PRSRT STD U.S. Postage Paid Permit No. 746 Seattle, WA
VOL 41 NO 40 OCTOBER 1 – OCTOBER 7, 2022
FREE 40 YEARS YOUR VOICE
CID community members say NO! to homeless shelter expansion, express pain and anger at county council meeting
THE INSIDE STORY NAMES IN THE NEWS Bruce Lee mural repainted and replaced after theft 3 A&E Chinese-German filmmaker Eckelberg celebrates lion dancing, heritage, and dual cultures 8
Photo by Assunta Ng
EDITORIAL Homeless shelter expansion death knell for the CID? 9
Community members and supporters of the CID line up outside to protest a homeless shelter expansion.
By Mahlon Meyer NORTHWEST ASIAN WEEKLY Almost 100 residents from the Chinatown-International District (CID), attended a King County Council meeting that took place on Sept. 27 to protest a homeless shelter expansion.
see PROTEST on 12
Pacific Northwest Ballet celebrates 50th season featuring set design by the late Ming Cho Lee and dancer Angelica Generosa
see PNB on 13
see SATI on 12
■
Photo provided by Sati Mookherjee
Kent Stowell and Francia Russell, as well as principal dancer, Angelica Generosa, about the season opener, “Carmina Burana,” and its famous set designer, Ming Cho Lee.
Bellingham, Washington, population 92,000. Kolkata (formerly known as Calcutta), India, population almost 4.5 million. A study in contrasts. But poet Sati Mookherjee, who spent school years in the former and summers in the latter, finds some surprising similarities. “I’ve never thought about it before, but both first memories involve sunlight,” recalled Mookherjee, who reads from her new book “Eye,” at the University Book Store on Oct. 5. “My [first] Bellingham memory is of sun filling the picture window of our 1950s ranch house (where my parents still live), over a green carpet. I remember the sensation of my toddler body hurtling toward my mother, her arms outstretched, and I remember sensing the gaze of my father over me, warm as the sensation of light.
Image courtesy of PNB
The 2022/2023 season marks Pacific Northwest Ballet (PNB)’s 50th year on stage in Seattle. The Weekly spoke with co-founders and former artistic directors,
A poetic ‘Eye’: Sati Mookherjee on fate, fish, and stick shifts By Andrew Hamlin NORTHWEST ASIAN WEEKLY
Angelica Generosa dancing with Dylan Wald in a prior performance of Carmina Burana.
By Kai Curry NORTHWEST ASIAN WEEKLY
PICTORIAL Seattle Symphony Orchestra 2022 10
They shared stories of break-ins, assaults, harassment, property destruction, and other personal violence. They all returned to a common theme: Their community is no longer safe. “I was raped in the CID,” said the last speaker, communicating
Sati Mookherjee
412 Maynard Ave. S., Seattle, WA 98104 • t. 206.223.5559 • f. 206.223.0626 • editor@nwasianweekly.com • ads@nwasianweekly.com • www.nwasianweekly.com