11-14-2024  8:50 am   •   PDX and SEA Weather

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NORTHWEST NEWS

Family of Security Guard Shot and Killed at Portland Hospital Sues Facility for $35M

The family of Bobby Smallwood argue that Legacy Good Samaritan Medical Center failed to enforce its policies against violence and weapons in the workplace by not responding to staff reports of threats in the days before the shooting.

In Portland, Political Outsider Keith Wilson Elected Mayor After Homelessness-focused Race

Wilson, a Portland native and CEO of a trucking company, ran on an ambitious pledge to end unsheltered homelessness within a year of taking office.

‘Black Friday’ Screening Honors Black Portlanders, Encourages Sense of Belonging

The second annual event will be held Nov. 8 at the Hollywood Theatre.

Democratic Attorney General Bob Ferguson Wins Governor’s Race in Washington

Ferguson came to national prominence by repeatedly suing the administration of former President Donald Trump, including bringing the lawsuit that blocked Trump’s initial travel ban on citizens of several majority Muslim nations. 

NEWS BRIEFS

Multnomah County Library Breaks Ground on Expanded St. Johns Library

Groundbreaking marks milestone in library transformations ...

Janelle Bynum Statement on Her Victory in Oregon’s 5th Congressional District

"I am proud to be the first – but not the last – Black Member of Congress from Oregon" ...

Veterans Day, Monday, Nov. 11: Honoring a Legacy of Loyalty and Service and Expanding Benefits for Washington Veterans

Washington State Department of Veterans Affairs (WDVA) is pleased to share the Veterans Day Proclamation and highlight the various...

Nkenge Harmon Johnson honored with PCUN’s Cipriano Ferrel Award

Harmon Johnson recognized for civil rights work in Oregon and the Pacific Northwest ...

FBI offers up to ,000 reward for information about suspect behind Northwest ballot box fires

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — The FBI said Wednesday it is offering up to ,000 as a reward for information about the suspect behind recent ballot box fires in Oregon and Washington state. Authorities believe a male suspect that may have metalworking and welding experience was behind...

Family of security guard shot and killed at Portland, Oregon, hospital sues facility for M

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — The family of a security guard who was shot and killed at a hospital in Portland, Oregon, sued the facility for million on Tuesday, accusing it of negligence and failing to respond to the dangers that the gunman posed to hospital staff over multiple days. ...

No. 23 South Carolina looking for 4th straight SEC win when it faces No. 24 Missouri on Saturday

No. 24 Missouri (7-2, 3-2 Southeastern Conference) at No. 23 South Carolina (6-3, 4-3), Saturday, 4:15 p.m. EST (SEC Network) BetMGM College Football Odds: South Carolina by 12 1/2. Series record: Missouri leads 9-5. What’s at stake? South...

South Carolina's Beamer likely to face one-time recruit in Missouri quarterback Drew Pyne

COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — South Carolina coach Shane Beamer remembers watching a lot of quarterback Drew Pyne a few years back. Beamer anticipates seeing a lot more of Pyne this weekend. Pyne, Missouri's backup behind injured starter Brady Cook, is prepping to start for the 24th-ranked...

OPINION

Donald Trump Rides Patriarchy Back to the White House

White male supremacy, which Trump ran on, continues to play an outsized role in exacerbating the divide that afflicts our nation. ...

Why Not Voting Could Deprioritize Black Communities

President Biden’s Justice40 initiative ensures that 40% of federal investment benefits flow to disadvantaged communities, addressing deep-seated inequities. ...

The Skanner News 2024 Presidential Endorsement

It will come as no surprise that we strongly endorse Vice President Kamala Harris for president. ...

Black Retirees Growing Older and Poorer: 2025 Social Security COLA lowest in 10 years

As Americans live longer, the ability to remain financially independent is an ongoing struggle. Especially for Black and other people of color whose lifetime incomes are often lower than that of other contemporaries, finding money to save for ‘old age’ is...

AFRICAN AMERICANS IN THE NEWS

More human remains from Philadelphia's 1985 MOVE bombing have been found at a museum

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Additional human remains from a 1985 police bombing on the headquarters of a Black liberation group in Philadelphia have been found at the University of Pennsylvania. The remains are believed to be those of 12-year-old Delisha Africa, one of five children and six...

Lawmakers stage Māori protest in New Zealand's parliament during fraught race relations debate

WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) — A vote in New Zealand’s parliament was suspended and two lawmakers ejected on Thursday when dramatic political theater erupted over a controversial proposed law redefining the country’s founding agreement between Indigenous Māori and the British Crown. ...

Dutch lawmaker Wilders wants to deport those convicted of violence against Israeli soccer fans

THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) — Hard-right Dutch political leader Geert Wilders on Wednesday blamed “Moroccans” for attacks on Israeli soccer fans in Amsterdam last week, asserting that they “want to destroy Jews” and recommending the deportation of people convicted of involvement if they...

ENTERTAINMENT

Book Review: 'Those Opulent Days' is a mystery drenched in cruelties of colonial French Indochina

It’s not often that a historical novel is set in the Vietnam of the 1920s, a period when the land in Indochina was occupied and exploited by French colonizers. It’s also unusual that such a novel would be a whodunit murder mystery. “Those Opulent Days,” the debut novel of...

Book Review: Reader would be 'Damn Glad' to pick up a copy of actor Tim Matheson's new memoir

Tim Matheson has portrayed a president and vice president. A police officer and military officer. And more than a few doctors. He's worked with Lucille Ball, Henry Fonda, Jackie Gleason, Clint Eastwood, Kurt Russell and Steven Spielberg. He appeared in episodes of everything from “Leave to...

Book Review: A new book about cult favorite Eve Babitz throws shade on reputation of Joan Didion

An entire generation of literary-minded women has not stopped telling itself stories influenced by master storyteller Joan Didion. The same, alas, cannot be said of Eve Babitz, a Hollywood bad girl whose life briefly intersected with Didion’s in the late 1960s and early ’70s. Few...

U.S. & WORLD NEWS

Trump issues early challenge to GOP Senate with defiant nominations

WASHINGTON (AP) — Just hours after Republican Sen. John Thune was elected as the incoming Senate majority leader...

Japan's sake brewers hope UNESCO heritage listing can boost rice wine's appeal

OME, Japan (AP) — Deep in a dark warehouse the sake sleeps, stored in rows of giant tanks, each holding more...

Biden heads to international summits in Peru and Brazil as world leaders brace for Trump presidency

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden begins his six-day visit to Peru and Brazil on Thursday for the final...

Japan will resume V-22 flights after inquiry finds pilot error caused incident last month

TOKYO (AP) — Japan's fleet of hybrid-helicopter military aircraft have been cleared to resume operations after...

Edinburgh Zoo blames fireworks for death of baby red panda

LONDON (AP) — Zookeepers in Scotland have blamed pyrotechnics from annual Bonfire Night celebrations for the...

Men earn more than women in egalitarian Norway, report finds. But it's on par with Europe

OSLO, Norway (AP) — The Norwegian equality minister said Thursday that she found it “completely...

Wang Jun China Daily Usa

Sol de Leon, an immigrant to the United States from Panama, lights up when recalling the "incredible" meeting with her extended family in China.

Her grandfather Liang Tick Fe left the village of Fa Yen -later renamed Pingshan - on the outskirts of Guangzhou for Panama in 1918 when he was 24, leaving his wife and two sons at home. China was in chaos, ruled by warlords following the overthrow of its last emperor.

Ninety-three years later, de Leon traveled to China the first time.

The reunion in October 2011 brought happiness for different generations of her family living in Panama, the US and China.

De Leon said she always wanted to visit China. With an old document her father had provided - her grandfather's certificate of registration with the Chinese consulate in Panama - de Leon was able to find the village formerly known as Fa Yen.

"I went with my sister on the trip," she said. "I didn't expect to find a family but only to see the place."

Athena Liang, a college student who is part of the Liang family in Pingshan, recalled the reunion.

"I wasn't at home when they arrived; my mom called me home. I saw everyone was full of excitement," she said. "(De Leon's) grandfather is my grandfather's grandfather. The only thing I have heard from the older generations was that he moved to Panama."

De Leon told the whole story: Local authorities in Panama registered her grandfather as Felix Leon. "When you pronounce Liang, it sounds like 'Leon' in Spanish. So they 'adapted' his name to Spanish," she said.

Leon had an eventful life in his new country. He imported the first convertible cars to Panama and opened a bakery, ultimately prospering and enjoying an affluent life. He became part of what the Panama News called "the biggest of Panama's Chinese fraternal societies" - expatriates from Fa Yen.

But Leon's good fortune didn't last. He fell on hard times, for reasons his granddaughter can only speculate about. "Somehow my grandfather lost everything and started to struggle. He kept looking for jobs and worked in different cities in Panama and moved very often from place to place."

At the time, most Chinese immigrants in Panama were hardly doing better than Leon, partly due to strict Chinese-exclusion laws in the Central American nation.

The first Chinese arrived in the mid-19th century by way of Canada and Jamaica to work on the Panamanian railroad, according to Juan Tam, a historian and writer with the Chinese Association of Panama.

In 1903, the government declared Chinese "undesirable citizens." Ten years later, just before the Panama Canal's completion, a "head tax" was imposed on the Chinese community. The 1941 constitution stripped citizenship from all Panamanians of Asian ancestry.

Arnulfo Arias, Panama's president at the time, ordered Asian immigrants' property to be confiscated. That year, Arias was deposed in a coup. (His two additional presidential terms, in the 1950s and 1968, met a similar fate.) But the persecution didn't end, as Arias' followers forced many Chinese-owned stores to close.

"But they couldn't expel my grandfather because he had a Panamanian wife and children," de Leon said.

Her father, Jaime de Leon, was born in the 1930s, along with two sisters. Besides his Spanish name, he was given a Chinese one - Liang Tai Man.

"My father, Liang Tai Man, took care of his father, Liang Tick Fe, until he died. He lived with us - my father, my mother and I in our apartment," she recalled, "I was the first grandchild to my grandfather.

"Every day he used to bring me something to eat, like steamed buns filled with sweet black beans." De Leon still loves the Chinese snack and cherishes memories of her grandfather.

From kindergarten through high school, she attended a Jewish school where she received scholarships. It's natural for her to relate to the Jewish diaspora and the overseas Chinese communities in suffering and more, she said.

Starting in the early 20th century, the Chinese played a crucial role in Panama's economy. They are said to have owned over 600 stores, on which the country depended.

According to the English-language Panama News, the Chinese community currently accounts for between 5 percent to more than a third of the Panamanian population.

"There are about 150,000 people in this country who can speak Chinese, who look Chinese and who know something about Chinese culture, but there is a much larger group that has at least some Chinese ancestry," explained Tam, the historian.

New immigrants from China are adding to that number.

People from Pingshan, including two classmates of Athena's, have moved to Panama. Today's immigrants aren't leaving China out of desperation, but as with the newcomers Athena knows, for new experiences and opportunities.

"I may go to live and study in another country for a period of time and experience the cultural difference when I don't need my parents' support," she said. "Experience is important for our generation."

De Leon received her college education in Mexico. With a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering, she moved back to Panama, working in the IT industry. Ten years ago, she married an American and immigrated to the United States.

In Guangzhou, she and her sister hired an interpreter, a young woman who spoke Chinese, English and Spanish. The group of three arrived in Pingshan on Oct 3 by motorcycle taxis on a dirt road.

After an hour's search, someone took them to a family temple with a huge "Liang" in Chinese engraved above the entrance. From the temple, the group was taken to apartments nearby. All of the families had kept genealogical records. Liang Tick Fe was identified from the Liang family tree.

That moment was surreal, de Leon said. A local resident pointed to a man in his 70s and said to her in Chinese: "He's your brother!"

"In Chinese culture, a cousin is a brother or sister," de Leon explained, still feeling the excitement of that moment. Pointing at her 73-year-old cousin in a photo, she observed: "He has my grandfather's forehead!"

Someone in the Panama branch of the Liang family gathered the whole family - old and young, including de Leon and her sister - and took the group to a village restaurant for a celebratory feast and plenty of picture-taking.

De Leon called her dad in Panama from her hotel room that night. "I could tell my father had tears at the other end of the telephone," she said.

Her father, who turned 80 last year, has begun studying Mandarin. He sends video clips of his practice to his children and grandchildren.

Later this month, de Leon and her husband, Dennis Bress, are leaving for another trip to China. Bress has traveled extensively throughout China since the late 1970s on business and pays close attention to news from China.

The couple will be taking de Leon's two children - Paolo, 21, who just graduated from the University of California, Santa Barbara with a major in global studies, and Amy, 19 who finished high school in Southern California and returned to Panama for college two years ago.

"They're very interested in studying the Chinese language," de Leon said. She and the children have been in touch with Athena through QQ, a Chinese Internet conferencing service similar to Skype.

Both Paolo and Amy were recently granted a scholarship from the Chinese government and accepted to Nanjing University. "After our last trip to China, a whole new world has been opened for all of us," de Leon said.

Contact the author: [email protected]

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