Actions Panel
Nurses in the Diaspora Panel Discussion presented by Kularts
Join Kularts for online convenings centered around the upcoming project Nursing These Wounds.
When and where
Date and time
Wed, Mar 24, 2021 5:00 PM - 7:00 PM PDT
Location
Online
Refund Policy
About this event
Join Kularts for online convenings centered around the upcoming project Nursing These Wounds. Nursing These Wounds investigates the impacts of colonization on diasporic Pilipinx health and caregiving, particularly through the lens and stories of Pilipinx nurses, whose experiences with Westernized medical education and subsequent migrations laid the groundwork for the continuing global export of Pilipino labor, shaped the United States medical field, and created a fissure between traditional forms of knowledge and our community’s conceptions of well-being.
This panel made up of nurses and scholars, will dialogue on the history and state of Pilipinx nurses in the diaspora.
This project is funded by the William & Flora Hewlett Foundation and the San Francisco Arts Commission.
Moderated by Jason Magabo Perez, Ph.D.
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ABOUT THE MODERATORS
JASON MAGABO PEREZ, Ph.D., is a writer, performer, teacher, and scholar. Perez is the author of Phenomenology of Superhero (Red Bird Chapbooks, 2016) and This is for the Mostless (WordTech Editions, 2017). Recipient of an NEA Challenge America Grant, Perez has been a featured performer at notable venues such as National Asian American Theatre Festival, International Conference of the Philippines, La Jolla Playhouse, and Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions. Perez works as Assistant Professor of Ethnic Studies at California State University San Marcos, and is the current Artist-in-Residence at Center for Art and Thought (CA+T) and inaugural Community Arts Fellow at Bulosan Center.
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ABOUT THE PANELISTS
CATHERINE CENIZA CHOY, PhD., is a Professor of Ethnic Studies at UC Berkeley. She is the author of the award-winning book, Empire of Care: Nursing and Migration in Filipino American History (2003), which explored how and why the Philippines became the leading exporter of professional nurses to the United States. Catherine’s second book, Global Families: A History of Asian International Adoption in America (2013), unearths the little-known historical origins of Asian international adoption in the United States beginning with the post-World War II presence of the U.S. military in Asia. She is also the editor of the Brill book series Gendering the Trans-Pacific World. Catherine received her Ph.D. in History from UCLA, and her B.A. in History from Pomona College. The daughter of Filipino immigrants, she was born and raised in New York City. She lives in Berkeley with her husband and their two children.
HANEILY “HAN HAN” PABLEO, is a Filipina-Canadian artist and operating room nurse at Toronto General Hospital (the 4th best hospital in the world according to Newsweek) specializing in cardiac surgery. During the pandemic, she volunteered to be part of the Emergency Response Intubation Team (ERIT), the team responsible for intubating possible and/or confirmed COVID-19 patients. She is also currently hired as the TAVI (Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation) operating room coordinator in the hospital.
She was a volunteer disaster relief worker after typhoon Haiyan (Yolanda) in 2014 and 2015 with All Hands Volunteers: Project Leyte, an organization promoting community collaboration, cultural exchange and local empowerment.
Han Han can broadly be described as an emcee, using rap and spoken word techniques to deliver her vocals. Her approach is melodic, and she chooses to sing almost exclusively in Filipino languages — Tagalog and Cebuano — rather than shoehorning her ideas into translation in order to cater to English-speaking audiences. Her songs combine contemporary, 808-hip-hop beats with traditional Filipino rhythms and cadences, yielding fresh sounds that tend to spur dancing wherever they’re heard.
RITCHEL TAN GAZO, RN, MS, is a mother, a performer, an executive director, and a registered nurse. She has been a Registered Nurse since 2004, where she graduated with her Bachelors of Nursing from San Francisco State University. In 2008, Ritchel received her Masters in Nursing from UCSF as a Clinical Nurse Specialist: Neonatal. Shortly after the passing of her father who was in hospice care due to pancreatic cancer, Ritchel moved into a new spectrum of her nursing career as an After Hours and Hospice Advice Nurse providing advice care to the geriatric population in Skilled Nursing Facilities and Home Hospice patients. Ritchel’s nursing career took another turn when she landed the Pediatric and Adult Home Health Nurse/Case Manager position, where she currently has been working the last two years.
Ritchel's past experience includes employment at UCSF as a staff nurse II in their Intensive Care Nursery for 1 year, Mills Peninsula Hospital, Burlingame as a per diem staff nurse in the nursery and postpartum for 5 years, and Queen of the Valley Medical Center in Napa as a per diem nursery nurse.
CLAIRE VALDERAMA-WALLACE, PhD, MPH, RN, her journey has taken her from physiology (UCLA) to public health (George Washington University) to nursing (UCSF and UC Davis) in classrooms, clinical settings, and harm reduction based organizations. She is also a member of the grassroots Filipino/a/x women's organization, GABRIELA Oakland. She is currently an Assistant Professor in the Department of Nursing at California State University, East Bay, where she teaches Community Health Nursing, Community Engagement, and Epidemiology and Social Inequities. She recently assumed the role of MSN Program Coordinator and is eager to promote nursing leadership focused on serving the people and fighting for health equity. She stands upon the shoulders of ancestors, scholars, students, and kasamas. A vision for anticolonial, anti-imperialist, and anti-racist nursing education, research, and practice is what guides her pedagogy, service, and scholarship.
DAVID MONKAWA was FORMER Assistant National Organizing Director, California Nurse Association/NNU, AFL-CIO (retired). He organized as a “salt” (hired employee with specific purpose to organize non-union shops) in hospitals, warehouse-transport companies, and rubber factories.
He immigrated from Japan to Los Angeles, where he was raised in Crenshaw District and attended Dorsey High School. He attended the California Institute of the Arts due to Tudor Art program for inner city kids, which was a direct beneficiary of the Watts Rebellion. He co-chaired the National Coalition for Redress & Reparations, a Japanese American organization which won individual redress and apology for Japanese Americans thrown into Concentration Camps during World War 2.
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About the organizer
Founded in 1985, Kulintang Arts, Inc., now known popularly as Kularts, is the premier presenter of contemporary and tribal Pilipino arts in the United States. Through our three decades of service, Kularts has grown into a leading elder arts organization, uniting generations of artists and community activists in a common effort to build a collective space and sense of belonging within our city, specifically the SOMA Pilipinas: Filipino Cultural Heritage District. Kularts creates work that makes visible the contributions of Pilipino Americans and creates room for cultural continuity and knowledge.