Celebrating AAPI Heritage

โ€˜To have your own day just means a lot': May 14 declared Hmong American Day

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What would be a typical night at a Milpitas home has become a sort of gathering space for some Hmong Americans who call the Bay Area home.

โ€œI live in San Jose, Iโ€™ve been living here since 1990,โ€ Patti Moua said.

The state itself boasts the largest population of Hmong people in the country at more than 90,000, according to a state legislature resolution that recognizes May 14 as Hmong American Day.

Itโ€™s thanks to an effort by folks with Hmong Innovating Politics who say they choose the day because of the groupโ€™s tethered history with the U.S. as fighters alongside Americans during the secret war -- covert war that lives in the shadows of the Vietnam war.

โ€œIn May 14th, 1975 that marked the withdrawal of the United States, but also the last airlift evacuation of Hmong soldier families,โ€ Kao Ye Thao, of Hmong Innovating Politics, said. โ€œIt was really at the point that marked the diaspora of the Hmong community but not just the Hmong community but many other minority ethnic groups.โ€

The resolution acknowledges the group that originated from what is now southern China as part of the fabric of the state and Thao hopes itโ€™ll do much more.

โ€œIt becomes a platform really for other folks whose not even in the Hmong community too that donโ€™t identify in the Hmong community to also learn and be curious,โ€ Thao said.

Back at the Milpitas house, many young and old have been waiting for this.

โ€œIt brings awareness to our community but also spotlights us and what we have done and gone through,โ€ Amanda Sinwongsa of San Jose said,

โ€œNot a lot of them know where they stem from so to have your own day just means a lot,โ€ Mary Thao of Fremont said.

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