By Kawehi Haug
©2004 Honolulu Star-Bulletin
August 13, 2004
A former lieutenant governor, the president of a national cable channel, the
person who introduced frozen pizza to the Japanese, and a Zen Buddhist priest
all agree on one thing: Women can and should be as successful as they want to
be.
The four Asian Americans are examples of people who have overcome the
challenges of being minority women to achieve personal and professional success.
The panel discussing the role of Asian-American women in society yesterday
was made up of former Lt. Gov. Mazie Hirono, National Geographic Channel
President Laureen Ong, JC Comsa Corp. Chairwoman Merle Aiko Okawara and
community builder and Buddhist priest Puanani Burgess.
The discussion was part of the Japanese American Citizens League National
Convention this week at the Waikiki Beach Marriott Resort & Spa. The
convention marks the league's 75th anniversary and is being attended by U.S.
Transportation Secretary Norman Mineta and Japan's ambassador to the United
States, Ryozo Kato. Mineta will deliver the keynote address at the convention's
closing banquet tomorrow evening.
The JACL was founded in 1929 and is the nation's oldest and largest
Asian-American civil rights organization. The five-day convention addresses
topics such as hate crimes, affirmative action and the implications of the
Patriot Act on minorities.
The four women who participated in yesterday's panel discussion brought
diverse perspectives and stories of their journeys up the social and economic
ladders.
Hirono, the first Asian-American woman to be elected to statewide office in
Hawaii, shared her unlikely career in politics. She said that had she not had an
example in her mother, a Japanese immigrant who risked everything to escape the
abuse of her husband and bring her three children to Hawaii, she would not have
had the courage to run for office.
Hirono also urged the women in the audience to vote. Last year, 20 million
women did not vote, and Hawaii has the lowest female voter turnout in the United
States, she said.
"It doesn't matter what you believe in and what party you support, it's
important that you get out there and vote," Hirono said.
Okawara, who went to college with U.S. House Minority Leader Dick Gephardt
and Teresa Heinz Kerry, wife of Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry,
spoke of the challenge of being a Japanese American woman in male-dominated
Japan of the 1960s. Her company, JC Comsa Corp., grew from a one-woman endeavor
to introduce frozen pizza to the Japanese to Japan's top producer of frozen
foods.
Okawara acknowledged that although the times of overt racial and gender
discrimination have passed, both still exist. But such challenges should not be
deterrents to achieving success.
"We should forget petty discriminations and petty prejudices," she
said. "Let us forget them and go on with life, and let us see the bigger
picture."