The Province

Alt-folk artist Diyet comes home for 40th Powell Street Festival

DIVERSE: First Nations, other area groups are also participat­ing

- STUART DERDEYN sderdeyn@theprovinc­e.com twitter.com/stuartderd­eyn

When she appears at the 40th Annual Powell Street Festival this weekend, alt-folk artist Diyet will be hanging in the family ‘hood.’

It’s a long way from her home in Burwash Landing, Yukon. But the Southern Tutchone, Tlingit, Scottish and Japanese musician can trace her lineage back to St. James Anglican Church, 303 E. Cordova St.

“Before Second World War, my Japanese-Canadian grandmothe­r and her family were a part of the congregati­on, and there is 70 years of family history tied up in it,” Diyet said. “My husband and I were married there, and so were many other family members. Of course, that all ended with the internment.”

During the Second World War internment, Canadian-born citizens with Japanese heritage had their belongings and livelihood­s expropriat­ed and they were shipped off to camps.

Fortunatel­y, for Diyet’s grandmothe­r, her faith and musical gifts kept her from the worst of it and the nuns at the cloister across the street from St. James sent her on a train to Toronto to go to a missionary school.

“She was able to study music and get an education,” Diyet said. “Although she didn’t talk about it often, I think that they passed her off as Chinese.

“A side to that story is that the family who took her in when she was there was former governor general Adrienne Clarkson’s family.”

Stories like this, or that of the championsh­ip baseball squad Vancouver Asahi, are a key part to the founding of the Powell Street Festival in 1977 on the centennial of the landing of Japanese sailor Manzo in New Westminste­r in 1877. Through upheavals such as the 1902 race riots and more, the Japanese-Canadian community flourished in the Powell Street area.

The annual festival keeps the memories alive and showcases the future. It has also expanded to include First Nations and other groups associated with the area.

Artists such as Diyet bring it full circle.

“When I lived down there I was in North Vancouver, but I always spent time in the area because that Downtown Eastside community really reminds me of my life in the North in a tight-knit community that looks out for one another,” Diyet said.

Diyet likes her set lists to reflect the event and is planning to select songs about togetherne­ss and community, with a few new ones as well.

 ?? — STU-DI-O BY JEANIE FILES ?? The Japanese-Canadian community has flourished in the Powell Street area of Vancouver.
— STU-DI-O BY JEANIE FILES The Japanese-Canadian community has flourished in the Powell Street area of Vancouver.
 ??  ?? DIYET
DIYET

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