Madeleine Vien (b. 2002) is a Métis writer, researcher, and graduate student living in Tkaronto (Toronto), Ontario. She received an Honours Bachelor of Arts in Sexual Diversity Studies from the University of Toronto and is currently pursuing a Master of Information, with a concentration in Archives and Records Management. Her academic and creative work reflects a sustained engagement with Métis identity, memory, and decolonial approaches to information practices. Vien has worked with community archives in both digital and physical capacities, contributed to exhibition curation, and created original works in poetry and multimedia. The records described in this fonds document her academic, artistic, and community-focused activities from 2020 to 2025.
Aaron Andrew Wickberg was born in Dallas, Texas on May 22nd 1997 to parents Alan and Nancy Wickberg. His brother, Brendan, was born around three years later on January 17th 2000, after which the family moved frequently for his father's work, with prolonged stops in Tokyo and Taipei, until settling in Beijing in 2002. Aaron spent his early years with an intense focus on reading and creative expression, and was diagnosed with Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) in 2009. His family would move to Taipei in 2011, where he would be captivated by theater and creative writing. Graduating in 2015, he decided to major in theater at the University of British Columbia. During that time, he would come to realize that his love for theater was not in its study, but in performing it, and would switch majors to Classical Studies, finishing his Bachelor of Arts three years later in 2020 with a minor in creative writing. During this time, he developed a love for tabletop roleplaying games as an alternative method of creative expression.
With work difficult to find, Aaron would spend the next few years working odd jobs, and trying to find creative work. He would eventually decide to return to his studies, in hopes of finding a career path that drew upon the critical thinking skills he developed in his undergraduate degree. A conversation with and encouragement from archivist Luciana Duranti would set his trajectory towards archiving, and he would apply and be accepted to the program at the University of Toronto in 2023.
Aaron is currently finishing his graduate degree, and spends his free time pursuing further creative ventures and volunteering as an archivist with The Queen's Own Rifles of Canada at Casa Loma. His current interest and focus in the archival field include trying to find the 'invisible' minorities within records, something that is of particular import to him as a person of Taiwanese and Swedish descent, and an out bisexual.
Early Education and Upbringing
Jason Kahei Wong was born on 1994 in Kowloon, Hong Kong. Growing up in a middle-class family, he was exposed to classical music in his early childhood. At the age of ten, he already attained the Associated Board of the Royal Schools of Music (ABRSM) Level 8 Certification for classical piano, but the oppressive learning environment deprived him of the interest to continue developing this instrument. Two years later, he entered the Hong Kong Pui Ching Middle School (equivalent of grade 7), which is renowned for its creative music curriculum. During his middle school studies away from his parents, Wong was introduced to classical guitar by his mentor, James Lau. It soon became his passion and a key turning point of his career in music. Founded by missionaries of the Baptism Church, Pui Ching Middle School carries the mission to develop the virtues and ethics of its students. Wong accepted the Christian faith in 2007 in a school assembly. He remained active in a home church and strongly embraced biblical principles about love and care for communities.
Classical Guitar Career
Wong's years of classical piano training accelerated the progress of his newfound interest in classical guitar. In less than 2 years, he received near full scores in the ABRSM Level 8 Certification for classical guitar and competed for third place in the Hong Kong Schools Music Festival. In 2010, he was referred to Universe Wang, a local independent musician, by the school's program. Universe Wang's avant-garde approach to classical music liberated Jason Wong from the confinement of classical theory. He began composing fusion music with classical guitar techniques, mashing up genres that include Flamenco, R&B, gospel, traditional Chinese music, and 80s ballad. Wong's increasingly secular approach to guitar eventually led to the break-up between James Lau and himself. But Wong was determined about the modernization of classical guitar, especially advocating for a bigger role of un-plugged acoustic guitar in band and symphony. In 2012, he entered the Chinese University of Hong Kong to pursue a Bachelor of Art (Music) degree in contemporary fingerstyles and conducting theories. College education transformed his vision about audience and meaning of artistic interactions. He decided to fade out from traditional classical guitar competition, turning his efforts to street performances and chapel worships.
Religious Life
Since become a Christian in 2007, Wong began attending the Mei Foo Home Church in his neighbourhood. But the worldview of Christianity inevitably collided with the morals and norms of the Chinese tradition. To navigate through these issues, Wong started a bible study group with his peers to parse the meaning of the scripture and its implications to teenagers in a Chinese society. To better grasp the semantics and etymology of Books from the New Testament, Wong started another group in 2018 that studied the Hellenistic Greek language, which is the original script of the bible. Through their studies, Wong and his peers were determined about a mission to care for other young students and minorities in the neighbourhood. They formed a youth fellowship program that would gather students from multiple universities for community service and outreaching.
Situation during and after the 2019 social turmoil
Since June 2019, a large-scale movement for democratization broke out in Hong Kong. Driven by Christian belief of love and care for the disadvantaged, Wong visited multiple petition sites in the city and wrote a series of political essays that raised awareness about human rights infringement and societal harmony. When the movement eventually died down, Wong, along others who did not feel safe living in Hong Kong anymore, moved to Canada for a new life, continuing his pursuit for a Master of Musical studies at the University of Toronto. Unfortunately, he suffered from an acute heart attack at the Rogers Centre as the Toronto Blue Jays lost to the New York Yankees by 5-16 on June 28, 2024. He passed away peacefully in the embrace of his family.
Rebecca was born December 28th1995 in Ajax, Ontario. Growing up she expressed interest in music, science, animals and museums. She attended St.Elizabeth Seton from 1998-2009 followed by St.Mary from 2009-2013. She spent her time in the Greater Toronto Area from birth until the age of 17 went she began University. She started her undergraduate degree at the University of British Columbia finishing with a BScN in Natural Resources conservation in 2017. Within her undergrad years she worked at the UBC pool as a lifeguard and swim instructor, as a nutrition researcher at the Toronto Zoo, as a horticultural specialist at the City of Pickering, as a policy assistant at the Government of Western Australia and as an educator at Ripley’s Aquarium of Canada.
After finishing her undergraduate degree, she completed her master’s degree in Geomatics for Environmental Management also at the University of British Columbia’s Faculty of Forestry graduating in 2018. After this she moved back to Toronto continuing her career as an educator at Ripley’s Aquarium while she began to pursue her PhD at Trent University in 2019. After a year as a PhD student the 2020 covid-19 pandemic began leading to her leaving her studies and briefly becoming an administrative assistant in medical offices until 2021.
Rebecca then moved to Kamloops in British Columbia to work as GIS analyst from 2021-2023. She moved back to Toronto in 2023 continuing her career as an educator at Ripley’s Aquarium and a remote GIS analyst. Rebecca started her master’s degrees in 2024 and is currently working towards those degrees in Archives and Records Management as well as Museum Studies while working full time at the aquarium. Despite growing up in a Jewish-Catholic family, Rebecca identifies as agnostic and left wing politically.