The Province

More than 40,000 people expected at WE Day

Two days of events in Vancouver will feature a lineup of inspiratio­nal speakers and a celebratio­n of the power of families

- GLENDA LUYMES gluymes@postmedia.com Twitter.com/glendaluym­es

When Jason Cao was a child, he would run free in his neighbourh­ood, playing with friends. These days, he rarely speaks to his neighbours in Renfrew Heights.

But a project inspired by a WE Day workshop Cao attended with his wife and two kids in July is changing that.

The family recently built a mini-library out of a used breadbox, then filled it with some of their favourite books, encouragin­g their neighbours to help themselves to one and leave another for someone else.

“While I’m mowing the lawn, neighbours come up and ask me about it. It’s been a chance for everyone to get to know each other,” said Cao.

The family will be attending the first WE Day Family event at Rogers Arena on Wednesday evening, along with about 20,000 others interested in making a difference at home and around the world.

“We’ve had it on the calendar for quite a while,” said Cao. “My father passed on a philosophy to me that even the smallest pebble can make ripples that spread out. I want to pass that on to my kids.”

WE Day Family will also be a chance for some of the students who have participat­ed in WE Day in the past to share the experience with their family, said regional director Bryanna Baker. Some families, like the Caos, earned their tickets by doing service projects over the past year, while other families will be experienci­ng WE for the first time.

The family event happens the evening before Thursday’s annual WE Day event, which will be attended by 20,000 students from across B.C. who also earned their tickets by committing to do projects through their schools.

A lineup of inspiratio­nal speakers, including WE founders Craig and Marc Kielburger, co-hosts Jessi Cruickshan­k and Drew Scott, as well as Lights, Sarah McLachlan, Peter Mansbridge, Jacob and Jason Tremblay and Margaret Trudeau, will encourage attendees to find service projects that align with their interests to make a difference in their communitie­s and around the world.

The Christense­n family will also be speaking at the Wednesday evening family event.

After losing their six-yearold son Jonah to an unforeseen medical condition 10 years ago, the Vancouver family created an annual celebratio­n around his birthday, June 19. The fundraiser, called A Magical Evening, raises money each year for a different children’s charity, including WE.

One year, they raised money for a school in Kenya through a WE Villages project.

“Jonah was a big animal lover and he was fascinated by Africa,” said Emma Christense­n. “He loved all the big mammals. Lions, elephants — he talked and acted and imagined them.”

Jeff Christense­n recalls coming home one day to find his son had decided to “expand” his imaginary zoo by punching a hole in the wall with this play tools.

The family, Jeff, Emma and daughter Hannah, were recently able to travel to Africa to see the school.

“None of this was the plan,” Jeff Christense­n said about life without his son. “But I feel proud that we’re doing this to remember him.”

 ?? FRANCIS GEORGIAN/PNG ?? Jason Cao and his family created a book exchange.
FRANCIS GEORGIAN/PNG Jason Cao and his family created a book exchange.

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