Organization of Chinese Americans - The Greater Washington DC Chapter

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OCA 35th Anniversary Video

Posted by: DawnLi in youtubeOCA History2008 on

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More OCA Videos are available at OCANationalCenter Channel: http://www.youtube.com/user/OCANationalCenter.


Thanks to Lisa Lee, we have a OCA-DC group page on Facebook.  It is created mainly to advertise our upcoming Gala, but hopefully also to be a useful tool for communication, networking, and marketing our organization.

Please visit http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=32323114839 to join the group. Invite friends, post photos, and have fun!


Read an insightful article by OCA-DC President Lily Qi, published by Asian Fortune:

Reentry Shocks and the China Complex


Ginny, Congratulations!

 

Ginny Gong, President of the Organization of Chinese Americans (OCA), and author of "From Ironing Board to Corporate Board", with Lily Qi, President of OCA DC Chapter, at the Borders Bookstore booth during the OCA National Convention last month. Photo Courtesy of Asian Fortune

"From Ironing Board to Corporate Board" is the story of an immigrant family's survival experiences in their adopted country as well as the story of a community's acculturation into American society. 

From the author: Identifying books that I could relate to was always a challenge when I was growing up. Although there were books about Asia and its people, books on the Asian American experience were seriously lacking. My hope is that this book fills that void and will be included in recommended and/or suggested reading lists of schools across this nation.

For more information on Ginny's book, visit her website.


Recommended by Stan Lou

At the OCA National convention this past summer, we were treated to an Authors Forum that was chaired by William Wong, a noted author from the California Bay Area.  Bill is best known for his op-ed articles in various newspapers since the 1980s that regularly presented a Chinese American slant and view of social happenings.  He became a reminder to the mainstream that Chinese Americans are real people who belong to this country.  After the recent Presidential election, he wrote the following article:

Barack Obama: Almost Like Us
November 6, 2008

By William Wong
    I can't stop crying. Tears of joy, tears of history, tears that join a babbling brook that becomes a stream that becomes a river that connects me and other Chinese Americans and Asian Americans to Barack Obama, who will be our 44th president.
    Chinese Americans and Asian Americans ought to be rejoicing Obama's amazing election victory. In many ways, he is like us. 
    He is a racial and ethnic minority, just like we are, in America. He is the son of an immigrant, like me and many Chinese Americans and Asian Americans. He was born and grew up in Hawaii, the only state with a majority Asian and Pacific Islander population. He lived in Indonesia as a youth and has blood relatives who are of mixed Asian heritage.
    That may not be strictly relevant to being our next president, but he is certainly closer to us in terms of living experience and background than any other U.S. president has been.
    Should we then expect him to cater to our community's needs? Some will say, "Of course he should!" But not me. 
    For one thing, our "community's needs" are all over the political map in part because our "community" is all over the demographic map. 
    In spite of what some of us say and want, we are not one "community." We are many communities, separated by ethnicity, Asian and Pacific Islander roots, histories, cultures, faiths, languages, traditions, and ideologies. Certainly, we share some experiences, especially those having to do with our immigration histories and interactions with the majority white population and other people of color in the United States.
    Besides, not all of us voted for Obama. Our collective political profile is quite mixed, some voting Republican, others Democratic, while others going back and forth, or not voting at all, partially because of ineligibility, partially because of inertia and ignorance.
    I am certain that different segments of Asian and Pacific America wish for special attention from Obama when he takes office next year. But for my tastes and inclination, I am hoping he will usher in a more progressive, more sensible, more rational, more humane, and more equitable set of policies that will help not only the five percent of Americans who are Asian and Pacific Islander, but the country as a whole. After all, right now, we are as an American people unusually hurting economically, culturally and spiritually under the incompetent and disastrous Bush administration.
    It would be nice if we Chinese Americans, Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders got special treatment from the incoming Obama administration, but we would benefit even more if he and his team work to lift the nation up from its doldrums.
That way, we can truly be part of what promises to be a great new era of American life led by a charismatic, brilliant, and inspiring man who happens to be the son of a white American woman and a black African man.

William Wong is author of Yellow Journalist: Dispatches from Asian America, Images of America: Oakland's Chinatown, and co-author of Images of America: Angel Island.


2008 OCA Summer Internship Video

Posted by: DawnLi in OCA programs on

OCA Summer Internship is an OCA program that runs every year.  Enjoy watching this video of our outstanding OCA summer interns 2008!

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OCA-DC 35th Anniversary Gala

Posted by: DawnLi in gala2008 on

  Dear Friends:

You are cordially invited to OCA-DC's 35th Anniversary Awards Gala on Sunday, Dec. 7, 5:30 pm, at the New Fortune Restaurant in Gaithersburg. 

OCA-DC's annual gala is a key event of the local Asian American community that highlights our community's accomplishments, progress, and challenges.  It is also a fun gathering of our members, friends, and local Asian American activists and leaders.  We expect another full house this year. 

I look forward to seeing you with your friends and family on Dec. 7!  Please register online at www.ocadc.org or by mail.
 
Sincerely,

Lily Qi

 

 


Meet OCA-DC New Members (2006)

Posted by: admin in Members2006 on

Daniel and Stephanie Teo 
Daniel and Stephanie are originally from Singapore. They have lived in the US for over 10 years. Daniel is a seasoned Finance (M&A) and Strategic Planning professional. He has worked with energy giant BP. He is currently a Managing Partner for a boutique international consulting firm. Stephanie is a marketing and financial professional with over 15 years of working experience with MNCs such as HP, DuPont and Intelsat. She is currently with UBS Financial Services. Daniel is an alumnus of Cambridge University (UK) and the Stanford Business School, and Stephanie is an alumna of the Curtin University (Australia), and Johns Hopkins University. We have two kids, Ethan and Audrey. Ethan is 7-year old and is currently attending Norwood School in Potomac. Audrey will be turning two in June this year and is excited about joining the St. Francis Episcopal Day School this fall. Due to Daniel's career, our family has lived in different parts of the world during the past 15 years including Singapore, San Francisco, London, Maryland and Beijing. I can be reached at wwsgteo@yahoo.com.

Ruiyue Chen and Fangqing Yu
Ruiyue is from Anhui province, China. He came to US in 2000 and got a Master degree in Atmospheric Sciences at Texas A&M university in 2003. He is now a physical scientist at a company in Maryland and working on environmental monitoring projects. He is also a Ph.D candidate at University of Maryland and expected to graduate soon. His wife, Fangqing, is from Nanjing, China and got a Master's degree in Computer Engineering at Texas A&M University in 2004. Their son, Dylan Chen, is one year old. They are excited to join in OCA and meet with new friends.


Stan retired in 2003 after a successful career as a civil engineer and manager of the airports grants program with the Federal Aviation Administration. Immediately after retirement, he taught English at a university in Jiangxi Province in China for two and a half years. He came to the realization that he owed much of his success and good life to his parents who migrated from Canton to Mississippi in the 1930s. He had always considered himself to be intelligent, but it took a long time to understand the hardships, prejudices, unfair treatment, and sacrifices that his parents and other Chinese immigrants suffered in order that he and other second generation Chinese Americans could enjoy good lives. He wants to make up for this late awakening by being able to pass on this unique history of our ancestors to Americans, Chinese and non-Chinese. He also wants to work to highlight and prevent injustices against Chinese and other minority races mainly because we are not "WASPs." He feels that OCA has these goals on its agenda, and it is his hope that we can all work together to realize these and other worthwhile goals.

Annette Cheng 

Annette is currently a representative of the County's Limited English Proficiency (LEP) committee and serves on its advisory board to develop a County-wide policies and regulations. She has also served as the Treasurer for the Montgomery County Asian Pacific American Employees Association (APAEA) for the past 4 years.

In August 2006, Annette was invited by the OCA-DC to participate in the annual convention in Philadelphia and was extremely fascinated with the contributions that OCA has made on behalf of Asian communities. Impressed by the success of this organization and its involvement in community and educational programs, Annette joined OCA-DC in October of this year.


Richard and I are originally from Tianjin, China. We've been in the U.S. for 6 years now. I am working as a professor in computer science at a university in D.C. and he will be relocating to D.C. to join me this month and work as a software engineer in V.A. Our son, Joshua Wang, is a year-and-half old now. Richard and I first met on our first day of college in 1991 in Tianjin, China. We came to University of Nevada, Reno for graduate school in 2000 and both graduated in 2004. This year, we had our fifteenth anniversary of knowing each other and he's been the oldest and the best friend of mine.

I love my career. It's something that I found that I enjoy doing and have a long-lasting passion for. Richard has been enjoying what he's been doing too, and I appreciate him for coming to join me, taking the risk of starting a new career at a new location.

In our lives in U.S., we've been lucky to meet many kind, friendly people who helped us and shared life with us, both in career and in personal life. We are also looking forward to meet more friends at OCA-DC.


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