.
It is our duty as global citizens to be the voices for those whose liberties have been silenced and to be the march for those whose feet have been bound.
Our work for diversity and inclusion is much more than our collective strive for individual and localized advancements, it’s about fostering and realizing a tomorrow where everyone everywhere can live their lives authentically.
I encourage everyone to be active voices and participants in not only our own communities but also as global citizens in our global communities.
We exist together, both here and out there.
Congratulations to all the recipients and nominees of the 2015 @CityofVancouver Awards of Excellence.
I feel truly honoured and humbled to be among your nomination for the City of Vancouver 2015 Awards of Excellence.

OUTShine 2015 “Hear Our Story”

OUTShine 2015
“Hear Our Story” Presentation by Christepher Wee

Hello, I am Christepher Wee. I am an educator in the BC School System, an actor and model in Asia, and Mr. Gay Canada 2014. The person speaking to you today was not always whom you perceive now. I too like many including those sitting among us here today at OUTShine have all gone through our own adversities and challenges. Had our share of failures and victories. We have all soared in our own ways like Phoenixes out of the ashes to become the ever evolving person we are today.

I was one of those not completely quiet and shy kids who at times exhibited a bubbly and playful nature. In my elementary and high school years, I was not a part of the nerdy, popular, or the artsy group and from the looks of me far from the rebels of the playgrounds and courtyards. As one of my classmates, Jarrett, stated I was the “in-between” because I associated well with everyone and parts of me connected and identified with each group. Upon reflection, perhaps fitting in a little bit everywhere was my fear of not completely fitting somewhere because I knew I was different. The fear of not being accepted and not fully coming to terms with my own sexual orientation left me marginalized. Knowing that I was different was far from the reality of letting my authentic self live.

School life today is very different from when I was teaching over 10 years ago and when I was going to school dinosaur years prior. Back then we did not address the presence of LGBTQ+ students in schools. It was like a quiet, unspoken acknowledgement and tolerance of it. Where school life went on for the mainstream, the LGBTQ+ students like myself were unconsciously and consciously marginalized.

Though I had a good school life, it was not the full enriching experience because I did not have a forum or conducive environment to be authentically myself. I was not able to share my personal thoughts and feelings as a young gay youth. I felt left out because the world that revolved around me did not address my concerns and issues, nor did it provide me with an environment to harness or nurture my development as a gay youth.

I think time has changed this reality for many today. If we compare our education system today to mine and that of our parents and grandparents, we would witness the progressive advancements that have been made. For instance, during my days in sex education class, we talked about sex, safer sex, and transmittable STDs that were of heterosexual content. Never mind the fact that most of us were already embarrassed to talk about sex with our teacher and classmates out loud, for me sitting there to discuss heterosexual related content was like watching a Sci-Fi movie or having an outer-body experience. I remember thinking the following and trying to answer my own questions but getting no answers of course.

“Is it normal for me to have feelings for guys?”
“Am I suppose to be attracted to guys?”
“How do I ask another guy out?”
“Is he going to beat me up and tell everyone?”
“Will everyone laugh at me and avoid me like the plague?”
“How do I have sex with a guy and what would we do?”
“Are there gay STDs?”

When my friends and peers talked about their first kiss, dating bliss and nightmares, and their boyfriend/girlfriend problems, I sat silently marginalized. Nothing pertained to me. Their experiences and comments only silenced me more and created further self-doubt of my own awareness. Though never bullied for my sexual orientation, I think the effect of feeling marginalized was still the same. A part of me still felt alone and excluded. It was like a silent imprisonment.

I think I isolated and marginalized myself as much as my unsafe school environment did by not having the insight to embrace the realities of our diverse school community. As the classes and years of schooling passed, my self-questioning and feelings toward guys intensified. Without knowing where to turn to, those pressing emotions and thoughts of my own authenticity became thorns that seemed unjustifiable and unacceptable.

If only those were the days of googling, let’s ask Siri, Egale, OUTShine, myGSA, Out in Schools, The Youth Project, Camp fYrefly, and CampOut. I think my questions would have had many answers without having to sit through class after class of questioning, unknowing, and heterosexual sex-Ed Sci-Fi marathons. I would have had opportunities to have my story and identity validated by others of like minds, spirits, and sensibilities.

In my teaching years, I witnessed the same neglect in my teaching environment. I could see some of the students in me when I was their age. Going through school life as voiceless and silenced LGBTQ+ youths. Even then our educational system was still not at a place where students could openly be themselves and have the support and encouragement they needed. Schools were still where all could not feel safe, secure, and protected. Today as adults, my “Out” students and I can openly share what it was like for them in school and how different their lives would be if they had the supportive school environment, and personal courage and confidence to be themselves then.

I think today that silence is broken. Being acknowledged and tolerated is not enough because it does not foster accountability for the issues at hand. Today, we openly strive for all to feel safe, secure, and included in every aspect of school life. For example, this OUTShine Summit, the many GSAs in schools across Canada, Pink Shirt Days, Anti-bullying campaigns, and diversified school-based sex education. Discussion of same-sex parents, sexual orientation, and identified gender are talked about and discussed. I think students have a safer place to have their questions answered and their thoughts and feelings shared. School Boards and schools are making advancements in creating forums for LGBTQ+ awareness and education.

Last year, the Vancouver School Board passed an amended LGBTQ+ policy. This process was met with challenges and obstacles that needed to be overcome. I witnessed opposing sides stand up for what they believed was acceptable in our society. With the clashes of ideals, values, opinions, and philosophies, the important fact is implementation of this revised policy could only benefit students at large, regardless of where he, she, or they fits within the LGBTQA+ spectrum.

The reality that the Vancouver School Board and any school board in Canada or in the world must ultimately address is the provision of safe and secure school environments where LGBTQ+ students have the same opportunities and environments to excel, develop, and be nurtured like their counterparts, so that they too may reach their fullest authentic potentials.

OUTShine is a reflection of our Canadian societal progress culturally and educationally. GSAs though not in all schools across Canada yet, their existence exemplify and amplify how students have the right to an environment conducive to their educational, social, physical, emotional, and mental development. If we want our schools and society to advance then we must each take ownership and responsibility to be a part of its evolution.

“Social advance depends quite as much upon an increase in moral sensibility as it does upon a sense of duty.” – Jane Addams.

I hope that being here at OUTShine will awaken your consciousness. It took me years of discovery, self-doubt, questioning, rediscovery, and evolution to slowly come into my own conscious awareness of my identity, belonging in our community and society, and acceptance and revelation of living a life that is authentically mine.

I no longer live for being at the top of my class or the most successful, popular teacher but rather for the empowerment knowledge brings and the gratitude that my voice and inspiration make a difference in students. I no longer live to wear the latest designs or have a home that outshines my relatives and peers but rather wear what makes me comfortable and look presentable, and contentment in a home uniquely my sensibility. I no longer live to compare my endeavours with others or pay attention to the number of likes and friend requests on my social media accounts but rather how my endeavours and postings can inspire, empower, and impact others. I no longer live to please my parents’ aspirations or acceptance from relatives, friends, peers, and others but rather to be true and authentic to myself, and to value my own existence and life.

I believe that if we do not awaken our consciousness, our tomorrow will not materialize. When we become conscious of our being and presence, our responsibilities toward ourselves, loved ones, community, and society will become apparent. Our self-discovery, redefining, and, or defining will be the foundation to our efforts, endeavours, and journey ahead. I think that personal and social transformation go hand in hand.

Gandhi once said, “If we could change ourselves, the tendencies in the world would also change. As a man changes his own nature, so does the attitude of the world change towards him..We need not wait to see what others do.”

I encourage you to reflect about your possible transformation and how you can be a vehicle to change rather than rest on the passive waiting for the world and others to transform around you or be your source of impact.
We all have the capacity and potential to leave a positive imprint and legacy, and create an impactful phenomenon. We need to begin by awakening our own consciousness. Then be the flame to ignite the consciousness of others.

I think that human consciousness is the premise to vision and action. Acknowledgement of this is the first step to self-revelation and immeasurable possibilities.

Today, LGBTQ+ youths have identifiers through television shows like Glee, Modern Family, Transparent, The Fosters, and so on depicting our diverse livelihoods. Public figures like Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne, talk show hosts Steven Sabados & Chris Hyndman, Ellen DeGeneres, actress Ellen Page, and athletes like Bruce Jenner and Ian Thorpe take centre stage in society becoming visible role models for LGBTQ+ individuals.

Your voices and experiences are powerful educational tools. Utilize them to inspire, educate, and enlighten others about the value of embracing diversity. Work together with your peers and others to create a school, a community where everyone can feel safe and proud to be authentically themselves.

I encourage and challenge each of you to get involved and stay involved, to expand and give life to the voices and opportunities you have now unlike my era of silence. Be a part of the legacy where one day life in our schools and communities can simply be places where words do not define or protect us. Exercise your rights as a member of your school community.

“If you are neutral in institutions of injustice, you have chosen the side of the oppressor.” – Desmond Tutu.

What’s one way you can materialize your vision? Networking.

Networking is one effective and efficient avenue to help you realize your vision. Use the resources around you or accessible online to assist. There is a wealth of knowledge, expertise, creativity, and convictions of those in your school, community, and around you here. Look to your left, your right, behind and in front of you. These new friends we have met here, all 500 of us at OUTShine 2015 is a complex web of skills, knowledge, support, encouragement, and momentum to create a phenomenon. You are never alone if you make the effort to call, email, text, Skype or simply tap the shoulder of the person near you. I am standing here today because I networked and dared to reach out.

When I won Mr. Gay Canada, there was no mandate or system organized for me. I had to create my own mandate and utilize the title like a self-operated business. I set out my plans to fulfill my vision of participating and speaking at Prides, being a visible and heard ambassador for our LGBTQ+ community regionally, nationally and globally, and being an advocate for organizations I feel passionate about.

I started searching online, in FB, Twitter, etc for Prides across Canada and in Asia. I reached out to the Prides with my letter of intent and vision.

I wrote, called, messaged, and went personally to organizations I wished to work with and, or endorse.

I reached out to the media to write and share my story and vision as a National LGBTQ+ ambassador.

I created visibility and awareness of who I am through my social media publicity and opportunities in print, radio, and TV interviews.

I networked to gain access to resources and individuals who could facilitate my plans. I utilized the resources in my regional, national, and global community to increase my profile.

I worked 18-20hrs everyday to build and support the foundation I needed to turn my vision into reality.

I think I was very successful in realizing my Mr. Gay Canada aspirations. When I relive my year as Mr. Gay Canada through my photos, videos, and interviews, I feel enriched, empowered, inspired, and blessed. In my adventures throughout Canada and Europe, I experienced first and foremost the kindness, passion, and commitment of many individuals in our LGBTQA+ communities. I sensed a progressive change and growth in society towards celebrating our differences and embracing our diversity. I witnessed our children being taught that love is love and being exposed to communities united in pride. I glimpsed into many livelihoods that heightened my sense of compassion, understanding, and respect for my fellow global brothers and sisters who face persecution and whose basic human rights are violated everyday.

Through the many messages from supporters, I know that I have inspired others in some way to reach their fullest potentials, sparked their desire to positively contribute to their communities, and empowered some to live lives that are authentically theirs.

Never could I have dreamed the fairy tale I lived the past year. I truly felt blessed and grateful for each and every experience along my journey. There was not a day or experience that I did not stop to give thanks for and reflect upon with gratitude. I feel so privileged to be living in a country where my lived realities are guarded by laws that are practiced. I am so proud to be an Out Chinese Canadian.
Remember that conviction without planning and dedication will not get you far. Use your resources and networking contacts to help you realize your vision.

You must remember to be grateful and thankful to those who have contributed to your endeavours and journey. Let me take this opportunity to thank Egale for giving me this honour to share my thoughts with you and be a part of OUTShine 2015, to MYGSA.ca for crediting me as one of their National GSA resources, to Pride Winnipeg who sponsored my flight to OUTShine because they believe in my efforts and the importance of my work here, and lastly, to Victoria Inn Hotel and Convention Centre for providing me with a comfortable home away from home.

When you leave here today, I have an assignment for you. Yes, what kind of teacher would I be if I did not assign you with homework. I want you to reflect on the following questions and send me your reflections. My contact can easily be found in your OUTShine booklet, you may google it, or ask Siri. Keep in mind that my ChristEpher is spelt with an “E” and my last name is WEE.

What are some of the initiatives and campaigns you are involved with in your school or community? Review these to see if they are meeting or exceeding their purpose. If not, what’s the next step? Improve on it? Or revamp it to reach its intended goal? Or start new?

What national initiative can you and others here collaboratively give life to? What are the action plans you will implement to help you succeed?

Always evaluate and re-evaluate what you are doing. Seek for advise and feedback. Remember to approach emerging challenges with innovative and productive actions and solutions. Don’t be afraid to adapt and change. Improvements will come out of this process.

“As long as you live in the past, you will never find your future.” – Rumplestiltskin, Once Upon A Time.

The last point I would like to share with you is that the premise of “Self-Pride” starts from our own conscious awakening and our “Self-Pride” must extend to our family, friends, community, provinces, nation, and into the borders of our global community for it to be meaningful.

We no longer live in days of isolation but in a national and global community where borders do not really separate us. The land and water boundaries that separate our homes do not reflect the borderless connections we have as fellow citizens of Canada and of the world.
If we let the physicality of our borders control our voices and actions then we have failed in our responsibilities to ourselves and to our fellow brothers and sisters elsewhere.
I believe that our visibility amplifies our voices. Our complacency only undermines the rights our pioneers fought to obtain, and our silence condones the hatred, injustice and violations of human rights that still exist in many corners of our country and world. We must stand firm in self-pride and exercise resiliency to be the voices and faces of advocacy.

“The fundamental delusion of humanity is to suppose that I am here and you are out there.” – Yasutani Roshi

The reality is we inter-exist. The reciprocality of what exists or happens there will affect and reflect here. As would the tendencies here transcend there. Our responsibility to ourselves extends beyond our regional community. We must be conscious national and global citizens to create momentum for the progress and the change we envision.

We must build a tomorrow where inter-are is a lived reality. To accomplish this we must work inter-dependently and inter-collaboratively. Start by creating a positive environment to accommodate change in your home, school, workplace, and community then look to extend that beyond.

Oprah Winfrey once said, “Be a part of something. Don’t live for yourself alone… stand for something larger than yourself…life is a reciprocal exchange. To move forward, you have to give back.”
You are the foundation of our community, society, and tomorrow. Are you going to leave our world better off than when you lived it? From your presence here, I already know that this is one step to an affirmative answer to my question.

We have the responsibility to tirelessly educate our young, our peers, our human counterparts and re-educate our antagonists. Work with others to create safe spaces for open dialogue where we can enlighten and educate, and give life to campaigns and initiatives that will change perceptions and foster understanding and respect. For example, I have started my initiative hi5diversity to empower our youth to use creative means to educate about and celebrate our diversity. How can you foster advancements in your school, community, and beyond?

When everyone has an understanding of what it is like to be one another, have a heart of compassion for the person sitting beside us, and have respect for the differences our diversity should celebrate and embrace, then we have achieved great progress.

How have you utilized your adversities and success stories to better our society? Have you tuned into the richness of who you are today to inspire and empower others to discover their potential and awesomeness? Are you going to utilize your prodigious ability to look beyond the horizon to build a tomorrow where you and our descendants can live in a world that acknowledges, embraces, and supports self-authenticity?

It takes leaders and visionaries to project ahead and see the benefits to come. That’s how positive progress and advancements are achieved. I hope that you will be the catalyst for the change Gandhi spoke of and be the leaders and visionaries in your school community and beyond.

Let’s build a tomorrow that honours and celebrates our diversity. Leave an imprint and legacy where society will be better than an individual. Then we have succeeded in our collective vision of creating and living in places where we can all be authentically ourselves and have the opportunities to reach our fullest potential.

“Progress is unstoppable. It is a drumbeat to which we must all march…marching to a different drumbeat of progress.” – Yann Martel’s Life of Pi.

Thank-you for giving me this honour to share my thoughts with you. I hope you will leave here charged with the phoenix within to be the change not only in the comfort of your environment but be the change that will impact the lives of our brothers and sisters elsewhere. A new tomorrow starts with today. Let your self-pride and resiliency be your strength to be the change. Dare to inspire to empower!


































“Racism In The Community” Discussion in Winnipeg, Canada

“Racism In The Community” conducted by Pride Winnipeg
Panelist and Speaker: Christepher Wee
Thank you to Pride Winnipeg for inviting me to this important discussion about racism in the community. Thank you for sponsoring my journey here to Winnipeg to not only be a part of this discussion, but also giving me the opportunity to be a part of OUTShine, the second Canadian National GSA Youth Summit, which starts tomorrow.
I want to thank Pride Winnipeg for its leadership in the community not only in its LGBTQ+ advocacy work but also its community building efforts in general. This is reflected in this discussion because racism does not only affect our LGBTQ+ community but it exists and affects people of color in every city, every province, and every country. Like our LGBTQ+ advocacy endeavors, racism is an issue we must continuously educate about and implement measures to promote understanding and respect.
I am the first person of color to win the title Mr. Gay Canada. Before I entered the competition, one of my friends said to me that I did not realize the impact of my participation. And if I won the competition, the impact I would have on the Asian communities everywhere would be exponential.
This comment took me by surprise and I did not realize its impact until I received countless messages in my social media accounts and in my emails about the impact and difference I making as a representative of the Asian community. The messages of gratitude for being a voice and face for those who have to live their authentic selves through my presence and protected reality also awakened my extended responsibility.
The truth is when I entered the competition it was from a mindset of being able to do advocacy work for our LGBTQ+ community and my role as a human being in our society. My color and cultural heritage were not a part of my mindset but that soon changed when I realized the visibility and significance of my color. 
I think being a person of color in the position of leadership and title is another challenge I face. I think that our society has definitely been progressing with the acceptance of women in the position of power, however embracing people of color in leadership roles still needs to be fully welcomed. I think it takes education, revelation, and time to adapt to this social and cultural adjustment.
Jane Addams once said, “Social advance depends quite as much upon an increase in moral sensibility as it does upon a sense of duty.”
Growing up in Greater Vancouver I have experienced my share of racist comments and negativity. In the playground of my elementary school, in the hallways of my high school, the boulevards of UBC, and in the hustle of my multicultural, metropolitan community.
You would think that after all these decades of co-existence that racism would be far from being an issue. I see more ethnic cuisines and restaurants now than before. I see more interracial unions and children. I see cultural and religious places of worship and gathering standing as neighbors. We teach and celebrate cultural differences in schools as part of the curriculum. Yet we still deal with racism in our community.
When I was in university driving down the road with my third generation Japanese-Canadian born friend in his father’s big, old American Buick, a man in his 30/40s shouted out of his big, old American vehicle for us to take our Mercedes and go back to Hong Kong.
Last month, after parking my car in a residential neighborhood and activating my car alarm, I heard a man in his 40/50s yelling from across the street to me and I just heard the words “beep beep.” I thought the gentleman was making a funny comment about the sound of my car alarm, but it turned out he was making negative comments about cars parking in the residential area and alarms going off. He proceeded to shout across the street at me about bashing my car in if my alarm goes off and then made comments about me being a China-man and that I should return back to my country.
2 weeks ago as I walked down Davie Street with my friend, a guy in his 20s who was walking towards me made negative comments about me being a member of a Chinese gang. As he walked beside me, he lightly gave me a nudge on my arm. I was on Davie Street, wearing my jeans, army-glammed motif shirt, a tuxedo jacket, and dress shoes.
The stereotype that I face for being a person of color who looks visibly Chinese, are further propagated and sensationalized by our entertainment industry and media.
I am of Chinese descent but I grew up in Canada. I am not good at Math, Astro-physics, or Calculus. I do not know your friend Joseph or Li Ping in China.
I live in an average house in east side Vancouver and not in a huge mansion on the hills of West Vancouver.
I drive a 2003 Hyundai Santa Fe which was passed down to me from my parents and not the latest Mercedes convertible.
I wear H&M and finds from thrift shops, not Gucci and Louis Vuitton.
However, I do know some martial arts and I am very skillful with my chopsticks. I am a person of visible color but I’m not that person of color you misunderstand in your mind and heart.
I think that more proactive family, school, community, and government based initiatives and campaigns should be implemented to address and educate about racism. Its heightened awareness could only benefit our ever evolving society.
From it’s political stance and social education about human rights with last year’s theme “WithOUT Borders,” this year’s “Evolution of Pride” and this evening’s discussion about racism, political leaders and other organizations should take notes from Pride Winnipeg’s vision, commitment, and leadership to building a united and harmonious community. 
I would like to close by sharing a passage from Pride Winnipeg’s Evolution of Pride message.
“The evolution of human rights is a reflection of the advancements made by society… ‘Evolution’ calls for us to reflect on our history and focus on the evolution of human rights through education and awareness. Education and awareness are the links from ignorance to knowledge, denial to acceptance, and hate to love.”
This message extends beyond our LGBTQ+ issues, it also relates to the ongoing issue of racism in our communities all over Canada and our world.

Farewell as your 2014 Mr. Gay Canada

As I relive my year as Mr. Gay Canada through my photos, videos, and interviews, I feel enriched, empowered, inspired, and blessed. In my adventures throughout Canada and Europe, I experienced first and foremost the kindness, passion, and commitment of many individuals in our LGBTQA+ communities. I sensed a progressive change and growth in society towards celebrating our differences and embracing our diversity. I witnessed our children being taught that love is love and being exposed to communities united in pride. I glimpsed into many livelihoods that heightened my sense of compassion, understanding, and respect for my fellow global brothers and sisters.
“A picture is worth a thousand words,” my photos exclaim. Perhaps some of my photos evoke more than what words can say or can perhaps conjure up a book. Through my captured moments shared with the world, I hope to inspire you in some way to reach your fullest potential, the desire to positively contribute to your community, and to be living examples of progress and change in society. I hope to invigorate you to get involved or to intensify the great work you are already doing in your community. I hope to empower you to live a life that is authentically you.
Never could I have dreamed the fairy tale I lived the past year. I truly felt blessed and grateful for each and every experience along my journey. There was not a day or experience that I did not stop to give thanks for and reflect upon with gratitude. I feel so privileged to be living in a country where my lived realities are guarded by laws that are practiced. I am so proud to be an Out Chinese Canadian.
Thank-you to the producers of Mr. Gay Canada for creating this platform to allow individuals with the desire to be the change an opportunity to do so. Thank-you to the organizations that gave me the chance to be your voice and partner in advocacy. Thank-you to my family, friends, and mentors who have showered me with support and love. Thank-you to the countless supporters from around the world for your unwavering encouragement. Thank-you to the sponsors who believed in my vision and work for your generosity and endorsement. Thank-you to all the angels who appeared along my journey for coming to my aid and opening doors. An enormous “Thank-you!” to the communities from across Canada who gave me the opportunity to work with you and be inspired by you. My “Thank-youS” encapsulate how truly blessed I am and my gratitude for you, you, and you.
To the future Mr. Gay CanadaS, I hope you seize every moment and opportunity to inspire others. I hope you will create your own legacy that will empower others to realize theirs. Your fairy tale begins with your passion, dedication, and determination. I look forward to witnessing and supporting your journey.
My new journey begins and I hope you will continue to be a part of my experiences and adventures. Let me continue inspiring to empower you to dream, to be leaders of tomorrow, and to be the change in your community. Let’s build tomorrow together in the true spirit of our rainbow spectrum of LGBTQA+ society.
Follow me at Christepher Wee and hi5diversity on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter.
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Christepher Wee Edmonton Pride 2014
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Christepher Wee
Christepher Wee Human Rights Conference
Christepher Wee Kathleen Wynne & First Lady
Christepher Wee Interview at WorldPride 2014
Christepher Wee McLaren Housing
Christepher Wee Pastor Brent Hawkes
Christepher Wee Pride Winnipeg
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Van Fab - Christepher & Darren CNY‘15
Christepher Wee VanPride 2014
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Christepher Wee VIA RAIL Journalling
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