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40 Years of History at Boston's
AACA
After 4 decades, the Asian American Civic Association Still Going
Strong, Adjusting to New Community Needs
By Adam Smith, with additional reporting by
Yang Yang
Boston - Feb 16, 2007 - Richard Goldberg, who teaches English at the
Asian American Civic Association, says his second favorite time of the
year is right before Christmas. That’s when he receives cards and mail
from former students, most of whom are recent immigrants, telling him
how they’re doing, and oftentimes, how they just completed their studies
at two-and four-year colleges.
His favorite time of the year, he says, is June, when his former
students invite him to their commencement ceremonies.
“I see my students in a cap and gown with a diploma in the commencement
line -- it’s rewarding,” said Goldberg, who’s been with the agency for
14 years.
As satisfying as this is for Goldberg, who is also the director of
education at the civic association, the men and women who founded the
agency in 1967 probably never envisioned the association would become a
center for English education for new immigrants.
Over the last 40 years, the Asian American Civic Association, while
adapting to the changing times, has completely changed its mission.
When the social services agency was founded, originally as the Chinese
American Civic Association, its focus was to support candidates who
served the needs of Chinese Americans.
Today, the association steers clear of politics and instead teaches
English and vocational skills to immigrants and others, so that they can
find jobs or enroll in higher education.
Operating on a budget of just over $1.9 million, the agency's 30-person
staff annually serves more than 6,000 clients -- mostly immigrants from
China, Haiti, Albania, and Somalia. Its four main services focus on
job-skills training and job placement, English-language education, and
its multi-service center, which provides assistance with immigration
applications, health insurance, filing income-tax returns, translation
and interpretation, and other resources. The fourth main service is the
Sampan newspaper, which the Asian American Civic Association has
published since 1972.
While these services help meet the needs of Greater Boston's growing
immigrant population, they are far different from what the agency
offered four decades ago.
"The Chinese American Civic Association was started," said founder Neil
Chin, "to participate in political support of candidates that would be
helpful to the Chinese."
Chin, whom the Sampan interviewed via e-mail, said that even the
association's original name, the Chinese American Civic Association, was
chosen specifically to "give ourselves some sort of identification to
present to the politicians."
At the time, the association operated out of 18 Oxford St., sharing
space with the Chinatown American Legion Post. Its first meeting
attracted 40 people, Chin recalls.
In many ways, the Chinese American Civic Association was a product of
its founders' generation.
The association formed in the late 1960s during a time when social
movements were taking over the U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson's "Great
Society" -- a set of programs aimed at ending poverty and racial
discrimination -- was underway, and so was the Civil Rights Movement.
"This was a time when a lot of social-action organizations were being
formed all around the country....It was sort of an awakening of the
Chinese community in Boston," said Caroline Chang, another founder of
the association.
But one milestone in particular had just occurred that would have great
impact on the course of Chinese-American history, nationally and
locally. The Immigration Act of 1965 was just passed, ending immigration
quotas based on national origin.
The 1965 act followed other changes in immigration laws of decades
earlier: The U.S. Congress had repealed the Chinese Exclusion Act in
1943, and the War Brides Act was enacted in 1945. The latter act allowed
spouses and children of U.S. military personnel to emigrate to the U.S.
With the opening of immigration policies, the population of Chinese
immigrants in Boston was changing, diversifying, and growing. By the
late 1960s, Chinese Americans started moving to the suburbs, having
kids, and becoming more established in the U.S.
"The community was growing. It was becoming more multilingual. They were
not just speaking Toisonese but Cantonese. It was also a community that
had more complexity: not just everybody came from a rural village
background, but people came from cities, from Hong Kong," said Chang.
"There was an Asian American movement going on in the country, too, that
sort of grew out of the black movement. A lot of Asian students were
becoming aware of their own identity and then becoming aware of Asian
communities in Boston, mostly the Chinese community."
Soon after the Chinese American Civic Association was formed, it also
began offering social activities so that Chinese Americans in the
suburbs could stay in touch with those living in Chinatown.
As Chinese Americans got married and started having children, "they
wanted some way for both their own group to socialize and keep their
Chinatown connections and Chinese connections," said Chang.
Soon, the civic association began offering social services, starting
with a Chinatown health task force that would later break off and turn
into the South Cove Community Health Center. It also started services
that later manifested into the Greater Boston Chinese Golden Age Center.
The agency eventually added immigration services and English classes to
its programming. In 1972, it began publishing a newsletter, the Sampan,
that by the mid-1970s would become a bilingual community newspaper
serving all of Chinatown.
Later, the association's clientele began to diversify, thus the change
in name to the Asian American Civic Association.
Chau-ming Lee, the director of the association for the past 25 years,
said that when he first came to the agency in 1982, there were only
three main services offered: adult basic education that taught English
to immigrants, the multi-service center, and the Sampan.
"The first thing in my mind, at that time, was: 'Not how we can expand,
but how can we make this a better program?'" he recalled.
By the mid-1980s, he said, the agency began looking to expand its
services.
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"The community kept changing as far as its needs," said Lee.
Soon after, he said, the association began exploring how it could
provide an office-skills training program, which would shape the
direction of the organization for years to come. The office-skills
course today remains one of the association's oldest,
vocational-skills-training program.
Now the agency, which will move into a newly-built building at 87 Tyler
St. later this summer with another Chinatown group, is focusing on
further developing its workforce-training programs, while at the same
time completing fundraising to pay for its share of the new six-story
building.
Expanding its workforce-development programs coincides with the growth
of Massachusetts' immigration population, which has exploded over the
last 20 years. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, in 2005 nearly one
in seven Massachusetts residents were immigrants.
Yet the state's minority and immigrant populations still struggle,
according to a recent study from the Institute for Asian American
Studies at UMass Boston. The study, entitled "Far From the
Commonwealth," found that nearly a third of Asian Americans in
Massachusetts earn low incomes, as do more than half of Hispanics and
four in 10 African Americans.
In recent years, the Asian American Civic Association's job training has
centered on offering various programs. One of them, called "Facilities
Maintenance," teaches the basics of carpentry, plumbing, and math to
aspiring maintenance workers. The previously-mentioned Office Skills
Training program teaches basic computer and accounting skills to
immigrants who want to obtain office jobs.
In January of 2005, the AACA expanded its job-training programs to
create a program in automotive-technician training. The program is a
partnership with two other Boston nonprofits, La Alianza Hispana and the
Urban League of Eastern Massachusetts, as well as with several
automotive-business groups.
Last year, the AACA also created a course, the Boston Self-Sufficiency
Project, that helps immigrants learn how to create resumes, gain
confidence in interviewing, and apply for work.
Now the organization is exploring the possibility of forming a
self-sufficient business that could train students to make money to
support other programs at that agency.
Over the coming years, said the agency's deputy director, Sunny
Schwartz, the goal is to "become the premier workforce development
agency -- to be on the cutting edge of offering job training and
English" education.
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