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Summer Trips for 2007

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Summer Trips for 2007
By Austin Djang and Leonard D. Chan

This is our third annual summer travel article. Check our June 2005 and June 2006 articles for some other ideas on places to visit. If you have some more suggestions for Asian Pacific American places and events of interest we'd love to hear them. Let us know if you go to any of our suggested destinations and send us your pictures. Have fun :).


International District - Seattle, WA

There is an area, in the heart of Seattle, rightfully dubbed as the "International District." Founded as the new Chinatown in 1889, after the Great Seattle Fire destroyed most of the original, it eventually became home to many other Asian ethnicities. Today it is known as the only place in the United States where Chinese, Japanese, Filipinos, Vietnamese, Koreans, and Cambodians, settled together to build one neighborhood.
More Information on the Area

International District History
In the beginning, men from China came by ships in search of shelter from poverty and war. They crowded into hotels, storefronts and employment halls near the railroad station and waterfront. These men came to work in the canneries, railroads, and mines.

After racial discrimination had driven many Chinese Americans out of Seattle, and the Great Seattle Fire of 1889 had destroyed much of the original China Town, the remaining Chinese had established a new China Town on King Street. Shortly after that, Japanese began to settle in a Japan Town, or Nihonmachi, two blocks north on Main Street. Following the Japanese, Filipinos also began to settle in the neighborhood.

After the Vietnam War, in the late 1970s, a large wave of Immigrants from Southeast Asia established an area known as "Little Saigon."

In 1987, the neighborhood gained federal status as the "Seattle Chinatown Historic District," and has since then become more commonly known as the "International District."
More on the International Districts History

Wing Luke Asian Museum
The Wing Luke Museum is committed to engaging the community in exploring issues regarding the art, culture, and history of Asian Pacific Americans. Founded in 1967, the Museum was named in honor of Wing Luke, who was the first Asian American elected to public office in the Pacific Northwest. The exhibition "How the Soy Sauce Was Bottled" will be on display until November 30, 2007. For more information on the gallery (which, I assure you, is not about Soy Sauce) click here. The gallery displays works of five local artists, using conventional Asian artifacts and photographs from the museum's own collection to convey their own experiences within modern Asian Pacific American communities.
More on International District Attractions

Slant Film Festival - San Francisco, CA
On July 21, 2007 the Slant Film Festival will feature Asian American short films. Films are playing will range from wacky comedies to heart warming family stories. The entrance fee is $8, and the films start at 7pm.
More on the Slant Film Festival


Foreign Mission School - Cornwall, CT
In May, 1817 the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions established a school in Cornwall, Connecticut for the education of youth of all races.

In its first year there were 12 students - seven Hawaiians, two South Asians, a Native American, and two white Americans. The following year the make-up of the school included seven Native Americans, two Chinese, two South Asians, a South East Asian, six Hawaiians, two Marquesans, and three white Americans.

One of the Hawaiians by name of Henry Obookiah writes the first Hawaiian translation of the book of Genesis. Obookiah began work on a Hawaiian grammar, dictionary, and spelling book, but died before its completion. He is buried at Cornwall Cemetery.

The Foreign Mission School was forced to close in 1826 after the community was sent into turmoil when two of the Native American students married prominent white members of the community. The school had a short history, but is notable for being one of the first multi-racial schools, which included some of the earliest Asian Pacific Americans in the United States. The site of the school is marked with a plaque near the St. Peter's Church in Cornwall, Connecticut.

Oklahoma Historical Society's Article on the Foreign Mission School
Cornwall Historical Society's Article on the Foreign Mission School
Places to visit in Cornwall, CT
Wikipedia's Article on Cornwall, CT


Chinese American Museum of Northern California
232 1st Street, Marysville, CA 95901

Back in our June 2005 travel article we had a very short mention of this museum. At that time we did not have any information on it. As it turned out, the Chinese American Museum of Northern California was not officially completed until earlier this year. AACP had a chance to participate in this museum's grand opening and we are please to tell you that you can visit this museum on the first Saturday of each month. To learn a little bit about the museum, read our March 2007 newsletter interview with the museum's owner and curator Brian Tom.


Up Coming Events

Here are some events that AACP will soon be attending. Invite us to your events.
DateEventLocation
June 28 -
July 1
OCA National Convention
Sac. Convention Center
Sacramento, CA
July 12
7:30pm
William Poy Lee reads from his new book The Eighth Promise
Foster City Library
Foster City, CA
July 14-15
San Jose Obon Festival
SJ Buddhist Temple
San Jose, CA
July 21-22
Sa 1-10pm
Su 11-8pm
Ginza Bazaar & Obon Odori Buddhist Church of SF
San Francisco, CA
Other Event of Interest that AACP May Not Attend
June 29 -
July 1
JACL National Youth Conference
Santa Clara University
Santa Clara, CA
July 8 Monterey Obon Festival Monterey Peninsula
Buddhist Temple
Seaside, CA
July 13-15 30th Anniversary of the Lotus Festival Echo Park
Los Angeles, CA
July 20-22 The 9th Annual KAAN Conference
(Korean Am. Adoptee Adoptive Family Network)
Royal Sonesta Hotel
Boston, MA
July 21-22 Mountain View Obon Festival 575 N. Shoreline Blvd.
Mountain View, CA

Editor's Message

Hello Everyone,

I have to make this editor's message short, I still have to finish packing for the OCA convention in Sacramento. By the time you get this I'll probably already be there. I may even be sending this from Sacramento.

Authors William Wong, Helen Zia, William Poy Lee, and possibly others will be on hand at the OCA convention to sign books. The exhibit area in the Sacramento Convention hall is open to all visitors. We hope you can come.

We will also be on hand for William Poy Lee's reading at the Foster City Library on July 12. We hope you can make that and any of the other events listed on our calendar.

Thank you to our intern Austin Djang for writing our summer travel article.

Have a great summer everyone.

Leonard Chan
Executive Editor

Give Us Your Feedback

Please feel free to send us your reviews, comments, and book suggestions. You can contact us at -
aacpinc@asianamericanbooks.com

ADDITIONS TO OUR WEBSITE

The following books are discounted for subscribers to our newsletter. The discounts on these books end July 17, 2007.

Driven Out
The Forgotten War Against Chinese Americans

By Jean Pfaelzer
2007, 400 pages, Hardback.

Driven Out begins with a retelling of the abominable event of November 3, 1885 in Tacoma, Washington where hundreds of Chinese American were forcibly expelled from the town in what could only be describe as "ethnic cleansing." Driven Out is not fiction - this actually happened and author Jean Pfaelzer goes on to describe much more of this little know part of Chinese American history that took place throughout the West and North West regions of the United States.

Driven Out is not only a retelling of a horrific part of American history, it is also a testament to the heroics of a community that persevered in a climate of extreme duress.

View Additional Information
ORDER -- Item #3463, $27.95

The Story of
Cherry the Pig

By Utako Yamada
First American Addition 2007, 32 pages, Hardback.

Pigs can't fly, but in this delightful story about Cherry the Pig, they certainly can cook. Follow Cherry as she enters her apple cake in a bake-off at the local harvest festival. Even the finicky mice wouldn't keep this pig down.

Author Utako Yamada is both a dessert shop owner and a picture book author living in Tokyo.

View Additional Information
ORDER -- Item #3459, $15.95

Twenty-Five Chickens and a Pig for a Bride
Growing up in a Filipino Immigrant Family

By Evangeline Canonizado Buell
2006, 190 pages, Hardback.

Autobiographies are only as good as the life described by the author - the more interesting the life the more interesting the book. In Twenty-five Chickens and a Pig for a Bride, you'll discover that author Evangeline Canonizado Buell is one fascinating Filipina American with an equally interesting family history. Follow her story as she describes her Buffalo Soldier grandfather through to her works with the Filipino American National Historical Society.

View Additional Information
ORDER -- Item #3461, $24.95

The Zoo

By Suzy Lee
First American Edition 2007, 32 pages, Hardback.

A girl and her parents visit The Zoo. The parents only notice empty exhibits while their daughter wanders off to have fun with the animals. In this picture book, first published in Korea, you'll find that a visit to the zoo is universally magical in the eyes of a child.

View Additional Information
ORDER -- Item #3460, Normally $15.95

Hello Hello

By Fumiko Takeshita
Illustrated by Jun Takabatake
First American Edition 2006, 31 pages, Paperback.

Alexander Graham Bell wanted people to use the word "ahoy" to answer phones. In Hello Hello young children will discover the concept of phones and learn that it's "hello" that we say upon starting phone conversations.

View Additional Information
ORDER -- Item #3462, $4.95


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