By Andrew Chin
ModelMinority.com
February 14, 2003
Imagine a Black History Month observed primarily by fried chicken, watermelon, and tap
dancing festivals, with barely a mention of slavery, Jim Crow, the civil rights
movement, Brown v. Board of Education, Harriet Tubman, Martin Luther King Jr., Paul Robeson, Rosa Parks, and
Malcolm X.
The way most Asian American organizations celebrate Asian American Heritage
Month (see below) is just as pointless.
Americans who patronize
and appropriate the most palatable aspects of Asian culture on a year-round
basis -- without giving a single thought to Asian American empowerment issues --
do not deserve a special month when it is all served up to them on a convenient
combination platter.
This May, instead of coast-to-coast dumpling parties and dragon dances, wouldn't it be
more productive to use this brief and precious time in the spotlight to raise the
nation's awareness about the historical and continuing relevance of race to the
Asian American experience?
Real Asian American heritage (to paraphrase Mari
Matsuda) subsists in our memory of the people who went to bed hungry, who
lost land to the tax collector, who worked to exhaustion and ill-health, who
faced pain and relocation, who blasted the tunnels for the railroad, who stooped
over the short-handled hoe, and who fought for a democracy that didn't include
them.
We preserve the meaning of that heritage not by catering to America's taste
for exoticism, but by continuing
the struggle for empowerment.
Representative Asian American Heritage Month Activities
More than 400 performers from six Pacific Rim countries will participate in
an Asian-American Heritage Month celebration for the ninth annual Asian Heritage
Day at Paramount's Great America.
The daylong celebration of Asian cultures today will feature traditional
Japanese, Thai, Indian, Vietnamese, Taiwanese and Filipino performances.
The festival will culminate with a performance by popular Vietnamese
performers, The Tran and Y Lan. Other highlights of the performance include:
presentations by the three Japanese taiko drum groups from the Bay Area;
traditional Thai mask dancing, Thai sword fighting, and Thai boxing; Filipino
bamboo dancing; 60 performers from Taiwan performing Diabolo, a Taiwanese folk
dance that incorporates yo-yos. A percentage of ticket sales from Asian Heritage
Day will be donated to the Asian American Federation, sponsor of the event.
-- San Jose Mercury News, May 25, 2002
Students from the Northside College Preparatory High School perform a Korean
fan dance today at the Richard J. Daley Center plaza. The event was part of the
celebration of Asian American Heritage Month.
-- Chicago Sun-Times, May 21, 2002
"Sound of the Asian Spirit," a Korean and Chinese traditional folk
song and dance performance, takes place tomorrow at the Queens Borough Public
Library's Flushing branch in celebration of Asian- American Heritage Month.
-- Newsday (N.Y.), May 17, 2002
A recently opened exhibit, "Asian Arts at Tudor Place: An American
Passion to Collect," presents 70 items from the Peter holdings, including
exquisite jade jewelry, lacquered Chinese furniture, a Kabuki doll and curved
wooden clothespins from Japan.
The exhibit is perfect for families wishing to celebrate Asian American
Heritage Month in May. With the accompanying activity sheet, kids can hunt for
hidden animals and explore symbology in Asian art. A pink-and-blue bat and
butterflies on a porcelain bowl bring good luck and long life. A dragon twining
through an intricately carved ivory ball represents good fortune. George
Washington's large Chinese punch bowl sports an East-meets-West theme, with an
American hunt scene on the inside and an Asian agricultural motif on the
outside. A chess set transfixed my daughter, who returned several times to gaze
at the finely detailed pieces.
-- Washington Post, May 17, 2002
Kansas State University will enjoy Asian American culture and a little taste
of Asia by celebrating Asian American Heritage Month with events and activities
open to the campus and community scheduled for the month of March.
The Union Program Council Multicultural Committee will sponsor "Festival
of Nations," featuring South Asian cultures, from noon to 1 p.m. March 4,
in the K-State Union Courtyard. Members of the Indian Student Association will
provide entertainment with a South Asian theme performance. In addition,
refreshments will be provided free of charge.
The "Taste of Asia," an Asian food potluck, is scheduled from 5 to
7 p.m. March 10, at the International Student Center on the K-State campus, and
will feature several native cuisines for those in attendance to sample. Members
of the community are encouraged to bring an Asian dish or a minimum donation of
$2.
In addition, the film "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon," will be
shown at 7 p.m. March 11, in K-State Union Forum Hall. Previous to the showing,
a representative from the Asian American Student Union will speak briefly about
the genre of the film. Admission is free of charge.
-- Kansas State Collegian, February 28, 2002
See also: Students Show Up to Multicultural Fair Solely for the Food