O.C. Vietnamese American activists urge youth to speak up for their beliefs
In July, the VietRISE activist group led a parade of marchers down All-American Way in Westminster, intently going from Freedom Park to Liberty Park for a âBring Human Rights Home for Immigrants and Refugeesâ rally.
âAt an intersection, we thought, âLetâs just stop traffic for a little bit and let people know weâre here,ââ says VietRISE co-founder and executive director Tracy La.
The demonstrators figured theyâd get a few honks (and they did), but La remembers their excitement as some drivers got out of their cars and joined them. Others who lived nearby walked over after hearing the commotion and have since gotten involved in the activism.
That was just one of 11 rallies (and one vigil, for the victims of this yearâs El Paso, Texas, shooting) that VietRISE has organized in Little Saigon since the organization formed last year. It now has three full-time and one part-time staff members and about 25 active volunteers.
When members march, they wear âICE out of Little Saigonâ shirts and hold signs defending sanctuary status. They condemn the Trump administrationâs attempt to repeal the U.S.-Vietnam repatriation agreement, which excludes Vietnamese refugees that arrived before July 12, 1995 from deportation â and call out politicians (especially their fellow Vietnamese American politicians) when they vote in ways they find harmful to their community.
They create bilingual hashtags â #ChoTatCa (#SanctuaryForAll), #ChongLấiSuGhet (#FightAgainstHate), #DongTraiTu (#CloseTheCamps) and #BaoVeGiaDinh (#ProtectFamilies) â and issue press releases in both English and Vietnamese.
They want to normalize speaking out in their community.
âMy dad says to me, âI donât want you to ever be afraid of saying what you believe in,ââ La said.
She understands that many young Vietnamese Americans donât have the same support from their parents, who may be nervous about their children getting involved in American politics.
âWeâre not trying to do anything dangerous or protesting just because we want to make noise,â says La. âWe want to do it strategically to highlight specific issues ... Young people have told us that they were scared to come out for a protest. We donât want people to be afraid anymore.â
La, 24, grew up in San Diego, the daughter of Vietnamese American refugees. She was born five months after her parents and brother arrived in America after living for five years in a Thai refugee camp.
Their family lived in government-subsidized housing and moved around a lot, but as a kid La didnât understand it was because they couldnât afford the rent.
âA lot of my understanding of the [Vietnamese American] community came from my family discovering what it was like to be in a new country, but also the different experiences that my brother, whoâs seven years older, experienced compared to me,â she says.
âThe main difference was the way the system treated us,â she explains. âI was really nurtured by my teachers ⌠[while] he didnât know English when he came here, and he was always reprimanded, so that made him rebel. He ended up joining gangs and getting involved in stuff like that, while I ended up growing up on the other side.â
Allison Vo, VietRISEâs youth organizing coordinator, said she sometimes feels La is âthe mouthpiece for my own personal story.â
Vo, 24, also grew up moving from city to city, but around Little Saigon.
âItâs because we share a lot of similar experiences, as â1.5â and second generation Vietnamese Americans,â says La. (â1.5 generationâ refers to people who arrived in the U.S. as youths, like her brother.) âHousing is a big issue, as is immigration.â
In high school, La was the president of the campus Asian cultural awareness club, and during the 2012 presidential election, she sought permission to organize a mock election because she wanted her fellow students to have a better understanding of the local and national issues at stake.
âIt was the first time I felt that young people could have power,â she says, âbecause my principal agreed to it.â
While she was studying at UC Irvine, La searched for specifically Vietnamese American spaces that did the activism and policy work she was interested in. While she says there were great pan-Asian American political groups, as well as Vietnamese-specific organizations focusing on arts, education or issues related to human rights in Vietnam, it wasnât quite what she was looking for.
She wanted to work to change sociopolitical and economic conditions in Little Saigon, home of the largest Vietnamese diaspora.
Inspired by groups like Philadelphiaâs Viet Lead, Orange Countyâs own VROC (Viet Rainbow of Orange County), as well as the history of Vietnamese American organizing for labor rights in the 1970s and â80s, as outlined in Kent Wong and An Leâs book, âOrganizing on Separate Shores: Vietnamese and Vietnamese American Union Organizers,â she and a group of co-organizers created VietRISE.
Hieu Nguyen, founder of VROC, says there has been no progressive space for Vietnamese Americans here in Orange County.
âThe need has always been there,â he says.
Linda Vo, a professor in the Asian American Studies department at UC Irvine, says groups like VietRISE give a voice to many who have been underrepresented.
As the organizationâs youth organizing coordinator, Allison Vo works with mostly college-age students in the county, holding political training workshops to teach them how to engage with public officials, run activism campaigns and do their own organizing.
Allison Vo says that when she talks to younger Vietnamese Americans, they cite the inter-generational trauma in their families, but embrace the idea of resiliency. They want to figure out how to break cycles and move forward.
âWeâre trying to build a curriculum that acknowledges history and contextualizes it, but also show that there are specific tools that we can utilize in order to build power for ourselves in the community,â Allison Vo says.
Still, challenges remain.
âPolitics can be very contentious and divisive, and there are generational differencesâ in the Vietnamese American community, says Linda Vo. âThis can scare away the younger generationâ from participating.
Going into that future, activists like those in VietRISE strive to highlight the present.
So on Sunday, VietRiSE is collaborating with the National Day Laborer Organizing Network to host a Vietnamese and Latinx community festival at the Atlantis Play Center in Garden Grove. It will feature music by DJ Nina Ross, Anaheimâs Weapons of Mass Creation, Los Jornaleros del Norte and Son Del Centro, as well as poetry by Scott Keltic Knot and Äáť NguyĂŞn Mai.
âThe theme of the festival is to celebrate how sanctuary laws have made our community safer but also to celebrate our immigrant and refugee legacies,â La says. âIn a place like Little Saigon, we want to celebrate our Latinx and Central American counterparts who are our neighbors. â
There will be a community art project, collecting thumbprints on a wood panel that says âWe Celebrate Sanctuary for Immigrants Hereâ in English, Vietnamese and Spanish, and the day before, they will host and live-stream an exchange with Vietnamese refugees and Central American refugees in the activistsâ Garden Grove office.
âOur community is very powerful,â says La, who credits the elected Vietnamese American politicians in Orange County.
La says some people understandably have reservations about the public criticism VietRISE lodges against leaders in its own community.
But according to Nguyen of VROC, some of the newer groups have a strategy that involves a very public presence.
He says parents sometimes ask him: âWhy canât you just do things and not have to post it online?â
But he believes that posting can help allow people to better access the groups, engaging a base that may not have found a space. Once theyâre in that space he believes they will feel more compelled to act.
âIt is more powerful when it comes from a Vietnamese person, for [politicians] to hear from someone whoâs a refugee or a child of refugees, because then they can no longer be the sole carrier of the narrative of what Vietnamese people look like,â says La. âItâs not because itâs fun. Itâs really difficult.â
The difficulties include feeling isolated.
âBut because our team is very grounded in our work and our values, itâs a source of comfort and confidence,â says Allison Vo.
La adds she doesnât think the local officials âknow what to do with us yet. But I think the one thing they canât take away is that itâs clear that we really care about our community.â
After meeting La, Westminster Councilman Tai Do says, âI had nothing but my utmost respect for Tracy for her leadership uniting young Vietnamese Americans and Latin Americans and for being vocal about local politics. These young men and women are the future leaders of our city.â
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