Asian American activists call White House immigration paper `anti
Transcription
Asian American activists call White House immigration paper `anti
PRSRT STD U.S. POSTAGE PAID SEATTLE, WA Permit No. 2393 VOL. 34, NO. 8 JOURNAL OF THE NORTHWEST ASIAN PACIFIC AMERICAN COMMUNITIES It’s official — Korean American Day is Jan. 13 Washington state Senator Paull Shin, DEdmonds, stands alongside Gov. Chris Gregoire at a bill signing recognizing Korean American Day. Washington becomes the first state in the nation to recognize the holiday in state law. Photo by Sandra Manwiller. Jan. 13 will be observed as a non-legal holiday with schools, banks and post offices open for business. APRIL 18 - MAY 1, 2007 Asian American activists call White House immigration paper ‘anti-family’ A White House immigration draft could be as devastating as the Chinese Exclusion Act, say community leaders BY EUGENIA CHIEN New American Media Asian American community leaders called a White House immigration draft “inhumane” and “un-American” because it calls taking away the right of legal immigrants to sponsor their relatives to join them and breaking up families as a result. The document containing “a set of principles” for immigration reform drafted by key Republican Congressional representatives was circulated in Washington last month. The plan creates temporary visas for undocumented immigrants and new workers, but it also puts more limits on American citizens’ ability to bring their parents, children over age 21 and siblings to the United States. “This plan attacks families and offers false hope for those seeking to legalize,” says Karen K. Narasaki, executive director of the Washington-based Asian American Justice Center. The Asian American community is the second largest group of immigrants who enter the United States through family sponsorship or by being immediate relatives of American citizens. China, Vietnam and India are among the top 10 countries whose immigrants arrive through family sponsorship, according to the Office of Immigration Statistics at the Department of Homeland Security. In 2005 about 17,000 Chinese obtained legal status in the United States through family sponsorship; 26,800 became legal residents because they were immediate relatives of U.S. citizens. Because so many Asians enter the United States through family quotas, the result of the White House draft “could be nearly the same as the Chinese Exclusion Act,” says Michael - continued on page 5 Sea-Tac, seaports, real estate major draws for new Port CEO BY KEN MOCHIZUKI Examiner Assistant Editor With a sweeping view of Elliott Bay from his Port of Seattle office, the Port’s new Chief Executive Officer Tay Yoshitani points to a container ship headed toward a cargo terminal. “You see that ship there?” he said. “Seventy percent of all containers go inland. What’s to prevent that ship from going to another port? We have to provide the total package of services.” After a month and a half on the job, Yoshitani, 60, said being the Port’s CEO is going “great” as he manages the three main components of the Port: Seattle’s seaports, Sea-Tac Airport and real estate acquisition and development. He deals with one “dynamic issue” after another, he said – “long projects that have momentum.” One of the most recent is development of the third runway at Sea-Tac. To make the runway possible, the Port is having to “redevelop the area,” he said. Buying property, “noise issues” and working with the local community and politicians has turned the runway into a “real estate project.” Yoshitani also recently dealt with air pollution from ships and trains using the port – issues that have “significantly hampered” other ports, he said. “We’re taking corrective action well in advance.” After a six-month national search and considering over 70 candidates, the Port of Seattle Commission unanimously chose operating budget of $450 Yoshitani last January to million and a $250 million replace retiring Port CEO capital budget. Besides the Mic Dinsmore. Yoshitani industrial ports along Elliott previously worked as depBay, Harbor Island and the uty director of the Port Duwamish Waterway, the of Los Angeles beginning Port also manages Shilshole in 1989, became director Bay Marina, the Maritime of the Port of Baltimore Industrial Center and and the Maryland Port Fishermen’s Terminal on Commission in 1995, and Salmon Bay, terminals and deputy director and then the grain elevator at Smith director of the Port of Cove, and two cruise ship Oakland since 1998. He terminals. The Port’s reveis credited with turning nue is derived from the Port around a struggling port being “real estate developsystem at Baltimore and overseeing the creation of Tay Yoshitani - Port of Seattle CEO ers and property managers,” Yoshitani said. “Whatever the largest export terminal asset we own, we charge for on the West Coast at Los Angeles. He also serves as Senior Adviser for the use of it.” Parking at Sea-Tac accounts the Coalition for Secure Ports, a national for “thirty to thirty-five percent of the total consortium of industrial and maritime revenue,” he said. “The third runway – you have to be in organizations advocating for security from this business to know how important that terrorism. Yoshitani said he chose to come to Seattle is,” he said. “That’s a huge leg up. The seaports can compete with everybody up and because of a “professional desire.” “A job like this doesn’t come along too down the West Coast and are in a position often,” he said. “Only a handful of ports to continue to grow. Overall we’re a healthy have this variety of business: an airport, the institution.” Yoshitani’s father graduated from the seaports, and real estate.” That “handful,” he said, includes the port systems in Oakland, University of Southern California in 1937. Due to discrimination, he found no work Portland and Boston. Yoshitani said he oversees an annual in America as an oil company engineer and - continued on page 4 Presented by Washington Mutual and International Examiner Wednesday, May 16 Honoring: Mai Nguyen Kip Tokuda Neighborhood House Muckleshoot Indian Tribe Plus - a special new award -See page 5 INTERNATIONAL EXAMINER 2 —— April 18 - May 1, 2007 FEATURE NEWS arts senior services Northwest Asian American Theatre NIKKEI CONCERNS 409 Seventh Ave S. Seattle, WA 98104 ph: 206-340-1445 fx: 206-682-4348 Seattle’s premiere pan-Asian American performing arts center. Manages Theatre Off Jackson. Wing Luke Asian Museum 407 7th Ave. S Seattle, WA 98104 ph:206-623-5124 fx: 206-622-4559 folks@wingluke.org; www.wingluke.org The only pan-Asian Pacific American museum in the country, the Wing Luke Asian Museum is nationally recognized for its award-winning exhibitions and community-based model of exhibition and program development. WLAM an affiliate of the Smithsonian Instititue, is dedicated to engaging the APA communities and the public in exploring issues related to the culture, art and history of Asian Pacific Americans. Offers guided tours for schools and adult groups, and provides excellent programs for families and all ages. business Chinatown/International District Business Improvement Area 409 Maynard Ave. S., Suite P1 Seattle, WA 98104 ph: 206-382-1197 www.cidbia.org Merchants association enhancing business, parking and public space in the International District. Sponsors Lunar New Year and Summer Festival events. Japanese American Chamber of Commerce 14116 S. Jackson Seattle, WA 98144 ph: 206-320-1010 www.jachamber.com Encourages entrepreneurial & educational activity among Japanese, Americans and Japanese Americans and promotes increased understanding of Japanese culture & heritage. Seattle Chinese Chamber of Commerce 675 S. King St Seattle, WA 98104 ph: 206-332-1933 fx: 206-650-8337 info@chinesechamber.net Acts as an advocate for local Chinese businesses and in a public relations role. Organizes the Seattle Miss Chinatown Pageant. political & civil rights Commission of Asian Pacific American Affairs 1210 Eastside St. SE 1st Flr. Olympia, WA 98504 Olympia ph: 360-753-7053 www.capaa.wa.gov Statewide liason between governmnet and APA communities. Monitors and informs public about legislative issues. Japanese American Citizens League - Seattle Chapter 316 Maynard S. Seattle, WA 98104 www.jaclseattle.org Dedicated to protecting the rights of Japanese Americans and upholding the civil and human rights of all people. Organization of Chinese Americans Seattle Chapter 606 Maynard Ave S., Suite 104 Seattle, WA 98104 ph: 206-682-0665 www.ocaseattle.org Civil rights and Education, promotes the active participation of chinese and Asian Americans in civic and community affairs. schools Asia Pacific Language School 14040 NE 8th, #302, Bellevue, WA 98007 ph: 425-785-8299 or 425-641-1703 www.apls.org Multilingual preschool, language classes, adult ESL, “One World Learning School Program”Academic enrichment, prep for WASL and SAT’s. Denise Louie Education Center 801 So. Lane St. Seattle, WA 98104 ph: 206-621-7880 info@deniselouie.org www.deniselouie.org Half day and full day Head Start program located in the International District, Beacon Hill, Mt Baker, and Rainier Beach. Comprehensive multi-cultural pre-school for children ages 3-5. church St. Peter’s Episcopal Parish 1610 S King St. Seattle, WA 98144 ph: 206-323-5250 email: cono@pugetsoundeyecare.com website: www.stpeterseattle.org St. Peter’s invite all people to a life of faith through worship education, service, and spiritual development. Enriching the lives of our elders. 1601 E. Yesler Way, Seattle, WA 98122 Ph: 206-323-7100 www.nikkeiconcerns.org Seattle Keiro, Skilled Nursing Facility 24-hour skilled nursing facility offering high quality medical and rehabilitation programs, activities and social services. 1601 E. Yesler, Seattle, WA 98122 Ph: 206-323-7100 Nikkei Manor, Assisted Living Community 50 private apartments. Service plans tailored to individual needs. Nurse on staff 8 hrs./day. 700 – 6th Ave. S., Seattle, WA 98104 Ph: 206-726-6460 Kokoro Kai, Adult Day Program Provides social opportunities, light exercises, lunch and activities 3 days a week. 700 – 6th Ave. S., Seattle, WA 98104 Ph: 206-726-6474 Nikkei Horizons, Continuing Education Program Offers tours and excursions, courses in arts, computers, language and more. 700 6th Ave. S., Seattle, WA 98104 Ph: 206-726-6469 Legacy House 803 South Lane, Seattle, WA 98104 ph: 206-292-5184 fx: 206-292-5271 info@legacyhouse.org Assisted living, Adult Day services, Independent Senior apartments, Ethnic-specific meal programs for low-income seniors. National Asian Pacific Center on Aging (Senior Community Service Employment Program) 1025 S. King St. Seattle, WA 98104 ph: 206-322-5272 fx: 206-322-5387 www.napca.org Part-time training program for low income Asian Pacific Islander age 55+ in Seattle/King County. professional Asian American Journalists Association - Seattle Chapter P.O. Box 9698 Seattle, WA 98109 www.aajaseattle.org Professional deveopment for journalist, scholarships for students and community service since 1985. National Association of Asian American Professionals - Seattle Chapter PO Box 14344 Seattle, WA 98104 pr@naaapseattle.org; www.naaapseattle.org Fostering future leaders through education, networking and community services for Asian American professionals and entrepreneurs. housing & neighborhood planning HomeSight 5117 Rainier Ave S. Seattle, WA 98118 ph: 206-723-4355 fax: 206-760-4210 www.homesightwa.org First-time home buyer purchase assistance services including low-interest loans, deferred payment loans, financial coaching, for-sale homes and more! Inter*Im Community Development Association 308 6th Ave So Seattle, WA 98104 ph: 206-624-1802 fx: 206-624-5859 info@interimicda.org; www.interimicda.org Low-income housing, economic development, neighborhood planning and advocacy for the APA community. International District Housing Alliance 606 Maynard Ave. S #104/105 Seattle, WA 98104 ph: 206-623-5132 fx: 206-623-3479 Multi-lingual low-income housing outreach, rental information, homeownership community education. Low Income Housing Institute 2407 First Ave Suite #200 Seattle, WA 98121 ph: 206-443-9935 fx: 206-443-9851 housinginfo@lihi.org; www.lihi.org Housing and services for families, individuals, seniors and the disabled in Seattle and the Puget Sound Region. Seattle Chinatown/International District Preservation and Development Authority ph: 206-624-8929 fax: 206-467-6376 info@scidpda.org Housing, property management, and community development. social & health services Asian Counseling & Referral Service 720 8th Ave S Suite 200 Seattle, WA 98104 ph: 206-695-7600 fx: 206-695-7606 www.acrs.org ACRS offers nationally recognized, culturally competent health and social services. Food for survival and culture: food bank, specializing in Asian/Pacific staples; emergency feeding; senior ethnic lunch programs Healthy mind and body: assistance for elders and adults with disabilities; bilingual, bicultural counseling for children and adults; problem gambling treatment; substance abuse treatment and recovery services; domestic violence batterers’ treatment and community education Building blocks for success: youth leadership development and academic support; vocational and employment services Stronger communities through civic engagement: naturalization and immigration assistance; community education, mobilization and advocacy Information for taking action: legal clinic; information and referral; consultation and education Asian & Pacific Islander Women & Family Safety Center P.O. Box 14047, Seattle, WA 98114 ph: 206-467-9976 email: apiwfsc@apialliance.org website: www.apiwfsc.org Provides community organizing, education, outreach, training, technical assistance & comprehensive culturally relevant service on domestic violence, sexual assault, and human trafficking to API community members, services providers, survivors & thier families. Center For Career Alternatives 901 Rainier Ave So. Seattle, WA 98144 ph: 206-322-9080 fx: 206-322-9084 www.ccawa.org Need a Job! Free Training, GED, and job placement service. Chinese Information and Service Cener 611 S. Lane St. Seattle, WA 98104 ph: 206-624-5633 fax: 206-624-5634 www.cisc-seattle.org Helps Asian immigrants achieve success in their new community by providing information, referral, advocacy, social, and support services. Our bilingual & bicultural staff offer after school programs, English as a Second Language, citizenship classes, employment training, computer classes, elderly care services and additional family support services. Please contact us. International Drop-In Center 7301 Beacon Ave S. Seattle, WA 98108 ph: 206-587-3735 fx: 206-742-0282 email: idic_seattle@yahoo.com We are open form 9 till 5 Mon-Fri and do referrals, counseling, fitness and recreation, social, arts & cultural activities for elderly member and walk-ins. Helping Link ph: 206-781-4246 fx:206-568-5160 www.cityofseattle.net/helpinglink Vietnamese community-based organization providing social service, education, social activities and more for the greater Seattle area. International Community Health Services International District Medical & Dental Clinic 720 8th Ave. S. Suite 100 Seattle, WA 98104 ph: 206-788-3700 Holly Park Medical & Dental Clinic 3815 S. Othello St. 2nd Floor, Seattle WA 98118 ph: 206-788-3500 www.ichs.com We are a nonprofit health care center offering affordable medical, dental, pharmacy, acupuncture and health education services primarily to Seattle and King County’s Asian and Pacific Islander communities. Kin On Community Health Care 815 S. Weller St. Suite 212 Seattle, WA 98104 ph: 206-652-2330 fx:206-652-2344 rtong@kinon.org; www.kinon.org Provides home care, home health, Alzheimer’s and caregiver support, community education and chronic care management. Coordinate medical supply delivery. Install Personal Emergency Response system. Serves the Chinese/Asian community in King County. Refugee Women’s Alliance 4008 Martin Luther King Jr. Seattle, WA 98108 ph: 206-721-0243 • fax: 206-721-0282 www.rewa.org A multi-ethnic, multilingual, community-based organization that provides the following programs to refugee and immigrant women and families in the Puget Sound area: Development Disabilities, Domesitc Violence, Early Childhood Education, Youth Family Support, Mentel Health, Parent Education and Education and Vocational Training. Washington Asian Pacific Islander Families Against Substance Abuse 606 Maynard Ave. S, Suite 200 Seattle, WA 98104 ph: 206-223-9578 Alcohol, tobacco & drug prevention; early intervention & outpatient treatment for APIA youth and their families. Join our Community Resource Directory. Email: advertising@iexaminer.org INTERNATIONAL EXAMINER OPINION April 18 - May 1, 2007 —— 3 Lack of health insurance harms our community BY HIROSHI NAKANO ICHS Board Chair The International Examiner profiled the lives of the medically uninsured in California in its March 21 issue. Their stories echo those from our own state, where almost one in 10 people live without any medical coverage. Of those 593,000 uninsured Washingtonians, approximately 190,000 live in King County which includes 30,000 Asian and Pacific Islanders (APIs) – that’s 13 percent of our community. There is a common misperception that the uninsured are also unemployed. In truth, the majority of people without health insurance have jobs or are part of working families. Most of them either work for employers who do not offer health insurance or make too little to buy into their employer-sponsored plan. Many earn too much to qualify for Medicaid or other public programs, yet do not earn enough to afford private insurance. Citizenship and other eligibility requirements for Medicaid and Medicare also prevent many tax-paying residents from accessing coverage. International Community Health Services (ICHS) is part of the safety net for the uninsured. ICHS was founded to provide culturally relevant and linguistically appropriate health care to API communities, although our patient population today includes a wide diversity of ethnic groups. In 2006, ICHS provided medical and dental services to over 16,000 patients, including 4,250 uninsured. Two-thirds of our patients live below 100 percent of the Federal Poverty Level. Every year, our clinics spend more than $1.3 million on charity care. As a comprehensive family practice, ICHS cares for people of all ages; however, the majority of our patients are between the ages of 20 and 64. This demographic is the most likely to be uninsured, since the programs like Medicaid and Medicare primarily assist children and the elderly. Being uninsured can be devastating. Many delay seeking medical care until the condition is dire, leading to expensive emergency room treatments and hospitalizations. The uninsured manage to pay only a portion of their health care bills, often depleting their savings, EDITOR NhienNguyen 622S.WashingtonSt. Seattle,WA98104 www.iexaminer.org ADVERTISINGMANAGER CarmelaLim ASSISTANTEDITOR Establishedin1974,theInternationalExamineris theoldestandlargestnonprofit,pan-AsianAmerican publication in the Pacific Northwest. Named after the historic and thriving multi-ethnic International District (ID) of Seattle, the International Examineraspirestobeacrediblecatalystforbuilding an inspiring, connected, well-respected, and socially conscious Asian Pacific American (APA) community. Our mission is to promote critical thinking,dialogueandactionbyprovidingtimely, accurate and culturally sensitive coverage of relevantAPAmatters.Inadditiontoproducingafree semi-monthly newspaper, we also publish a literary supplement, “Pacific Reader” devoted to the criticalreviewsofAPAbooks.Wehavepublished two books, “The History of the International District”byDougChinand“HumBowsNotHotDogs –MemoirsofanActivist”byBobSantos. KenMochizuki ARTSEDITOR AlanChongLau BUSINESSMANAGER EllenSuzuki CREATIVEDIRECTOR KenHiraiwa INFO.SYSTEMS CanhTieu INTERNS ReikoIijima SatokoKako KaoriKonishi PhiLe ArlaShephard FantanelyWong CONTRIBUTORS The International Examiner is published on the first and third Wednesdays of every month. Subscription rates for one-year home delivery is $25 for individuals and $45 first class/ overseas. The International Examiner is a registered 501(c)(3) nonprofit; subscriptions are tax-deductible. ClaireEmikoFant AnnaMariaHong ChizuOmori TarisaMatsumoto Tel:(206)624-3925 Fax:(206)624-3046 iexaminer@iexaminer.org advertising@iexaminer.org Sign up for our E-news! e-mail us at: iexaminer@iexaminer.org - or Visit www.iexaminer.org borrowing from friends and family, mortgaging their homes, and accumulating credit card debt in the process. With half of all personal bankruptcies originating from medical costs, it is clear that lack of health coverage prevents many from achieving financial stability. In an effort to live within their means, many of the uninsured forgo preventive care such as dental cleanings. Thirty-four percent of APIs in King County have untreated oral decay. This is a major problem for our communities, since poor oral health is linked to increased incidence of disease generally. While young and middle-aged working adults are the most likely to be uninsured, a significant number of the elderly in API communities also lack coverage. ICHS sees many older immigrants who do not qualify for Medicare or Medicaid and who have at least one chronic condition requiring regular medical evaluation and treatment. Many elders will not purchase medications or see specialists that cost more than what they can afford. As ICHS physician Dr Alan Chun explains, “This older, fragile, and often isolated population would rather wither away than incur expenses that they or their children would have to pay for.” For many of us, these words ache with truth. Debt is not part of the “better life” that our elders wished for us in this country. By excluding so many from coverage, our health care system winds up being expensive for everyone. Unpaid medical bills result in higher prices for medical services; insurance companies shift this increased cost to employers via higher premiums; employers mitigate higher premiums by increasing the copays, deductibles, and coinsurance that employees pay. Health care bills not paid out-of-pocket by the uninsured amounted to $950 million in Washington State alone in 2005. By 2010, unless we fix our system, that expense is projected to exceed $1.3 billion. If the cost of health insurance continues to rise as a result, even fewer people will be able to afford it. Halting this vicious spiral is key to ensuring good health and financial stability for everyone. Access to affordable health care is a national problem that will ultimately require a national solution; however, steps can be taken at the state level. Adequately funding Basic Health, the popular state health insurance plan, would reduce the number of uninsured Washingtonians significantly. About two-thirds of the uninsured are eligible, but current funding is insufficient to open this program to all qualified people who need it. We encourage you to remind your elected officials at the federal, state, county and city levels of the importance of community health centers like ICHS to the safety net. We also encourage you to support the services we provide to uninsured patients through the Uncle Bob Health Fund, established by ICHS to honor Robert N. Santos, community visionary and one of the founders of ICHS. This fund is supported by direct donations and by proceeds from our Annual Celebration, held this year on May 19 at the Grand Hyatt Hotel in Seattle. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: We want to hear from you! Please submit letters with name, address, phone number. Send to: 622 S. Washington Seattle, WA 98104 fax: (206) 624-3046 e-mail: editor@iexaminer.org 4 —— April 18 - May 1, 2007 - continued from front page INTERNATIONAL EXAMINER NEWS PortCEO:“IwastheonlyJapaneseAmericaninthewholeschool...” returned to Japan. By the early ‘50s and with four sons, “my father’s main goal in life was that his sons graduate from U.S. universities,” said Yoshitani, the youngest son and born in post-World War II Japan. “At age 42, he moved his family back to the states and took an entry-level job at Mobil Oil.” Arriving in America at age seven, Yoshitani lived in Los Angeles and then spent part of his junior high and high school years in Norwalk, Conn. While other newspaper profiles have described Yoshitani’s early years as a miserable experience, he said, “I was the only Japanese American in the whole school, and that didn’t even occur to me.” By the mid-‘60s, Yoshitani followed a brother to the U.S. Military Academy at West Point. The Academy, he said, was a “great place to have gone; I wouldn’t change a thing, although I remember I was always tired.” He then underwent training for the elite Army Rangers – “an awful, awful school for nine weeks,” he said – and became airborne (parachute jumper) qualified. He served as an Army engineer in Vietnam during the war building roads and airfields. Even though his role was as a noncombatant from 1969-1970, “everybody got shot at in Vietnam,” he said. Yoshitani went on to earn his master’s of business administration from Harvard University. Being that he was a West Point graduate, underwent elite military training and earned a Harvard MBA, was he trying to prove something to himself or others? “I just tried to receive the best training and best education I could,” he said. For the next 14 years, Yoshitani worked executive positions in real estate, office products and food processing, including with Dole Foods in San Francisco and Honolulu until starting his career with the ports. Yoshitani moved to Seattle along with his wife Becky and children Jennifer, 18; Taylor, 15; and Ryan, 13. Regarding his present job as the Port of Seattle’s CEO, Yoshitani said he is “working with a cadre of professionals I am proud to be associated with.” “This is the best job in the country for a port director,” he said. “And being that this job is in Seattle, how much better can it get?” The2007GreaterSeattleJapaneseCommunityCourt University of Washington students Lisa Felice Akiyama, Allison Chieko Iguchi, Samantha Miyuki Lim, Monique Aiyaka Perkins, and Alicia Jun Pumpian will be introduced at the Seattle Cherry Blossom Festival as the 2007 contestants who will participate in the 48th annual Greater Seattle Japanese Community Queen Scholarship Pageant to be held on May 26 at the Carco Theater in Renton. Each year a community panel Back row, l-r: Lisa Felice Akiyama, Samantha Miyuki Lim. selects a queen based on her aca- Front row, l-r: Alicia Jun Pumpian, Allison Chieko Iguchi, demic achievement, leadership Monique Aiyaka Perkins skills, community involvement, personal accomplishments, self-expression, communication skills and creativity. Throughout the year, the queen and her court represent the Greater Seattle Japanese community at numerous local community events as well as at the Cherry Blossom Festivals in San Francisco and Honolulu, and the Nisei Week Japanese Festival in Los Angeles. The queen also represents the Japanese community in the Seafair Scholarship Program for Women in July. “Save Our Neighborhoods!” march and rally on April 21 On Saturday, April 21 at 1 p.m, there will be a march and rally to voice community concerns regarding the Dearborn Street Project, a shopping mall development that is being planned at the corner of Rainier and Dearborn. The rally will be held after the Spring Clean Up, sponsored by the ChinatownInternational District Public Development Authority (SCIDPDA), which takes place in the morning of April 21. (See our Calendar on page 14). Rally details: - Gather at 12th & Yesler (near BaileyGatzert School) to march to Goodwill Industries (Dearborn & Rainier). - Send a strong message to City Council and the developer: - your desire for responsible, neighborhood-friendly development at the Goodwill site - your opposition to an auto-oriented shopping mall in the International and Central Districts. INTERNATIONAL EXAMINER The IE announces new Young Leadership Award Dinner & Benefit on Wednesday, May 16 The International Examiner announces the recipients of the 17th Annual Community Voice Awards: Mai Nguyen, Kip Tokuda, Neighborhood House and Muckleshoot Indian Tribe. The dinner and benefit to recognize the individuals and groups who have greatly contributed to the Asian American community is scheduled for Wednesday, May 16 during APA Heritage Month. A new special award this year will pay tribute to a promising, young leader in the APA community. The IE will name a new Young Leadership Award after Matthew “Tatsuo” Nakata. Nakata was tragically killed at a pedestrian crossing West Seattle. The first winner under this award is 1st Lt. Ehren Watada, for his stand against the War in Iraq. Watada is scheduled to accept the award at the dinner. On March 10, the State Legislature passed House Bill 1588. Through this measure, the House paid tribute to Nakata, David Della’s late Chief of Staff by naming the legislation in his honor. Della’s office writes: “The Matthew “Tatsuo” Nakata Act will add curriculum to the state’s drivers’ education requirements that will provide information on how motorists can safely share the road with pedestrians and bicyclists. Visit our Web site at www.iexaminer.org. - continued from front page Immigrationbills:AnotherChineseExclusionAct? Lin, executive director of the Organization of Chinese Americans. “We cannot allow this injustice to happen again. Family is the foundation of American society,” Lin says at a teleconference hosted by the Asian American Justice Center. Joren Lyons, staff attorney at the San Francisco-based Asian Law Caucus says the White House proposal would have an “immediate impact” on the Asian American community” and “is quite shocking and devastating for many families who have been looking forward to the day they can reunite.” The wait to become legal United States residents can take decades, Lyons says. Advocates also criticize the penalty fees proposed by the draft White House plan, which would require undocumented immigrants to pay $3,500 fines and other fees every three years in order to stay in the United States. “The fees are exorbitant,” says Eun Sook Lee, executive director of the National Korean American Service and Education Consortium in Los Angeles. Many Asian American immigrant advocates support the STRIVE ACT of 2007, a new comprehensive immigration reform bill introduced by Representatives Luis Gutierrez (D-IL) and Jeff Flake (R-AZ) on March 23. Advocates say that the STRIVE ACT could eliminate the backlog of familybased immigrants and help reunite children of Filipino World War II veterans. The White House has minimized the importance of the document, describing it as only “discussion points.” So far no bill has been based on the document. Grassroots and advocacy organizations across the country are calling for a nationwide mobilization of APAs to Washington D.C. on Monday, April 30 through Tuesday, May 1. Visit www.advancingequality.org. April 18 - May 1, 2007 —— 5 6 —— April 18 - May 1, 2007 INTERNATIONAL EXAMINER HOUSING Condos: Asian immigrants shift to new concept of home BY NHIEN NGUYEN Examiner Editor Illustration by Fantanely Wong Asian immigrants instill the importance of owning your own home to their children at a very young age. But the American dream is changing from the house-and-white-picket-fence image to a shared building with condominium units. “The concept of a condo is very unusual to a lot of immigrants,” says International District Housing Alliance (IDHA) program service manager Elaine Magil. “It’s not quite the same thing as an apartment, where the building manager comes and fixes problems in your unit.” When Magil first started at the organization, IDHA clients were not interested in buying condos. They saw condos as being similar to apartments — in lifestyle, living restrictions and space — factors of which they were trying to escape by buying their own home. Now, Magil says that clients, in particular new homebuyers, are more willing than ever to embrace the concept of condo buying. “Generally speaking, there’s definitely a trend,” says Tony To of Homesight, a nonprofit organization that promotes affordable homeownership opportunities. To says that low-income or first-time homebuyers used to look for houses outside of Seattle – as far north as Skagit County or as far south as Pierce or Thurston County. As the real estate market continues to boom in the Pacific Northwest, housing costs in Tips for condo homebuyers these outlying areas are becoming comparable to that of the Seattle area. With gas prices sky-rocketing past $3 a gallon, long commutes from suburban living to urban jobs are no longer affordable nor attractive. “People are coming back into the city and looking at our projects to purchase units,” says To. Homesight is currently developing affordable condos near Seattle University, Squire Park neighborhood, and the north end of Rainier Avenue at Jackson Place neighborhood. Though condos are not a good choice for large families, as most units tend to have no more than three bedrooms, condos are suitable for couples, smaller families and single parent families. Townhomes are also becoming popular for families — even though they may work like condos with associations and related fees, townhomes look “a little bit more like their image of what a home should look like,” according to Magil. But there are other reasons that condo buying has become so attractive. For Asian families in particular, Jeanny Lee of John L. Scott says that many parents are realizing that another way to help their children get a leg up on the American dream is to buy a condo as an investment. Parents may either have their children live in the condo for college or early adulthood at a low, affordable rent or sell the condo to their children at a below-market price. The price break results in equity that can be used as a down payment or lower mortgage payments. “If it wasn’t for my mother helping me and my brother, we would never be homeowners,” says Lee. To predicts that condos will be not only important to young adults, but also to the older generation. Many seniors who own large houses in Beacon Hill, says To, will be looking for smaller, more manageable, more accessible living situations, like Midori Condominiums on Yesler Way. Condos may not be the American dream but it’s one step closer to achieving it. Ask before you buy. Many new condo owners may not know where the monthly condo fees are going to and why they are paying them. Every condo association is different. Some fees may include utilities, water/sewer/garbage, cable and building maintenance. Other fees include various insurance coverage plans, such as fire, flood or earthquake damage. Don’t double up your payments by adding insurance coverage for something that is already covered by the general building fees. Participate in the homeowners association. Many important decisions get made during homeowners association meetings. If you’re not there to represent your own needs and wishes, you may be very surprised to see your monthly condo fees increase. If the condo owner has language barriers, hopefully association members will be open to finding ways to get the owner access to information and also become involved in the decisionmaking process. Prepare for changes in condo fees. Your condo association may have automatic annual increases or decide to raise condo fee rates for various purposes. Since condo owners share the burden of maintaining the building, each condo owner must also contribute financially to any repairs, assessments or improvements. Assessments can mean doubling condo fees or even second mortgages. Check the homeowners by-laws and guidelines. Owning your own condo unfortunately does not mean you have free reign to re-model or re-design your place. Oftentimes, re-modeling proposals need to be approved by the condo association before anything can be done to your unit. The building may also have restrictions on tenant leasing, pets, children and selling procedures. INTERNATIONAL EXAMINER Freddie Mac unveils Asian homebuyers program CreditSmart Asian to assist with Credit Housing Counseling BY KHALIL ABDULLAH New America Media Offstage, on the ground floor of Freddie Mac’s headquarters in McLean, Virg., the martial artists of the Wong Chinese Boxing Association were waiting to perform the lion dance. Comprising two performers — one carrying a massive decorative lion’s head; the other hidden under a rippling yellow cloth body — the king of the beasts leaps and twirls to the sounds of drums and cymbals in order to frighten away the evil spirits that may have not yet departed with the coming of the lunar new year. The performance in March also was, in part, to announce the unveiling of CreditSmart Asian, a Freddie Mac initiative designed to familiarize Asian communities with establishing credit and ideally leading to homeownership. According to the company’s data, only 60 percent of Asians own their homes as compared to 72 percent of non-Hispanic whites. The lion dance was indeed appreciatively welcomed by company attendees and guests, but only after a short roster of speakers, including Gene McQuade, Freddie Mac’s President and COO, and Hyepin Im, President of the Korean Churches for Community Development, who did some intricate footwork of her own. From the podium, Im told a tale of three fishermen who shared a boat. Each remembered something he had left behind after pulling away from shore. The first one returned to retrieve his neglected item by stepping out of the boat and walking across the water to land. He then retraced his path across the water to the boat. The second fisherman followed suit, also walking across the water and returning safely. The third, who suddenly recalled a forgotten object, stepped out of the boat only to disappear beneath the water. “I wondered if we should have told him where the stepping stones were?” Im said one of the remaining fishermen asked the other. Laughing, the audience also seemed to exhale a collective breath of exhilarating relief that Im had a rational explanation of the fishermen’s seemingly miraculous powers. “I wondered where she was going with that,” an audience member said later. Im said she used the analogy of the stepping stones to illustrate what CreditSmart Asian could provide potential Asian homebuyers: a clear pathway to home ownership. With Freddie Mac’s assistance, she said the Korean Churches for Community Development had educated 3,000 home buyers in the last four years and that the guidebooks would amplify her organization’s reach. The Korean Churches for Community Development was one of several “community partners” engaged by Freddie Mac’s Asian Project Team, headed by Julie Sun, Manager of Corporate Relations and Housing Outreach, to assist in translating guidebooks into Korean, Chinese, and Vietnamese. The guidebooks explain the mechanics of establishing and managing credit with the goal of qualifying for a mortgage. Other partners included: Asian Americans for Equality; Boat People SOS; Chhaya; Chinese American Citizens League; Filipinos for Affirmative Action; National Coalition for Asian Pacific American Hyepin Im, President of the Korean Churches for Community Development Community Development; National Congress of Vietnamese Americans, and National Korean American Service & Education Consortium, Inc. Dwight Robinson, Freddie Mac’s Senior Vice President of Corporate Relations and Outreach, noted that even among Asians who are fluent in English, many prefer information in their Asian language. He said that the guidebooks were only a first step toward making the information “interactive and universally available on the internet” and will be followed by efforts to push credit education into the school system. In addition to translation work, which had to take Asian and American idioms into account, focus groups were convened. “How is credit understood and used in your community?” Robinson said addressing the audience, were the essential questions that prompted Freddie Mac to engage the community partners. The entire process took approximately two years. Trang Khanh Tran of Boat People SOS was one of the individual “community ambassadors” cited by Robinson. She helped develop the curricula by translating the guidebook material into Vietnamese. Tran had served as a volunteer for BOAT People SOS for 10 years before joining as a full-time staff member two years ago. She is now the Community Development Department Director and said that CreditSmart Asian will be especially useful to new and lowincome immigrants. Tran explained that her organization provides direct services to those who do not have the requisite knowledge to negotiate America’s sometimes daunting financial system. “For example, many times new immigrants do not know how to open a bank account,” she said. “We help them.” Now, with CreditSmart Asian, Tran agreed that Boat People SOS has a tool kit to walk constituents through basic financial literacy and, eventually, the mortgage application process. Freddie Mac, though a stock corporation, (formally, the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation), was chartered by Congress in 1970 to assist American homebuyers. It does this by purchasing mortgages issued by lenders and reselling them as investments in what is known as the secondary mortgage market. With the new money available from Freddie Mac purchases, primary lenders are able to issue new loans. For more information. visit www.freddiemac.com. April 18 - May 1, 2007 —— 7 INTERNATIONAL EXAMINER CULTURE Asian American Youth Culture: Multi-racial dating BY ARLA SHEPHARD Examiner Contributor Now more than ever, young Asian-Americans are defying their parents’ cultural norms and are engaging in multi-racial dating, says an article in American Demographics on Asian-American youth trends. This complex issue however often puts them at odds with the parents and traditions that they’ve come to respect and their growing assimilation into American culture. Issues of identity come into play, and many Asian Americans must come to terms with how they want to be perceived and what will ultimately make them happy. University of Washington and FilipinoAmerican student Angeline Candido has been dating her Caucasian boyfriend, Jonathan Yockey, for nearly three years. Despite their closeness, Candido admits that a part of her still keeps her culture and her boyfriend separate. “[Trying new] food is still very hard for him. He doesn’t eat seafood … I wonder how we would raise our children if we got married,” Candido said. “Would they be raised in an American or Filipino tradition? Would I teach them Tagalog? What kinds of food would they eat?” she asked. Multi-racial dating is not a new phenomenon among Asian-Americans. When Filipino and Chinese male workers came to the United States in the 18th and 19th centuries, they would have no choice but to marry White women. After World War II, the situation reversed itself with several white men returning home with Asian “war brides.” Hand in hand with interracial dating comes the issue of discrimination. Anti-miscegenation laws, where interracial marriages are prohibited, have been common since the post-slavery era. In the case of the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, Asian men were seen as a threat to American society when they wed their Caucasian brides. Nowadays discrimination comes in much subtler forms for Asian American youth carefully wading the pool of multi-racial dating. Culture clashes and misunderstandings are common for today’s youth, with family structure seeming to be the common point of contention. Candido’s younger sister experienced more trouble with her interracial relationship. Her ex-boyfriend didn’t understand why she couldn’t stay out late, said Candido, or why she wouldn’t simply talk back to her parents. Differing religious beliefs played a large role in the fate of the relationship as well. Sophia Le, a Vietnamese American UW student, has also experienced her share of turbulent interracial relationships. She was hesitant to tell her parents about her white high school boyfriend, who came from a very non-traditional single-parent family. “He was not very understanding of my culture and didn’t understand why my parents were so controlling. He would often insult them in front of me. This lasted for five or six months, where we would sneak around … I was hoping that with time he would understand,” Le said. Asian American youth have a hard enough time “finding themselves” amidst the balancing act of maintaining the culture of their parents and striving to be more “American.” Adding dating into the mix can force them to call into question their own culture and beliefs. “I was at a very confusing point in my life, trying to figure out who I was. For someone to tell you that your way of life is wrong is unsettling. Now I realize that family is important and relationships need compromise,” Le said. Le has found that compromise with her current boyfriend, who is also white. Instead of putting down her family, he encourages her to express her culture more. Fantanely Wong 8 —— April 18 - May 1, 2007 “He wonders why I don’t learn to make pho [a traditional Vietnamese soup dish] or why I don’t speak more Vietnamese,” Le said. “He is open to other cultures and loves trying new food.” Despite the success of their current relationships, Candido and Le both run into problems occasionally. Le’s boyfriend doesn’t understand why the term “Oriental” might be offensive, and Candido has to explain to her boyfriend why he can’t call her father by his first name. Roadblocks are inevitable in any relationship, and fortunately Candido and Le have rarely experienced racism when dating outside of their ethnicity. Once Candido was treated coldly from the older World War II generation when it was thought that she was Japanese, but aside from that both families are accepting of the couple. “My parents are completely accepting, but would they be happier if I ended up with a nice Filipino boy? Probably,” Candido said. “I think my parents have accepted that it’s harder to find a Vietnamese guy, but it might make them happier … Still, considering the history between Vietnam and Cambodia, I know they’d be more upset if I dated a Cambodian,” Le said. Le has found that the struggle to identify oneself as Asian or American, an identity struggle that most Asian American youth go through, spills over into the issue of multi-racial dating. The solution for youth, whether in an interracial relationship or not, is to not fight to identify yourself within a set social construct. One doesn’t have to be Chinese or American; one can make their own culture. “I was at that breaking point with my last boyfriend where I thought I couldn’t be with someone different from me,” Le said. “Now I know better. It doesn’t have to be one way or another, black and white, my culture versus your culture. That becomes too polarizing and restrictive. You can create that third culture.” INTERNATIONAL EXAMINER April 18 - May 1, 2007 —— 9 ARTS Zhi Lin: “Unheard voices and invisible people” BY CLAIRE EMIKO FANT Examiner Contributor Amid the abundance of postmodern offerings, Zhi Lin’s figurative paintings and drawings stand out as testimony to his mastery of the realistic portrayal of epochal human history. Blending the representational techniques of Northern European Renaissance painting with the compositional devices of classic Chinese monumental landscape painting, he achieves his objective — to use his artwork to bring to light the social truths of the inhuman treatment of human beings that most of us tend to ignore and the historical truths that are buried in time. For Zhi Lin, learning is a lifelong journey. He is on a quest for the historical recognition of people, past and present, who make up the undercurrent of human history — undistinguished in the eyes of the society in which they live and treated with disdain and cruelty. Growing up during the Cultural Revolution in China as a child, he witnessed many street fights between political factions, and became acutely aware of the social and political climate to avoid persecution. This caused him to turn inward and reflect upon human society. Lin began his career in printmaking, experimenting with abstract forms and Chinese calligraphy. Tiananmen Square in 1989 was a watershed event for Lin who was in England studying European art at the time. Drawing inspiration from artists such as Philip Guston and Paula Rego, who turned from abstract to figurative representation in their painting, Lin found a profound purpose for his art. As someone who was exposed to human violence at an early age, he felt that a realistic portrayal of his subject would cross cultural lines with greater impact. Zhi Lin’s current solo show at Howard House is a rare and excellent opportunity to view his completed project, “Five Capital Executions in China,” an undertaking which he began in 1992, and his next project entitled “Invisible People: Chinese Railroad Workers,” that is still in the formative stages of development. “Five Capital Executions in China” is comprised of five monumental scroll paintings, each measuring 12 by 7 feet, depicting Lin’s interpretations of five ancient forms of capital punishment. They are titled: “Flaying” (1993), “Decapitation” (1995), “Firing Squad” (1996), “Starvation” (1999), and “Drawing and Quartering” (2007). The scrolls are hung and framed in the manner of Tibetan Buddhist “thanka” scrolls that Lin had studied in China. Ribbons with imprinted images of influential Chinese thinkers flank each scroll, and at the top sits a curtain that has been gathered up to reveal hidden truth. Each painting is realistically rendered with finely wrought detail that brings the viewer in as a witness anticipating the inevitable act. Crowds of people populate the paintings, engaged in daily activities or watching the event without emotion. Acrobats perform in “Flaying.” A parade marks a celebration in “Drawing and Quartering.” And we as viewers are a complicit audience with a direct bird’s-eye view of the horrific event about to take place. It is unsettling with an eerie allegorical quality akin to the religious paintings of the old European masters. Indeed, implied in the series is that Lin used China as the setting for an epic narrative that is essentially universal in scope and time, as no culture or civilization escapes the human propensity for violence. Lin attacks his next project, “Invisible People: Chinese Railroad Workers,” with the same passionate commitment and thoroughness, beginning with plenty of research. With help from books, photographs and the research capabilities created by the Internet and GPS, Lin was able to locate the areas that were inhabited by the immigrant Chinese railroad workers recruited to build the transcontinental railroad during the second half of the 19th century. He traveled to California and Utah to record where the workers lived, worked and died — places like Donner Summit and American River at Cape Horn in the Sierra Nevada mountain range, Bloomers Cut in Auburn, California, and Promontory Summit in Utah, site of the golden spike ceremonies. In the 8-1/2 by 11-inch Chinese ink paint- ings exhibited at Howard House, Lin’s trained eye and adept hand captures the wild, remote loneliness of these places, where only the railroad itself gives evidence to the Chinese workers’ presence. Lin’s paintings are a blend of graphic and realistic presentation that is realm of water-based media. The layered brushwork and wash possess an immediate contemporary quality that sets them apart from classic Chinese painting and historical engravings of the same areas. On each piece he describes the wilderness landscape and how the Chinese workers’ mostly unrecognized efforts altered it for the transcontinental railroad. Hundreds of Chinese workers perished at Donner Summit, American River and other remote areas, yet at none of these places nor in American railroad history is there much acknowledgement of their contributions except with unmarked graves and nondescript memorials like the Chinese Wall at the Donner Pass tunnels and the Chinese Arch (formally Chinaman Arch) near Promontory. Lin seeks to again challenge mainstream historical and cultural awareness by examining the contributions of Chinese immigrant workers to American history and the mistreatment they endured after the railroad had been completed and many became jobless. As with “Five Capital Executions in China,” for “Invisible People: Chinese Railroad Workers” Lin will develop final paintings based on his research and travels to California and Utah, draw and paint studies with human models wearing period dress, and create his masterpieces that engage the viewer to look beyond the general perception of our country’s history. Zhi Lin currently teaches painting at the University of Washington. His work will be on display at Howard House until April 28. 10 —— April 18 - May 1, 2007 INTERNATIONAL EXAMINER John Yau, backwards and forwards BY ANNA MARIA HONG Examiner Contributor John Yau was born in Massachusetts in 1950, soon after his parents fled Shanghai, and he has lived in Manhattan for many years. The author of over 30 books of poetry, fiction and criticism, including “Borrowed Love Poems,” “Ing Grish,” “Hawaiian Cowboys,” and “The United States of Jasper Johns,” Yau has received many awards including being named a Chevalier in the Order of Arts and Letters by France. Yau had just published his wonderful poetry collection, “Paradiso Diaspora” (Penguin), a fluid, witty and provocative work which begins with a series of collaborative poems with visual artist, Leiko Ikemura, and ends with the humorous “In the Kingdom of Poetry,” which explains exactly what a poet should not do beginning with the line, “Don’t write poems/ about yourself.” After hearing him lecture about the Seattle-based artist Randy Hayes, I spoke to Yau about his process and his new book. Anna Maria Hong: Most of my questions are about your book “Paradiso Diaspora.” I love the title, and I love that it’s an anagram. The way I interpret it, is that paradise is a kind of scattering, as opposed to “lost” and as opposed to “one place.” John Yau: That’s fairly accurate, “paradise” as a scattering and maybe the “diaspora” is also a paradise. I mean it to go two ways: you’re thrown out of the paradise into the diaspora, and the diaspora is also the paradise. You can read it literally backward and forward, and maybe there is no paradise but the place where you are, whatever that place is, if you accept the consequences of that possibility. I think that’s one of the ways I was thinking about it when I wrote that title, and also I just lucked into when I discovered that anagram and thought, “Ah, lucky me!” Welcome to our tribute to April, National Poetry Month. Our feature this issue is an interview with art critic, essayist, poet, prose writer, publisher, editor and curator, John Yau. Yau holds a unique position in the arts since he wears so many hats and I think it’s this versatility of expression and perspective that makes his writing so fresh and vital. Anna Maria Hong caught up with him last summer when he was in the area to read and teach workshops at Port Townsend. No single interview could address Yau’s multiplicity of interests but for those wishing more information, I’d suggest “The Passionate Spectator: Essays on Art and Poetry” by John Yau (Poets on Poetry Series/University of Michigan Press) for starters. To wrap things up, we also include two book reviews of poetry. Enjoy and read poetry! Alan Lau - IE Arts Editor kind of anonymously, and I really like that a images in her work as much as I could . . . So, it lot. is a real back and forth collaboration. JY: Not really. In a way I was thinking that everybody is part of diaspora but they don’t want to admit it. You know, there’s this notion that some people are more American than others, and I just think no. When I was growing up, my father said over and over again that everybody in America came from somewhere else – even the Native Americans came from somewhere else; they crossed the Bering Strait. I think it’s interesting to think that America’s this place where everybody has left their own country, and at the same time it’s thought of as this kind of paradise that you go to. What is paradise? AMH: A kind of restlessness. JY: Yeah! Restlessness and that you can’t accept your condition. Everyone in America wants something a little bit better, a little bit different. I mean I think that’s probably true everywhere . . . I think also living in New York, where you think nobody’s a native New Yorker, and everybody is really from somewhere else, and you meet Russian poets, and all these different people, and that seemed kind of like paradise to me, that it wasn’t one thing, and I would be the person outside of that. In New York, you feel like everybody’s outside in some funny way. AMH: You don’t really find that in other American cities. JY: Yeah, not in a city you can walk around in. L.A. is anonymous in a different way. I want to be in a city you can walk around in; I don’t want to have to drive everywhere. I like public transportation. I like walking, I like the subway, and if I have to I’ll take taxi-cabs, another kind of funny transportation . . . In L.A., I once took the bus – I think the entire Wilshire Boulevard from Santa Monica to L.A., an hour and 40 minutes – and I realized the people who took the bus in L.A. were the people who were really poor, and they literally went and got their laundry and took the bus for five blocks and got off. And I was really curious, because it was like a weird, little community vehicle, and the people would recognize some people on the bus, and I was like “Wow!” and I loved the ride! A friend of mine thought I was crazy to take the bus, but you would see in L.A. what you would not otherwise ever see. It was like a New York subway to me except very slow. AMH: The first section of your book is “Andalusia,” and the notes say that it was published in a limited edition with artwork by Leiko Ikemura. What was the process of working together? JY: Leiko Ikemura is a Japanese artist who lives in Germany, and I had seen her work in Berlin a number of times. She’s a ceramicist and a AMH: And everyone has a place. AMH: Were you also thinking of specific JY: And everyone has a place even though it’s painter, and somewhere along the line I had diasporas like the Chinese diaspora? read that she had done a book of drawings for a poet named Marina Zwetajewa, because she really likes Russian poetry. So, I decided I would do a collaboration with her, and I met her and talked to her, and I had to come up with the poems for her work. I knew that she had lived in Spain at a certain point, and I was interested in poems by Arab or Muslim women written in the 12th and 13th century in Spain that were anonymous. At the same time, I was reading about the Persian miniatures and the creation of paradise in the Persian miniature, because it’s a garden; there’s no people in it in the beginning. There’s no animals. It’s all flowers. So, then I wrote these poems trying to limit myself to images that you find in Persian miniatures that had no individuals in them. AMH: Do you have a preference for which way it works? Because you’ve done so many collaborations. JY: No, I don’t have a preference for which way it works. I’m just really interested in doing it, because I think it gets me out of thinking in certain ways and gets me thinking about different subjects, and I try to respond to the person’s work. AMH: And do you think it’s influenced your solo work as well? JY: Yeah, and, in fact, I can go to an exact moment. In the ‘80s, I worked with an artist named Archie Rand, and we decided to collaborate. We were going to do watercolors where I would write on the paper, and he would do the watercolor, and then he made up all the rules; I accepted them. He said that we had to do a thousand. I then had a little house in upstate New York. He came to my house, and he brought all the paper and gave me half of it, and I was to write something, and he was to do a watercolor, and it got to the point where he would be passing me a watercolor, and I would be passing him something I wrote on, and we kept going faster and faster. And I said, “A thousand? That’s crazy!” And he said, “Well, that’s the only way you can get beyond what you know how to do.” And that really changed my writing at a certain point, because it made me think about, “Oh, have I ever thought about getting beyond what I know how to do. Have I ever tried to get myself into another kind of situation?” And he was doing the watercolors extremely fast, and he’s very, very good, and I had to write, and I had to not think in a way. And, also I had to think about where I put the words on the page, and you want the poem or the writing to happen as fast as the image, but images happen faster than language. So, then it’s really like, how many words can you use before you slow it down so much? So, that really helped me to compress my lines a lot. Even if you put half the line up here and half the line down here, what happens with the break? So, things like that really did make me rethink everything I knew about writing. And, after that, I really got excited about working with artists. And artists — what’s amazing, because we don’t think about it as writers — artists, if they don’t like something, they throw it away. And it’s material! It’s like paper, canvas, whatever. And you think, “Well, if they’re not afraid of that, and it’s costing them money, what’s so precious about any one thing I write?” And then you get rid of the notion, “Oh, I wrote this line, it’s important, you know! I wrote it!” It’s like, “Eh, it’s not that good a line or it doesn’t work here, get rid of it.” So, that, I think, was really helpful, too. Working with artists has been a big influence on me. AMH: Wow. JY: And then there are things I do to contradict it. For instance, I talk about a shadow in the poem, and there would be no shadows in a Persian miniature, so I deliberately contradicted in one or two places. So, that’s the beginning, and that’s the first section, and then there’s a second section, where I wrote the poem “In the Lion Night” that was in response to her drawings. She did the drawings and sent photographs to me. And then I did another series of poems in response to her work, “Poems for Leiko,” – that’s the third section, and that’s To read the complete interview, visit the IE Web site sort of more specifically responding to specific at www.iexaminer.org INTERNATIONAL EXAMINER Living in Japan inspires other worldly poems “Ninety-Five Nights of Listening” (poems) By Malinda Markham Mariner Books (an imprint of Houghton Mifflin), 2002 Reviewed by Mari L’Esperance In her first collection of poems, Malinda Markham explores, considers, and illuminates her subjects with compassion, a keen intellect, and startling, precise language and imagery. The poems themselves are largely built around and inspired by Markham’s fascination with Japanese culture and language. The poems that make up “Ninety-five Nights of Listening” possess a remote otherworldliness — like museum artifacts from another place and time kept under glass —coupled with an intimacy and immediacy of voice and subject. This pairing of opposites — the rarefied and the familiar, the intangible and the material — is evident in the first stanza of the poem “Things That Seldom Remain in Place”: “Ghosts peel from the wallpaper. They turn to foxes,/run red to the trees. Weather knots/at the corners of sleep and will not recede./Who can see a stranger’s wrist/and not have regrets? The scent of wild orange/Invokes memory benign; sliced lime/calls forth pleasing thoughts best forgotten.” Throughout her collection, Markham is engaged in a persistent inquiry, attempting in each poem to reconcile the intangible with the embodied while correspondingly acknowledging the ultimate futility of her efforts. Her poems are infused with meaning and wonder; their perceptions seem to break apart at the very edge of their coming into being. This cyclical confluence and pulling apart of the divine and the mundane, the one “questioning” the other and back again, is what provides the tension and synthesis of these poems. They are simultaneously hermetic and unbound — “This is music: Birds scratch a line from treetop/to roof. The struck spine rings/like a sealed room.” (from “Being Glass”) — contracting and expanding much as the heart and lungs contract and expand. In her poems, Markham struggles with the failure of language to capture fully and accurately memory, meaning, and feeling. Furthermore, she maintains that fine and difficult balance between what is revealed and what is withheld without compromising one or the other; the two co-exist and inform one another, resulting in a shadow dance of give and take that threads its way through these poems. “Once a year, bells ring if there is someone/To sound them. If the snow melts,/Something unforeseen will be given” (from “Recalling the Start”). Frequently linguistically challenging while rich with haunting music and images that are often as strange as they are beautiful, the best of Markham’s poems also comfort and instruct, as do all poems of lasting and memorable merit. These are poems that voice the collective search for meaning and understanding and are imbued with a consciousness that this search can never be fully realized. Markham beautifully articulates this sense of futility in the final section of her poem “Before the River Freezes in Place”: “Sing me the story where lightning/divides the tanager in two./Each half beak opens, and wind pulls night/from inside the two mouths./ Are you looking for comfort? No matter/how you ask it, those two sides of sky/do not become one. There are people/wanting to be covered by night. There is a bird-shaped space/the color of light.” These are not “easy” poems; they demand the reader’s full participation. But one’s efforts are amply rewarded, for Ninety-five Nights of Listening is a collection whose mysteries and layers of meaning continue to reveal themselves and to resonate long after the poems have been read, and then again over subsequent readings. Engaging images still feel distant “The Real Moon of Poetry and Other Poems” (poems) By Tina Brown Celona New York: Fence Books, 2002 Reviewed by Tarisa A.M. Matsumoto After several failed attempts to finish reading Tina Brown Celona’s “The Real Moon of Poetry and Other Poems,” I forced myself to sit down one Tuesday and get to the end, no matter what. I was able to finish the book, but when I look back at the poems of the 2002 Alberta Prize-winning book, I am unable to connect with them. Brown Celona writes in a variety of styles — prose poems to traditional stanzaic poems — and the poems are definitely narrative, but I would not call them lyrical. Brown Celona certainly has a talent for creating resonating images: “The days are like a row of corpses/Face down at the edge of a pit.” She even describes the bomb dropped on Hiroshima as a “Singer sewing machine/ Dropped from the sky.” And there’s my favorite: “…The cardinal/Like a red sock/In the juniper bush.” Usually, images like these are enough to engage any reader. The world comes alive, and ordinary things become capable of parting the seas or gutting laughter from our memories. Despite the engaging images, I feel distanced from the poem and the poet. In one of her poems, Brown Celona writes, “…We are back in the landscape/of letters.” This is the best account of her poems in this collection: they attempt to describe a world of poetry. For academics, these poems may pulsate with life, but if you are looking for poems to show you something about the world, ourselves, or the human condition, there are other books that come closer to accomplishing these things than Brown Celona’s work in “The Real Moon of Poetry and Other Poems.” As a matter of fact, in one of the last poems in the book, Brown Celona writes: Let’s not use the word “landscape” in a poem. And especially not the word “poem.” Why do we use these Words in a poem? After reading this collection, I’m left asking myself the same question. April 18 - May 1, 2007 —— 11 12 —— April 18 - May 1, 2007 INTERNATIONAL EXAMINER FILM “Journey from the Fall” steers clear of Hollywood BY NHIEN NGUYEN Examiner Editor When Ham Tran pitched his film idea about the story of Vietnamese boat people, studio executives asked two questions: “Can you make it in English?” and “Can you cast Lucy Liu?” Some said Tran was overly ambitious, even naïve, to think he could woo investors — and ultimately distributors — to support a foreign language, historical drama with no name actors. Six years after the germination of the film idea following Sept. 11, Tran proved naysayers wrong. “Journey From the Fall” opens in Seattle on April 20 at Regal Meridian 16 in downtown Seattle and Portland, Ore. at Lloyd Mall 8 on April 27. “Journey from the Fall” explores the lives of the Vietnamese after the fall of Saigon, including the inherently dramatic stories of the re-education camps, the boat journey, and resettlement in America. Throughout the filmmaking journey, Tran, who was born in Saigon and immigrated to America with his parents through the Orderly Departure Program in 1982, persisted with his vision to create a Vietnamese film with an authentic Vietnamese voice. Even most members of the production crew, from costume designer to executive producer, are Vietnamese Americans. Tran’s passion for authenticity translated into support from about a dozen investors — all from within the Vietnamese community. Some Vietnamese supporters were willing to take money out of their children’s med school savings to fund the film’s production. Tran, whose short film “The Anniversary” was short-listed for an Academy Award, took the community’s support to heart. Tired of recurring images of Vietnamese women as prostitutes or “quiet, demure” characters, Tran was determined to portray characters that were complex and true to life. “If you know any Vietnamese woman, she speaks her mind,” said Tran in an interview with the International Examiner during his film’s Seattle premiere at the Northwest Asian American Film Festival (NWAAFF) earlier this year. To represent the strong-willed Vietnamese female character, Tran cast the quintessential Vietnamese leading actress, Kieu Chinh (“The Joy Luck Club”), as mother of re-education camp prisoner, Long Nguyen. Long’s wife, Mai, was a more difficult character to cast, as the part required a fluent Vietnamese speaker who carried the “essence” HamTran of a desperate wife and young mother during that tumultuous time in Vietnam’s history. At first, Tran rejected the concept of casting a Vietnamese popular singer because he didn’t want “cheezy karaoke acting.” But after a long search for the perfect Mai, Tran chose Diem Lien, a promising young voice in the Vietnamese music industry. Tran also cast pop singer Cat Ly as Phuong, who plays a fellow survivor from Mai’s treacherous boat journey. Casting took many surprising turns with not just the female leads but also the male counterparts. The original actor to play Long Nguyen, Khanh Doan, turned out to be too healthy to portray a starving re-education camp prisoner. Little did Tran realize that his male lead was someone born for the role – Long Nguyen (“Heaven and Earth”) shared the same name as that of Tran’s lead character. Nguyen could relate to the part as his own father was caught escaping the war and sentenced to six months in prison. Many other cast and crew members have direct, personal experience with the stories, making it all the more important for Tran to stay true to his vision. Tran said, “This is a Vietnamese film about Vietnamese people, not an American Vietnamese film.” My Journey, My Story. ImaginAsian Pictures invites you to submit a video or an essay about your personal journey or a friend’s or family member’s personal story of leaving Vietnam and coming to America. Selected submissions will be featured in the “Journey from the Fall” DVD (Special Features section). Visit www.journeyfromthefall.com for official rules. Filmmaker studies her subject closely BY CHIZU OMORI Examiner Contributor live in close quarters, This documentary has but Linda gamely allows a happy ending. him to continue his Now, for the most part, artwork in her apartdocumentaries are grim, ment. She has decided depressing, or designed to make a documentary to make you feel outrage film about this unusual and anger, but this one man, and she draws him is different. The interestout, getting information ing part of “The Cats of in bits and pieces. In the Mirikitani” is that it tells meantime, she works to a somewhat sad tale about “The Cats of Mirikitani” get Jimmy into the social Jimmy Mirikitani, a Japanese American home- services system. less artist who has been eking out an existence An article about Janice Mirikitani, San drawing pictures and selling them on the side- Francisco poet, catches her attention, and she walks of New York. asks if this could be a relative. They contact Bent and aged, he wears a jaunty beret, her, and indeed, they are related. paints and draws brightly colored pictures Worked into the narrative is archival footof flowers, cats, and maintains a dignity that age of the camps as Linda learns more about doesn’t match his circumstances. One feature the internment and Jimmy’s past. They are of his art is drawings of the World War II forming a bond, and they bicker like relaTule Lake concentration camp for Japanese tives. Jimmy had worked as a companion to a Americans, which are mysterious to most of rich man on Park Avenue, acting as cook and those passing by. Jimmy’s utterances are sub- driver. When the man died, Jimmy drifted and titled because his English is heavily accented. lived on the streets. And there are special Seattle connections with Linda, finding Jimmy resistant to moving this artist. out, works on his pride as an artist and he Filmmaker Linda Hattendorf was living a begins to teach art in a senior center. With couple of blocks away from his usual station the help of social workers and his new friends, and in January 2001, she strikes up a friend- he agrees to move into a place of his own and ship with Jimmy, photographing and filming he does get social security checks. He is now him in exchange for drawings. One day, he transformed into a popular and respected asks her to contact Roger Shimomura, Seattle teacher, he’s settled, and he is no longer that native who is a world-renown artist. Roger homeless bum. visits him in New York, and in conversations, Then, Linda takes him to California where begins to reveal his story. Jimmy talks of he meets poet Mirikitani, comes to Seattle internment, Tule Lake, his years there, and the where he is reunited with a sister he hadn’t anger he still feels about that experience. Born seen in 60 years. He has a show at the Wing in Sacramento, Calif., he spent his youth in Luke Asian Museum; he goes to the Tule Lake Hiroshima, coming back to the United States Pilgrimage and wanders the grounds and just before the start of World War II. landmarks of that area. Jimmy finally says he’s In August, Linda begins looking after him, not mad anymore and is at peace. asking him about social security, etc. But he is This film has layers of meaning, and edited proud and independent, rejecting her help. He so subtly that the layers are slowly revealed. expresses great anger about Hiroshima, tell- It’s a quirky, lovingly shot film about art, ing her that his entire family was wiped out. artists, war, injustice, internment, homelessJimmy is clearly a person with a troubled past. ness, friendship, compassion and sheer luck. On 9/11, Jimmy is very close to the towers and Hattendorf, who becomes a true friend to this furiously draws the scene as toxic fumes swirl eccentric, fiercely independent man, has made around him. Linda invites him into her apart- a wonderful film about Jimmy and herself. ment and they watch the TV news of the chaos “The Cats of Mirikitani” will show at and horror happening just outside her place. Northwest Film Forum, 1515 12th Ave., Seattle, Jimmy somewhat settles in and the two from April 20-26 at 7 & 9 p.m. INTERNATIONAL EXAMINER In the exhibit entitled “Non Action Painting,” longtime Chinese brush painter Frederic Wong uses tea and other pigments to stain ceramic tiles. On view BY ALAN LAU through April 27 with a reception on April 20 from 5 – 7 p.m. at which violinist Rachel Wong will perform. Edmonds Community College Art Gallery Seattle jazz pianist/composer Victor Noriega, who in Lynnwood Hall on the third floor (gallery access walked away with two awards at the last Earshot via the library), 2000 68th Ave. W. in Lynnwood, Jazz Music Awards, has been busy abroad, playing (425) 640-1339. http://gallery.edcc.edu. at clubs in the Philippines and Shanghai. Come welcome him back and see what experiences travel “Tussle in Shorthand” is a new group show has brought to his playing when he returns to the curated by Yoko Ott which features artists from Seattle stage on April 28 with the Victor Noriega around the world who employ mechanisms that Trio + 2 at Tula’s at 2214 Second Ave. Set starts at assist them in interpreting or dealing with their 8:30 p.m. For reservations, call (206) 443-4221 or physical and psychological environments. Work log on to www.tulas.com. by Meiro Koizumi of Tokyo is included. Through April 29. Punch Gallery, 119 Prefontaine Place S., Okay, let’s try this again. A while back, I mentioned (206) 621-1945. this film coming to the Grand Illusion in error. But now it is really coming. Katsuhito Ishii’s “Taste of Ceramic artist Ayumi Horie shows new work. She Tea” ranks as one of my favorite films from Japan will also lead a workshop at Pottery Northwest in recent memory. It runs April 27 – May 3. It’s a on April 21 & 22. For information on the worklook at a Japanese family living in the countryside shop, visit www.potterynorthwest.com. Sandra with a few eccentricities. Sprinkled with a double Westford presents works in pastel on paper. She dose of magic realism and anime, this wacky calls her work “zen realism.” Both shows at KOBO comedy presents endearing characters that At Higo. Reception for both artists on April 21 somehow cohere as a happy family. NOT TO BE from 6 – 8 p.m. Through May 19, 604 S. Jackson, MISSED – 1403 N.E. 50th, (206) 523-3935. (206) 381-3000. walk-through tour on April 28. “Family Day at the Wing” presents a workshop with Mizu Sugimura on April 21 at 1 p.m. Collage artist Sugimura will show you how to make your own handmade book. For details, call (206) 623-5124 ext. 114 or e-mail vchan@wingluke.org – 409 Seventh Ave. S., (206) 623-5124. Atul Gawande, a general surgeon and staff writer for The New Yorker when he isn’t teaching at Harvard Medical School, has a splendid new book out entitled “Better: A Surgeon’s Notes On Performance” (Metropolitan/Holt). He reads from it May 3 at 7 p.m. at the Microsoft Auditorium at Seattle Public Central Library. Co-presented by Elliott Bay Book Company and Washington Center For The Book. Downtown at 1000 Fourth Ave., (206) 386-4636 or log on to www.spl.org. Seattle Symphony — Maasaaki Suzuki conducts J.S. Bach’s Fourth Suite as part of the “Basically Baroque Series” on May 11 & 12 at 8 p.m. Features soprano Ying Huang. Benaroya Hall. Call (206) 215-4747 for tickets. “Contemporary Indian Miniatures” by Ajay Garg is the new show on view at DAVIDSON GALLERIES – Original Prints and Works on Paper through April 28 – 313 Occidental Ave. S., (206) 624-1324. The Seattle Asian Art Museum. Kids and families can enjoy the “Free First Saturdays” program activities from 11 a.m. – 2 p.m. in the Alvord Board Room and Fuller Garden Court. On May 5, “Treemendous Scrolls!” lets visitors try their own hand at painting trees with a calligraphy brush and ink – 1400 E. Prospect, (206) 654-3100. Gregory Kono’s kites are featured in a group show of artists using the element of wind. Through April. Bainbridge Arts And Crafts at 151 Winslow Way E., (206) 842-3132. The work of Yuki Nakamura and Mark Takamichi Miller is included in a group show entitled "Building Tradition: Contemporary Northwest Art" through April 29 at the Whatcom Museum at 121 Prospect in Bellingham, (360) 6766981 or log on to www.whatcommuseum.org. For lovers of the slack-key guitar sound from Hawai’i, check out Led Kaapana & Mike Kaawa on April 24. Popular singer/songwriter Vienna Teng returns to Seattle for a May 12 show with Sara Bareilles. All at The Triple Door downtown, “Memoirs” is the title of a show by Vietnam vet 216 Union St., (206) 838-4333. thetripledoor.net. Craig Barber who used his abilities as a photographer to help cope with memories from his tour of Jazz vocalist Sachal Vasandani and his band perduty. Through May 12. Benham Gallery, 1216 First form at Dimitriou’s Jazz Alley on April 23 at 7:30 p.m., 2033 Sixth Ave. www.jazzalley.com. Ave., (206) 622-2480. Howard House presents UW Professor Zhi Lin’s “Unheard Voices and Invisible People” (see review in this issue) through April 28 – 604 Second Ave., (206) 256-6399. www.howardhouse.net. Seattle Cherry Blossom and Japanese Cultural Festival takes place at Seattle Center April 20 – 22. The theme of this year’s fest is cherry blossoms. 2006 Kobe Jazz Queen Mami will perform as well as Japanese rock band BLESSEDMAIN. Japanese wood artist Atsushi Tanaka will demonstrate woodcarving and exhibit his work. “When the West Came to Japan” is a show that shows the dawn of Japan’s Westernization in all its complexity on view at Carolyn Staley Fine “Water Lillies” is a show by Thu Nguyen. She Japanese Prints throughout the month or online at often focuses on the abstract nature of water www.carolynstaleyprints.com – 2001 Western Ave. embodied in landscape/cityscapes rich with color Suite 320, (206) 621-1888. and depth. Through April 29. The Fountainhead Gallery, 625 W. McGraw St., (206) 285-4467. “Eternal Dreams & Rapture Born From the Heart” is the title of a show by Richard KirstenUW graduate Yi Liang returns from China where Daiensai. On view through April 29. Kirsten he is teaching to attend the opening of his Seattle Gallery at 5320 Roosevelt Way N.E., (206) 522debut show of paintings at Linda Hodges Gallery 2011 or log on to www.kirstengallery.com. on May 3 from 6 – 8 p.m. Through a series of thin linear landscapes, one sees a 360-degree perspec- “Nomadic Eye: the spirit of people, places, and tive of Greenlake. Through June 2, 316 First Ave. S., things” is a show of images from around the world (206) 624-3034. www.lindahodgesgallery.com. by photographer Oksana Perkins at ArtXchange through April 27 – 512 First Ave. S., (206) 839-0377 Examiner contributor Winnie Wong has paint- or log on to www.artxchange.org. ings in the ArtXchange Juried Group Exhibition from May 3 – June 30. Opening reception is May 3 The work of Mark Takamichi Miller is included from 5 – 8 p.m.: 512 First Ave. S., (206) 834-0377 in a show of new portable works purchases by the or log on to www.artxhange.org. Office of Arts & Cultural Affairs and Seattle Public Utilities at the Seattle Municipal Tower Gallery “Poetic Spaces – An Exhibition of Photographs through April 30. The group show entitled “People and Poetry of the Young Living on the Margins + Place” includes 48 artworks by 35 artists. 700 of Calcutta” is on view till April 30 on the ground Fifth Ave., third floor. (206) 684-4748. floor and second floor of Odegaard Library on the UW campus. www.kalammarginswrite.org. “How the Soy Sauce Was Bottled” is a special exhibition featuring the artwork of Heinrich Toh, Don’t miss Etsuko Ichikawa’s ephemeral ode to James Lawrence Ardena, June Sekiguchi, Saya fire and movement on paper as she captures the Moriyasu and Susie Jungune Lee who created new gesture of that movement in time in her show works based on the Wing Luke Asian Museum’s now at Gallery4Culture through April 27 – 101 permanent collection. This will be the last show Prefontaine in the Tashiro /Kaplan Building, (206) in the present site before the Museum moves. On 296-8674 or log on to www.4culture.org. view through Nov. 20, 2007. Jason Huff, a member of the selection committee for the show, will lead a Tetsunori Kawana, Sogetsu School master instructor from Tokyo, gives a Japanese flower arrangement demonstration on April 28 at Mercer Island Community Center. Luncheon at 11:30 a.m., demonstration at 2 p.m. $45 fee. 8236 S.E. 24th St. To register, call Lily McMahan at (253) 939-7941. Washington Center for the Book at The Seattle Public Library presents the “2007 Seattle Reads” series choice, “The Namesake” by Jhumpa Lahiri. Lahiri comes to town in May but activities around the book already abound. Gurinder Chada’s “Bend It Like Beckham” screens April 23 at 7 p.m. at the Green Lake Branch. “Writing India in the Pacific Northwest” is a discussion with local South Asian novelists Bharti Kirchner and Indu Sundaresan, 7 p.m., April 25 at the Central Library’s Microsoft Auditorium. Mira Nair’s “Mississippi Masala” screens on April 26 at 7 p.m. at the Capitol Hill April 18 - May 1, 2007 —— 13 Jhumpa Lahiri is the selected author for 2007 Seattle Reads. Branch. Seattle Theatre Group Education and Community Programs presents: “From Bharatha Natyam to Bhangra”: A lecture/demonstration in ancient traditional and popular Indian folk dances at 2 p.m. on May 5 at the Central Library’s Microsoft Auditorium. There will be a Community Organizations Dialogue on “The Namesake” on May 6 at 3 p.m. at the Capitol Hill Branch, (206) 386-4636 or log on to www.spl.org. Novelist Indu Sundaresan will participate in a dinner with local literary luminaries entitled “Literary Voices” as presented by UW Libraries. April 21 at 6 p.m. UW Club Building, UW campus, (206)-616-8397; uwlibs@u.washington.edu. Kenneth Pyle discusses and signs his book, “Japan Rising: Resurgence of Japanese Power And Purpose” (Public Affairs) on April 27 at 7 p.m., University Bookstore, (206) 634-3400. The 5th Annual Rainbow Bookfest featuring talks, activities, workshops by multicultural authors, 9: 30 a.m. – 5:30 p.m., Asian Resource Center at 1025 S. King, www.rainbowbookfest.com. Linda Hattendorf’s “Cats of Mirikitani” tells the story of homeless Japanese American artist Jimmy Mirikitani, who the director discovered painting on the streets of New York. Scarred by the experience of war and internment, Mirikitani uses his art to find his own personal peace. This Seattle premiere screens April 20 – 26 with special guests introducing the film the first two days. May 4 – 10 brings the Seattle premiere of Ritu Sarin and Tenzing Sonam’s “Dreaming Lhasa,” a romance and a quest tied to the story of an exiled Tibetan filmmaker from New York who returns to make a film about the spiritual and political realities of today’s Tibet. Northwest Film Forum at1515 12th Ave., (206) 329-2629 or log on to nwfilmforum.org. “The Day My God Died,” a documentary on child sexual slavery in the brothels of India and what is being done to rescue these girls will screen on May 4 at 7 p.m. Narrated by Tim Robbins and Winona Ryder. The $10 admission fee goes to support Maiti Nepal, an organization that helps girls in brothels. Presented by Crooked Trails, a Seattle-based nonprofit tourism organization, www.crookedtrails.com. At Mary Gates Hall on the UW campus. 14 —— April 18 - May 1, 2007 Saturday, April 21 • The 9th Annual Chinatown ID / Little Saigon Spring Neighborhood Clean-Up will kick off at 9 a.m. at Hing Hay Park. The event is hosted by SCIDpda’s Community Action Partnership (CAP) public safety program. Funds raised beyond the cost of the event will support CAP’s year-round programs. For more information or to donate or volunteer, email Tim Wang at tim.wang@tdwang.com or call (206) 674-9466. • Indian Association of Western Washington (IAWW) and the South Asian Studies Center of the University of Washington jointly present “Images of India.” Kane Hall on the UW campus from 1:30 - 4:30 p.m. www.iaww.org. • Join the Nepal Seattle Society (NSS) in celebrating Nepali New Year 2064 B.S. with food, dance, and song. Doors open at 6 p.m. at the Yesler Community Center, at 917 E. Yesler Way, Seattle 98122. $20 for NSS members, $25 for non-members, kids ten and under free. For more information visit www.nepalseattle.org, or call (206) 321-5779 Thursday, April 26 • The 2007 Asian Hall of Fame Celebration inducts new honorees Olympic Skating Champion Apolo Anton Ohno, and CEO of Beatrice Industries, Loida Nicolas-Lewis. 5:30 p.m. dinner, 6:15 p.m. show at Asian Resource Center, 1025 South King Street, Seattle. $50/ INTERNATIONAL EXAMINER CALENDAR ticket, visit www.asianhalloffame.org, or call Karen Wong at (206) 232-7495. • The International Rescue Committee presents their annual dinner and silent auction at 6 – 9:30 p.m. at the Fairview Club. Contact Jennifer Malloy at (206) 623-2105 or e-mail Jennifer.malloy@theirc.org. Friday, April 27 • The International District Housing Alliance celebrates their 30th anniversary at The Westin Seattle. 5:30 p.m. Call (206) 623-5132 x318. Saturday, April 28 • Beyond Suffering from Trauma of Displaced Migration: Black April marks the 32nd year of the fall of Saigon. Workshop offering conversation about shifting memory and drifting experience of dislocation. The case of Landerholm Circle S.E., Bellevue, at the interpost-1975s Vietnamese migration will be utisection of S.E. 28th St. and 148th Ave. S.E. Call lized to stimulate dialogue. 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. at BCC Student Programs at (425) 564-6150 or Treehouse, 2100 24th Ave S, Seattle, 98144. For e-mail multiculturalfest@bcc.ctc.edu. info, email VietQandA@gmail.com; call (206) 365-1613. Saturday, May 5 • Key Community Development Banking presents “SCIDPDA Fun at the Races 2007.” Grab your derby hats, put on your sunglasses and join us for SCIDpda’s signature annual fundraising event on Kentucky Derby Day! 1 to 4 p.m. Emerald Downs Race Track, Auburn. $100/ ticket. (206) 838-8240. www.scidpda.org. • “Cultures of Our Community” MultiCultural Festival will be held at Bellevue Community College (BCC). The free event will run from 10:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. at BCC, 3000 Sunday, May 6 • Come celebrate Asian Pacific Islander Heritage Month with art, music, performances, and dance at the Seattle Center! The all day free event will showcase Cold Tofu, a Los Angeles based Comedy Improv group and locally based performances from the Filipino Youth Activities Drill team, Dragon Dance Group, Vovinam Martial Arts, Ke Liko Aíe O Lei Lehua, Chinese Community Girls Drill Team, Nepal Seattle Society, Rachel Santos and much, much more! 12 noon – 5 p.m. at The Seattle Center, Center House, 305 Harrison St., Seattle. INTERNATIONAL EXAMINER CLASSIFIEDS EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT Bridge Maintenance $19.64 - $28.51/hr DOQ Plus Excellent Benefits The Seattle Department of Transportation needs a Bridge Maintenance Mechanic and a Helper to work on the restoration, repair, and construction of bridges, tunnels, seawalls, stairways, and related structures. Fabricate and repair structural steel components, troubleshoot hydraulic systems, and repair plumbing systems. Work from suspended baskets over water, on scaffolding, and in boats under piers. Requires from six months to four years of metal working, bridge construction, or related experience, and the ability to obtain a CDL. Experience in the fabrication of ferrous and nonferrous alloy metal structures is highly desirable. For more information and an Online Application Form, visit www.seattle.gov/jobs by 4/29/07. The City is an Equal Opportunity Employer that values diversity in the workforce. Financial Analyst Uses QRM software to perform financial modeling for asset liability mgmt. Requires MA/MS in Finance, Bus Admin or Econ + 2 yrs exp performing financial modeling for asset liability mgmt, incl modeling prepayment behavior, loans, securities & derivatives; performing interest rate risk modeling using mkt valuation, net interest income, & value-at-risk methodologies; preparing monthly rpts outlining changes in duration & NPV. Position in Seattle, WA includes competitive salary & outstanding benefits. NAPCA The National Asian Pacific Center on Aging (NAPCA) seeks a candidate to manage the Seattle office of its $6 million, national program to help meet the employment and training needs of Asian and Pacific Island (API) seniors as part of a 40-year-old program under Title V of the Older Americans Act. The ideal candidate holds a Bachelor’s Degree or equivalent work experience in social service, employment and training, or senior services. Preferred qualifications including working familiarity with local communities and organizations; bilingual in Chinese, Korean, or Vietnamese; comfort in a performance-based environment. See a detailed job description at www.napca.org. Email letters of interest and resumes to christine@napca.org. No calls please. Location: Seattle International District Compensation: DOE. Benefits include medical, dental, vision, prescription, health savings account, group life, 401k with company match, and transit subsidy. Executive Director Chinatown-International District Business Improvement Area (CIDBIA) is looking to hire an Executive Director. Duties include: overseeing and administering all programs and services, supervising staff, managing office operations, monitoring organizational budget, maintaining and developing stakeholder relations, providing direction and staff support to the Board and representing the District on standing committees and appointed task forces. Please mail resume to: CIDBIA, Attn: Board Chair, 409 Maynard Ave S., #P-1, Seattle, WA 98104 Visit us at www.iexaminer.org Please apply online at wamu.com/ careers, referencing Job # 428091, Source Type as Advertisement and Source Name as International Examiner. Washington Mutual is an Equal Opportunity Employer. We embrace differences, welcome diversity, and value a culture of respect. Financial Analyst Uses MatLab and SAS to conduct risk analytics and modeling projects for risk management. Requires MA/MS in Math or Statistics + 1 yr exp using MatLab & SAS to perform quantitative analysis, including modeling, analytics & numerical analyses. Position in Seattle, WA includes competitive salary and outstanding benefits. Please apply online at wamu.com/ careers, referencing Job # 428187, Source Type as Advertisement and Source Name as International Examiner. Washington Mutual is an Equal Opportunity Employer. We embrace differences, welcome diversity, and value a culture of respect. EMPLOYMENT Heavy Truck Driver $23.80 to $24.77/hour Plus Excellent Benefits Drive a truck/trailer, tractor/trailer combination, three-axle truck, or heavy dump truck to haul materials and equipment to Seattle Department of Transportation construction sites. Perform thorough safety inspections, operate winches, hoists, pumps, and compressors, and maintain mileage and equipment records. Requires at least one year of experience in the operation of multi-axle trucks and combinations, a Class A CDL with Air Brake Restriction removed, and a Medical Certificate. For more information and an Online Application Form, visit www.seattle.gov/jobs by 4/29/ 07. The City is an Equal Opportunity Employer that values diversity in the workforce. April 18 - May 1, 2007 —— 15 Macy’s