OPINION Page 6 n THE ASIAN REPORTER September 15, 2014 Volume 24 Number 18 September 15, 2014 ISSN: 1094-9453 The Asian Reporter is published on the first and third Monday each month. Please send all correspondence to: The Asian Reporter 922 N Killingsworth Street, Portland, OR 97217 Phone: (503) 283-4440, Fax: (503) 283-4445 News Department e-mail: news@asianreporter.com Advertising Department e-mail: ads@asianreporter.com General e-mail: info@asianreporter.com Website: www.asianreporter.com Please send reader feedback, Asian-related press releases, and community interest ideas/stories to the addresses listed above. Please include a contact phone number. Advertising information available upon request. Publisher Jaime Lim Contributing Editors Ronault L.S. Catalani (Polo), Jeff Wenger Correspondents Ian Blazina, Josephine Bridges, Pamela Ellgen, Maileen Hamto, Edward J. Han, A.P. 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Back issues of The Asian Reporter may be ordered by mail at the following rates: First copy: $1.50 Additional copies ordered at the same time: $1.00 each Send orders to: Asian Reporter Back Issues, 922 N. Killingsworth St., Portland, OR 97217-2220 The Asian Reporter welcomes reader response and participation. If you have a comment on a story we have printed, or have an Asian-related personal or community focus idea, please contact us. Please include a contact name, address, and phone number on all correspondence. Thank you. or the past few months, I’ve been working on way, too, she said, while accompanying themselves a multimedia project funded by the Regional on ukulele, guitar, or piano. It’s been a long time since most of the women in Arts & Culture Council called “Migrations,” which features immigrant and refugee artists in the sewing circle emigrated from Tonga. Kakala has Portland. Through the project, I learned about a been in the U.S. since 1987, when she and her Pacific Islander sewing circle, a program of the husband moved to Portland to raise their three girls Immigrant and Refugee Community Organization and give them a good education. Because the Ton- (IRCO) and the IRCO Asian Family Center (AFC). gan constitutional monarchy has made education free and mandatory for all Sewing is considered a citizens, people there have folk-art form in many a nearly 99 percent literacy cultures, especially quilt- rate. Quite often, Tongans ing, which reflects the come to the U.S. with their quilter’s personal experi- children after they’ve ences and traditions. I also finished secondary school, heard that many of the because they want access women currently partici- to a good higher education. pating in the sewing circle Kolini Fusitua, an aca- are Tongan and they sing demic achievement special- traditional songs. After ist for AFC, started the learning that, I had to sewing circle in 2012 to check it out. The Pacific Islander sewing circle, a program of the Immi- help families connect with The sewing circle met grant and Refugee Community Organization (IRCO) and the school system. The weekly this summer at the IRCO Asian Family Center, met weekly this past sum- group meets at different George Middle School in mer at George Middle School in north Portland. Many of schools so the women can north Portland. I attended the women who participate in the program are Tongan. become comfortable with a couple of meetings. What (Photo/Nisa’ Haron) I discovered was a group of about 10 to 18 women school buildings and staff. He mentioned that the gathered around tables in a large classroom while children accompany their moms to hear stories their school-age children drew pictures or played about Tonga. Current events within the Tongan with wooden blocks in other parts of the room. Most community are also discussed. Fusitua says some of of the women, ranging in age from 30 to 80 years old, the moms have gone on to volunteer at the school or were hand stitching various quilts in colorful in the library, and one has even become president of the Parent Teacher Association. With a great patterns that reached out like sunrays. One of the women, Kato Kakala, was using a measure of pride, he told me one of the parents was sewing machine. Kakala, a widowed mother of three honored as volunteer of the year at Portland Public children (one in college), serves as the instructor for Schools. Fusitua explained that education is a top priority the sewing circle. She seemed an expert hand on the sewing machine and created a beautiful Tongan for Tongan parents because in Tonga, the whole dress during the first meeting I attended. community is responsible for children staying in When I asked if the women could sing, they all school. broke out in beautiful harmonies singing a Tongan “It’s mandatory that all the children be in school “call-and-response” song. A lead woman would sing up to 12th grade,” Fusitua said. “In Tonga, you have one phrase and the others responded with a the school system, your parents, watching over you. complimentary musical phrase. They had beautiful You have nowhere to go even if you do want to skip voices and sang while working on their quilts. The school. They’ll put you in their canoe — some of our children, who are used to the sounds of their schools we have to canoe to — and get you there. It’s mothers’ singing, continued to play in a corner of the not a metaphor!” classroom, but I noticed they were listening. It Because Tongans cherish education, many seemed like a good way for the kids to stay in touch families go overseas to find employment so they can with their Tongan culture and language. afford to send their children to college. Fusitua’s Kakala told me she learned to sing as a child, own parents immigrated to America in 1975, when listening to elder women sing while doing their he was nine years old. After he earned his college work. Singing in church and at school is another Continued on page 7 F Opinions expressed in this newspaper are those of the authors and not necessarily those of this publication.