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Synopsis of
Talk by Rocky and Margaret Chin
The following
is a synopsis by Prof. Betty Lee Sung,
of the talk by Mr. Rocky Chin and Ms. Margaret Chin at
Graduate Center, Room 9206.
Both Margaret
Chin and Rocky Chin (not related) have been activists in the
Asian and ethnic communities of New York for close to 30
years. Margaret was associated with LaGuardia Community
College and is a member of AAHEC. Both are running in the 1st
District of New York City for a seat on the City Council in an
election this fall. Moderator Betty Lee Sung called attention
to AAHEC's non-profit status and said as a 501 organization,
we cannot support or endorse any political candidate. If we
did, we would lose our tax-exempt status, so this meeting is
an educational forum, to let the candidates inform us about
the issues they are running on, and to relate these issues to
CUNY, AHHEC and higher education.
Margaret spoke
about her involvement with the Chinatown community. She
attributed her motivation to Betty Sung;s Asian American
Studies classes, which inspired her to help the large influx
of immigrants pouring into Chinatown nearly 30 years ago. She
organized day care for garment workers, got jobs for Chinese
employees on the Confucius Plaza project, founded Asian
Americans for Equality and now serves as it executive
director. She also coordinated English language classes under
the auspices of LaGuardia Community College for Chinese
students offered right in Chinatown. Now she looks back
proudly at all the graduates she has helped to find better
jobs because of their acquired language skills.
Margaret is
especially supportive of our proposed Asian American Asian
Research Institute. She relates that in her service in the
community she felt handicapped because of lack of data, which
has been gathered or acquired, but no one has pulled the data
together. She is working with Queens College on how
discrimination affects Asians, and 6,000 Asians are being
interviewed. She hopes the Institute will become a reality so
that the interviews can be analyzed meaningfully.
In her
campaign for election, Margaret is in contact with many
community organizations that she can mobilize and lend support
to push for our Research Institute. She is running for City
Council because Asians desperately need a voice in City
Government.
Rocky is a
Civil Rights lawyer. He has long been an activist since his
days at Yale and UCLA. He helped form the first Asian American
Association. He pushed for Asian American Studies. He taught
Asians and the American Law at City College, Cornell, and
other colleges. He helped found the Chinatown Health Clinic
and Museum of Chinese American History. He stressed the need
for more research on Asian Americans, which is taking place on
the West Coast, but hardly anything is being done on the East
Coast. He is also supportive of the proposed Research
Institute.
How can City
Government help? He asked.
1. Get issues
up front on lack of Asian American representation.
2. Identify
sources of State, City and Federal Funding for services
3. Mobilize
community support
4. Get media
attention
5. Organize
coalitions.
6. Educate the
voters He said voting is a powerful weapon.
Chinatown has
6,000 registered voters, but this is a drop in the bucket
compared to our numbers. Politicians know this, so they ignore
us.
It was a very
rainy night. However, that was not an excuse for many of our
members not to show up. After all, the two candidates
sacrificed their time and effort to come make a presentation
and we should have provided larger numbers to hear them. We
thanked the speakers, and extended our apologies for the poor
attendance.
For questions,
please e-mail Prof. Betty Lee Sung at
Bettylee@sung.com

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