Seattle Community Leaders

 

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I started this project because of the welcomeness that I felt in the African American community during the hardest time in my life and because of the stories and injustice that I saw and heard in Seattle. It was 2019, and as an international student, I heard the people sitting next to me telling me the horrible stories just like the ones told on textbooks and in movies. After some research on the Internet, I started reaching out to people and began a photo project on gentrification. 

Gentrification is just one part of a bigger problem, but the media is focusing on it right now as tech companies are expanding in Seattle along with all the developments for more luxury apartments, hotels, sports arena, and office buildings. People are leaving due to increasing rent, increasing tax, or waiting for redevelopment. Communities are broken apart, and as Seattle Central’s Professor Carl Livingston once said, “they aren’t forming it in Auburn or in Kent.” 

I first got in touch with Professor Livingston at Seattle Central College. He was my Political Science professor back in 2015, and I came across his name several times when I was searching gentrification in Seattle online. He welcomed me to his community and has since introduced me to Mr. John Yasutake, Former State Representative Dr. Dawn Mason, and Mr. Gabriel Prawl. These connections lead to other amazing opportunities and people. For example, Mr. Yasutake introduced me to Mrs. Dorothy Cordova. There are many people that I met and would love to interview, but it is also important for me to concentrate on only a few in order to sort through what I really want to talk about. 

As I develop relationships through interviewing and shadowing them, my view on this project becomes less about gentrification but more around community leadership and how community comes together to battle and tackle issues. These five leaders/members all represent different aspects of a community. They are all bridges of the community, physically connecting people together through their work and virtually passing their knowledge and wisdom to the next generation and the public. 

Professor Livingston, a pastor as well, devoted himself in the church community while supporting students at Seattle Central College not only as a professor but also as a mentor. His leadership is not only presented in his activities among the pastoral coalitions but also exemplified in his efforts to bring up the next generation. Mr. Yasutake has been working in the government for equity among all people; his connection in the Asian- and African-American communities is a testament to how everyone can come together despite their race or ethnicity. Dr. Mason was a State Representative from 1995 to 1999 and is known for her continuing leadership in public affairs, specifically in the education sector in recent years. Mr. Prawl knows that in order to get the win for all people, everyone must come together without personal agenda, so he sacrifices his time and money to hold meetings, events, and forums to connect diverse communities and educate the next generation. Mrs. Cordova is the gatekeeper for the little known history of Seattle and Filipino Americans. In her office, there are boxes after boxes of documents, photos, and posters of different people, events, and groups. Seattle’s culture and history live inside her brain, her home, and her storage; she hopes people understand that everyone — whether white, black, Asian, African, or European — all lived in the same area in Seattle before war, laws, and human-force separates people.

Each of the leaders in this project represents different sectors of public affair that are crucial for a community to come together. Professor Livingston, Mr. Yasutake, Dr. Mason, Mr. Prawl, and Mrs. Cordova are all working in different places and organizations focusing on distinct subjects and areas. Through church, civic government, schools, public representatives, unions, and cultural groups and coalitions, people have a chance to join together not only for public affairs but also for leisure. Through shadowing these leaders for interviews and at different functions, I realize that people will not fight together if there is no common respect or love for each other, and all of the community leaders in my project have known or worked with each other in one way or another, and there is a common respect between them that make them support each other and work together. Each sector of public affair has their own leaders, and the leaders of each sector comes together to unite everyone for a bigger cause. 

I was trying to document Seattle’s gentrification and to find a solution for it when I started. However, at the end, I found out that gentrification did not simply begin in the recent five or ten years. The fight has always been there, and the problems are still the same for everyone, whether you are white, black, yellow, or whatever. When people recognize the work and need to come together with these leaders along with the wonderful people I’ve met and heard, the inequalities and injustices in Washington State can come to an end.

 

This is a compilation of Seattle community leaders' audio monologue and photos from my photography project, Seattle Community Leaders, featuring Pastor and Professor Carl Livingston, Mr. John Yasutake, Former State Rep. Dawn Mason, Mr. Gabriel Prawl, and Mrs. Dorothy Cordova.