Welcome to Asian American Empowerment

Register on the home page for full site privileges.

Sections
Academia
Books
Coolies
Dating
Families
Hate
History
Identity
Law
Leaders
Media
Music
Politics
Society
Theatre


Navigation
Home

Search



In the Chat Room
Users0



In the Forum
 Two AMs Chop Up Ex-Wife, Asiaphile
 For those of you who hate seeing AMs with XFs
 Bring on the Apocalypse
 Racist Jell-O commercial from the 60s
 Deleted scene in Hancock
 Blacks and Latinos have been through it before
 Stop Global Warming - Change the World
 Falloutcentral looking for a new lead

Go to the Forum


Search




Login
Nickname

Password

Security Code:
Security Code
Type Security Code

Don't have an account yet? You can create one. As a registered user you have some advantages like theme manager, comments configuration and post comments with your name.


Send a Postcard
Do your part to spread Asian American awareness by sending this postcard to your friends! Part of a series.

Read More and Comment


Get Our News Feed
Add even fresher Asian American content to your Web site! Just click here for HTML code you can cut and paste into your site to generate a live feed of our most recent headlines.

Click here to see how the live feed will appear on your site.

Or click here for an RSS feed.



  
Honoree Learned About Activism at her Parents' Feet
Posted by Andrew on Tuesday, April 08 @ 10:00:00 EDT
Leaders By John Gittelsohn
The Orange County Register
March 25, 2003

Mary Anne Foo's parents taught her to be a political activist because they suffered the sting of discrimination.

Her father worked in a grocery after college because, in the 1950s, Chinese-Americans couldn't get government jobs in his hometown of Marysville, where his family had lived since the 1860s.

Foo's mother spent three years during World War II in a Colorado internment camp for Japanese-Americans.

Foo suffered her share of indignities growing up in Marysville, a farm town north of Sacramento.

While other kids played, Foo's parents ordered her to write reports about civil-rights heroes. While other girls carried pink Barbie lunch boxes to school, Foo was teased for using a politically correct green "ecology" box. While other children watched television, Foo's parents took her to meetings at City Hall.

"I've been going to meetings since I was 5," Foo said. "My parents wanted me to know that children have a voice."

Foo made a career out of those lessons. In 1997, she co- founded the Orange County Asian Pacific Islander Community Alliance, an advocacy group for health, social and economic issues.

Her leadership of a diverse and fragmented community - Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Vietnamese, Laotian, Cambodian, Samoan, among other groups - led to her recognition as Woman of the Year by Assemblyman Lou Correa, D- Anaheim.

Foo, 36, is decades younger than most other women of the year honored Monday by the Assembly in Sacramento. But she does not come across as a woman in a hurry. Staff members at OCAPICA's Garden Grove office describe her as a patient, motherly figure, a consensus builder, and an inveterate matchmaker with a low batting average.

"Her success rate is zero," said Susan Lee, a staff member who is still single.

Foo is better at getting people together for unromantic causes, like panel discussions about hate crimes.

"You can't say no to her, because she's always smiling and nice," said Anne Lee, OCAPICA's associate director. "In a quiet way, she's very powerful."

Diep Tran, coordinator of two OCAPICA education and health projects, compared her boss to a popular Japanese animated character, Tenchi, a royal-blooded warrior who overcomes villains by making peace, not war.

"He gets enemies to get along with each other," Tran said.

Foo took the compliment with self-deprecating humor.

"I thought you were going to call me the guy from Pokemon," she said, "the little yellow fat dude." It's not easy building a community of Asians and Pacific Islanders. Koreans, Filipinos, Hmong, Vietnamese, Chinese and Samoans don't look alike. They speak different languages, worship different religions and often have ancient enmities in their ancestral homelands.

Foo seeks out common ground: language barriers, immigration history, health problems, prejudice. Her mantra is strength in numbers. Together, Asians and Pacific Islanders constitute 14 percent of Orange County's population. Like her job, Foo's family is a multicultural experience. Her husband, Eduardo Tsuneshige, is a Peruvian native of Japanese ancestry who works as a car mechanic and speaks Spanish as a first language. Their son, Matthew Francisco Foo Tsuneshige, adores Barney and speaks a mix of English, Spanish and Japanese that Foo calls "Spanglishnese." Foo's troubles as a working mom seeking child care increased her sympathy for the needs of her constituents. She worries that state budget cuts for health care and other services will cause more suffering. But fund raising has been a measure of Foo's success. OCAPICA now has a full-time staff of nine and a $580,000 budget - mostly government and private grants, including part of a $4 million grant to fight cervical cancer, a disproportionate killer of Asian women.

Foo's formula for persuasive grant applications is simple: "Tell a community story."

Learning those stories takes her from meeting to meeting - with politicians, government officials, educators, donors, activists. Once again, her parents' training comes in handy.

But there's one parental lesson she hasn't learned: cleaning up her room. Her office is strewn with gym clothes, half- read People magazines and teetering stacks of papers.

"I don't know how to file," she confessed.

But she knows how to get things done.

 
Related Links
· More about Leaders
· News by Andrew


Most read story about Leaders:
Marching in Step With Dr. King



Article Rating
Average Score: 3
Votes: 2


Please take a second and vote for this article:

Excellent
Very Good
Good
Regular
Bad




Options

 Printer Friendly Page  Printer Friendly Page

 Send to a Friend  Send to a Friend



"Login" | Login/Create an Account | 2 comments | Search Discussion
The comments are owned by the poster. We aren't responsible for their content.

No Comments Allowed for Anonymous, please register

Re: Honoree Learned About Activism at her Parents' Feet (Score: 1)
by parasiatic on Tuesday, April 08 @ 15:55:59 EDT
(User Info | Send a Message)
Right on, Mary Anne! There should be more AA activists like you all across U.S.A. You go girl!!!



Re: Honoree Learned About Activism at her Parents' Feet (Score: 1)
by Tuan on Tuesday, April 08 @ 20:45:13 EDT
(User Info | Send a Message)
Keep up the great work Mary Anne Foo.


Web site engine\'s code is Copyright © 2002 by PHP-Nuke. All Rights Reserved. PHP-Nuke is Free Software released under the GNU/GPL license.
Page Generation: 0.153 Seconds