Daily Archives: May 24, 2010

APA Heritage Month with President Barack Obama

APA Heritage Month with  Barack Obama
Here’s footage of President Barack Obama hosting a reception at the White House to celebrate APA Heritage Month. Earlier this month, he delivered a proclamation that May 2010 was President Obama hosts a reception at the White House to celebrate Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month. (see the proclamation below. Previously, he celebrated Diwali and the Lunar New Year at the White House.

BTW – At the beginning of the footage, you may recognize Father Vien Nguyen from the documentary A Village called Versailles. The film airs on PBS starting tomorrow. Check your local listings.

APA Heritage Month with President Barack Obama

Presidential Proclamation–Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month

A PROCLAMATION

For centuries, America’s story has been tied to the Pacific. Generations of brave men and women have crossed this vast ocean, seeking better lives and opportunities, and weaving their rich heritage into our cultural tapestry. During Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month, we celebrate the immeasurable contributions these diverse peoples have made to our Nation.

Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders have shared common struggles throughout their histories in America — including efforts to overcome racial, social, and religious discrimination. This year marks the 100th anniversary of the Angel Island Immigration Station in San Francisco Bay, a milestone that reminds us of an unjust time in our history. For three decades, immigrants from across the Pacific arrived at Angel Island, where they were subject to harsh interrogations and exams, and confined in crowded, unsanitary barracks. Many who were not turned back by racially prejudiced immigration laws endured hardship, injustice, and deplorable conditions as miners, railroad builders, and farm workers.

Despite these obstacles, Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders have persevered and flourished, achieving success in every sector of American life. They stood shoulder to shoulder with their fellow citizens during the civil rights movement; they have served proudly in our Armed Forces; and they have prospered as leaders in business, academia, and public service.

This month, as we honor all Americans who trace their ancestry to Asia and the Pacific Islands, we must acknowledge the challenges they still face. Today, many Asian American and Pacific Islander families experience unemployment and poverty, as well as significant education and health disparities. They are at high risk for diabetes and hepatitis, and the number of diagnoses for HIV/AIDS has increased in recent years.

We must recognize and properly address these critical concerns so all Americans can reach their full potential. That is why my Administration reestablished both the White House Initiative and the President’s Advisory Commission on Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders (AAPI). These partnerships include leaders from across our Government and the AAPI community, dedicated to improving the quality of life and opportunities for Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders.

Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders are a vast and diverse community, some native to the United States, hailing from Hawaii and our Pacific Island territories. Others trace their heritage to dozens of countries. All are treasured citizens who enrich our Nation in countless ways, and help fulfill the promise of the American dream which has drawn so many to our shores.

NOW, THEREFORE, I, BARACK OBAMA, President of the United States of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and the laws of the United States, do hereby proclaim May 2010, as Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month. I call upon all Americans to learn more about the history of Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders, and to observe this month with appropriate programs and activities.

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this twenty-ninth day of April, in the year of our Lord two thousand ten, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and thirty-fourth.

BARACK OBAMA

My Own Show teaser with Scott Yoshimoto

My Own Show teaser with Scott Yoshimoto

Here’s an interesting concept for a soon to be release web series with filmmaker Scott Yoshimoto. My Own Show will be a new online musical collaboration series. Each episode features different talented friends and individuals as special guest stars with new original music. Not only will the episodes be available online, but the songs also will be downloadable on itunes. Could his song The Gift of Music give a sneak peek of who’ll be showing up? Can’t wait to see who Scott’s got lined up.

My Own Show teaser with Scott Yoshimoto

Heather Park interview with channelAPA.com

Heather Park interview with channelAPA.com
channelAPA.com connected with singer/songstress Heather Park on our East Coast Tour. Learn about how she got into music and the type of music she creates. See some of her music videos including Leave Me to Dream off the West 32nd soundtrack and Trust You off her upcoming album Stay. We also get the scoop on her Stay, which was five years in the making. Look out for her song Woman Warrior on the struggles of Asian American artists trying to break into the music industry. Also a collabo in the works with Magnetic North.

Heather Park interview with channelAPA.com

A Moment in Time

A Moment in Time
We had a chance to watch “A Moment in Time” during the 2010 SF Asian American International Film Festival. The documentary is now hitting PBS this month. Here’ a synopsis of the film:

A Moment in Time, a new film by Oscar-winner Ruby Yang, is a one-hour documentary about the experience of the Chinese in America through the films they loved. It harkens back to a time when six movie theaters in San Francisco’s Chinatown crystallized the memories, the beliefs, the sorrows and aspirations of Chinese immigrant families.

The principal speakers in A Moment in Time grew up here: Irene Dea Collier, Jimmie Lee, Chuck Gee, Cecilia Wong, Amy Chung, Norman Fong. As children they associated Chinese movies (and the Chinese language) with their parents’ alien, backward world. Chinese mothers loved Cantonese Opera films in which tyrannical parents wrench young lovers apart. For them, movies were a rare break in an endless workweek. Chinese movies also translated national disasters – World War II, for example – into personal dramas of separation and loss. For Chinese immigrants they were true to life, unlike the sunny family shows on American TV.

The immigrants’ American kids eventually found their own reasons to appreciate Chinese film. Partly in self defense — because they were seen as Chinese — the children developed a pride in Chinese things. The heartbeat of A Moment in Time is a series of clips from films that were hits in Chinatown. Hollywood Westerns were always popular. Wong Fei Hung, a Robin Hood character from Hong Kong, defended the weak with a smile and a bullwhip. Films from revolutionary mainland China sparked battles in Chinatown between long-haired youths and a conservative older generation. 1950s bobbysoxer films from Hong Kong proved that Chinese girls can be cool. 1960s martial arts films, notably those of Bruce Lee, sent Chinatown boys to kung fu school. Before long all American boys were going.

Chinatown movie theaters have closed. Chinese movies have broken into mainstream culture. Hong Kong directors like John Woo and Wong Kar Wai, movie stars like Chow Yun Fat and Jackie Chan are known around the world. A Moment in Time recalls the period when Chinese movie theaters marked a dividing line between the
generations, but were also a school where American kids came to appreciate their Chinese roots.

Ruby Yang and her producer husband, Lambert Yam, are Americans born in Hong Kong. Lambert Yam managed the World Theater in San Francisco’s Chinatown from 1985 to 1995, an interlude of dramatic change in Chinatown and in Chinese films. Ruby Yang’s Oscar-winning documentary The Blood of Yingzhou District, produced by Thomas Lennon, was filmed in China, where she and Lambert Yam are now based. Yang has directed two other documentaries for American public TV – China 21 and Citizen Hong Kong. She edited Bill Moyers’ PBS series Becoming American: The Chinese Experience and Spencer Nakasako’s Emmy-award-winning documentary A.K.A. Don Bonus. She edited two of Joan Chen’s feature films, Xiu Xiu and Autumn in New York, and has worked on many other features and documentaries. For both Ruby Yang and Lambert Yam, A Moment in Time wraps up a great deal that is close to their hearts.

A Moment in Time draws parallels on the history of San Francisco Chinatown and how the community evolved over time. Look for this documentary on your local PBS station.

A Moment in Time Trailer

A Moment in Time interview with director Ruby Yang