AAPI – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu The official news site for Fordham University. Fri, 26 Apr 2024 17:40:32 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://now.fordham.edu/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/favicon.png AAPI – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu 32 32 232360065 Thousands of Alumni Return to Rose Hill for Homecoming Weekend https://now.fordham.edu/fordham-magazine/thousands-of-alumni-return-to-rose-hill-for-homecoming-weekend/ Wed, 21 Sep 2022 18:20:58 +0000 https://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=164093 The Fordham community showed up—and out—for Homecoming this year. Several thousand alumni, family, and friends flocked to Rose Hill on Saturday, September 17, for a sunny day of reunion and renewal. Some came for the food, drinks, and family-friendly fun. Some came to see old haunts and hear from Fordham’s new president, Tania Tetlow. And some came for the football.

In their first home game of the season, the undefeated Rams did not disappoint, rallying for 21 fourth-quarter points to secure a thrilling 48-45 victory before an enthusiastic crowd on Jack Coffey Field.

“Each and every visit is better than the one before,” said Julie (D’Attilio) Gautam, who has been coming back to campus since she earned a bachelor’s degree in finance from Fordham in 1989. “I think it looks beautiful, and I’m really excited for the next phase—the new president and bringing all of this incredible investment to building together without losing the spirit and history.”

Gautam’s son, Brij, is now a junior in the Gabelli School of Business, and on Saturday, she arrived early with her husband, Manish, and their daughter, Jaya, to take part in a campus tour led by Patricia Peek, Ph.D., FCRH ’90, GSAS ’92, ’07, dean of undergraduate admission.

Gautam Family (Photo by Kelly Prinz)

“I’m a senior in high school right now, but I’ve been coming to Homecoming my whole life, so I feel like I know the school, and I love the school, so I’m very excited to apply,” Jaya said after the tour, which was co-led by Ben Reilly, a Fordham College at Rose Hill senior.

Near the residence halls, Peek and Reilly joked that students might be sleeping in a bit after the semiformal President’s Ball, which kicked off at 9 p.m. on Friday and didn’t end until 1 in the morning. About 4,000 undergraduates from the Lincoln Center and Rose Hill campuses—the most to date—enjoyed dancing and refreshments under the tents on Edwards Parade, many getting their first chance to meet Fordham’s new president.

Meanwhile, recent graduates kicked off Homecoming weekend downtown with the Young Alumni Yacht Cruise on Friday night. The annual event, open this year to graduates from the classes of 2012 through 2022, drew about 800 alumni and friends. Together, they cruised around lower Manhattan while enjoying cocktails, dancing, and a buffet dinner.

And They’re Off

By 9 a.m. on Saturday, a few dozen members of the Fordham community had taken their marks near the McShane Campus Center for the 11th annual 5K Ram Run. Runners completed three loops around campus before finishing by the Victory Bell in front of the historic Rose Hill Gymnasium.

Michael Parrinello, a junior studying finance, ran with his sister, Lauren, for the second year in a row, as their parents, Michael and Theresa, cheered them on from sidelines. “It’s a fun time,” Michael Sr. said. “They look forward to the race, and we’re looking forward to the football game.”

Shannon Baurkot, FCRH ’23 (Photo by Chris Taggart)

Shannon Baurkot, a senior studying applied mathematics, was fired up to join alumni in the race. After her first lap, she leaped into the air to high-five Ramses, the Fordham mascot, before continuing down Constitution Row toward the University Church.

“It was a lot of fun,” she said. “Honestly, it’s just such a great way to start Homecoming; I couldn’t have asked for a better way.”

Welcoming a New President

After the Ram Run and campus tour, alumni and guests gathered in the Great Hall of the McShane Campus Center, where President Tania Tetlow shared some words of welcome in a fireside-style chat with Sally Benner, FCRH ’84, chair of the Fordham University Alumni Association (FUAA) Advisory Board.

The discussion came a few days after Tetlow’s first State of the University address, where she emphasized the power of the University as a “force multiplier” and an “agent of change.”

“When you look at the trajectory of schools, the ones where alumni really invest—and by that I mean in all of the ways that you do—those are the ones that lean forward,” Tetlow told the Homecoming audience. “So, the fact that Fordham alumni are so engaged, that they want to pay forward the opportunity they received here, that they care so much about this place, that’s a big part of why we are where we are today.”

Field Full of Memories

After the session, Tetlow headed to Edwards Parade to greet alumni, students, families, and friends as they entered the Homecoming tents. More than 2,000 people enjoyed boxed lunches, drinks, games, music, and even some shopping for Fordham-themed jewelry and swag while catching up with each other and learning about upcoming alumni events and one of the University’s newest alumni affinity groups.

As he hung out in the loyal donor tent, Richard Calabrese, FCRH ’72, recalled his days playing quarterback on an intramural football team. “On this very field,” he said, “there are good memories. It was fun. Our fall afternoons were great.”

Homecoming fell on roughly the same date that Calabrese and his wife, Angela, a 1972 College of New Rochelle graduate, met at an on-campus party more than five decades ago. They come to Homecoming every few years from their Florida home. “Today is probably going to be the best experience we’ve ever had here—based on the people we’re with, and the weather,” he said.

He and Angela were visiting with their friends Jacqueline and Fred Schwanwede, both members of the Class of 1972 who were on the sailing team as students.

Asked about his best Fordham memory, Fred pointed to Jacqueline and said just two words: “meeting her.”

Acosta Family (Photo by Patrick Verel)

Across the grass, in the family tent, Michelle Acosta, FCRH ’98, and her husband, Mark, sat with their 6-year-old daughter, Valentina, who’d availed herself of the face painting station. The couple got married at the University Church in 2010, and Michelle, a philosophy major who has since gone on to practice law on Long Island, had made it a point to come to just about every Homecoming. After a three-year hiatus, she said it was great to be back.

“It truly feels like coming home. There’s the familiar sights, the familiar energy, and there are also new things I haven’t had a chance to check out since the last timeI was here,” she said.

“Valentina has seen all the pictures of our wedding and we like to take her back there, too, to see the church where we got married. I think she definitely can participate more and she’ll have more of a memory. The last time we went to the football game, she was so little, and she was afraid of the Ram. I don’t think that’ll happen this year,” she said laughing.

Harnessing the Spirit of Homecoming to Spread Awareness

J. Iris Kim, GABELLI ’07, and Mark Son, LAW ’10 (Photo by Kelly Prinz)

Elsewhere, in the main tent, J. Iris Kim, GABELLI ’07, and Mark Son, LAW ’10, helmed a table where they spoke with alumni and students about the Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) alumni chapter, established in 2020 by Christopher P. Lee, FCRH ’71, LAW ’79, amid rising incidents of anti-Asian aggression across New York City and the country.

It’s been a little challenging for them to connect with alumni in person during the pandemic, which is why Kim and Son, two of the group’s co-leaders, decided to set up a table at this year’s Homecoming.

“We want to promote AAPI issues and just awareness of our presence on campus,” Kim said. “We’re relatively new, so we’re just really trying to get our name out there. We’re also hoping to connect with some of the student groups on campus, so we can have that connection with the students who will become alums.”

Son said that they’ve been advocating and supporting work taking place at the University toward creating an Asian American studies program. With support from two University grants—an Arts & Sciences Deans’ Challenge Grant and a Teaching Race Across the Curriculum Grant from the chief diversity officer—a group of Fordham professors is currently developing a curriculum for a minor in the subject.

“May is AAPI Heritage Month, so we’ve been celebrating every year,” said Son, who noted that the group is also working to add programming and partnerships, including with the New Jersey Performing Arts Center and Fordham Law School’s Center on Asian Americans and the Law. The goal of all this work, he said, is to build Fordham pride and “get more people to come out and support these issues.”

Alumni Bookworms Are Back for Round Two

Stacey D’Erasmo chats with Sean McCooe, FCRH ’84, who said he’s excited to join the book club with his wife and mother—all of them are avid readers. (Photo by Sierra McCleary-Harris)

Other attendees stopped by a table piled high with copies of The Complicities, the new novel from Stacey D’Erasmo, associate professor of English at Fordham University. Chosen for the latest Forever Fordham Alumni Book Club, The Complicities tells the story of Suzanne Flaherty, a woman attempting to rebuild her life after her now ex-husband is found guilty of financial crimes and sentenced to prison.

Maureen Corrigan-Connell, GRE ’94, ’95, a Yonkers-based Montessori teacher, said she’s looking forward to reading D’Erasmo’s other books after she finishes The Complicities. She decided to read the novel, and join the alumni book club, in memory of her husband, John, a 1974 graduate of Fordham College at Rose Hill who was an avid reader.

She’s also enjoying the break from education books.

“When the school year is in, it’s education books and all things Montessori, so I must say that when I do pick up a book I like a certain amount of romance, fiction, and history that dates to a place that I haven’t been.”

Tales from the Tailgate

In the parking lot, Blaine and Missy Lavergne were enjoying their first time tailgating on the Rose Hill campus. The couple, natives of Lafayette, Louisiana, were there to support their daughter Maggie, a first-year Fordham College at Lincoln Center student and a member of the cheerleading squad.

The Lavergnes are big Louisiana State University fans, but for the occasion, they were dressed to the hilt in maroon. Both sported custom-made sneakers with the Fordham logo that one of their other daughters had made for the occasion, and Blaine had fashioned a Fordham flag into a cape. Their spread was merely a test run for Family Weekend on October 1, when they plan to return with the whole family to cheer on Fordham football against Georgetown.

Blaine and Missy Lavergne (Photo by Patrick Verel)

“Maggie interviewed at all of these out-of-state schools, and she just fell in love with Fordham,” Blaine said. “As a Catholic dad, it just fired me up that she would choose a Catholic university. She’s in the best of both worlds: She’s here at a traditional campus, and she gets the beauty of New York and Broadway in Manhattan. It doesn’t get any better than that.”

A few spots away, Lea O’Rourke, a senior at the Gabelli School of Business, was playing cornhole and enjoying coffee and bagels with friends and her parents, Barbara and Kevin. Barbara’s father, Marc Angelillo Jr., FCLC ‘50, played football when he was an undergraduate, and she has fond memories of visiting Rose Hill as a child.

“We grew up coming to the alumni weekends, where he would reconnect with all of his friends,” she said. “My father would drag all six children here and we would enjoy the day.”

For Leah, this year’s Homecoming felt like a long time coming. She attended her first in 2019, but she didn’t know many people at the time, and for the past two years, the pandemic made it challenging to really enjoy the day.

“I am ready for the first of the last tailgates. They are so well put together by my mom, and I’m just so excited. It’s crazy that that was my freshman year,” she said remembering 2019, “and now we’re here.”

Rams Remain Undefeated

At 1 p.m., fans made their way to Jack Coffey Field to watch the then 2-0 Rams take on the University at Albany Great Danes. The Rams jumped out to a 10-0 lead in the first quarter, but they soon fell behind in what became a back-and-forth contest.

Staring at an 11-point deficit with 15 minutes to go, senior quarterback Tim DeMorat was unfazed. He led his team to a 21-point fourth quarter and a thrilling 48-45 victory. The win brought the Rams to 3-0 on the season—the team’s best start since 2013, when Fordham advanced to the second round of the FCS playoffs and finished the year ranked No. 10 in the country.

John J. Pettenati, FCRH ’81, took in the action on the field from the roof of one of the trailers reserved for members of the Maroon Club. A history major who would go on to work in the banking industry, he’s been a season ticket holder since his days as an undergraduate.

“We are a football school,” he said. “And it’s great, bringing alumni and students together in the fall. To me, this is the easiest thing to do. I mean, it’s not terribly expensive, it’s entertaining, I’m supporting my college, and I’m outside. Those are all wonderful things.”

—Kelly Prinz, Ryan Stellabotte, Chris Gosier, and Patrick Verel contributed to this story. Video by Tom Stoelker and Taylor Ha.

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Seniors Celebrate at Diversity Graduations https://now.fordham.edu/university-news/seniors-celebrate-at-diversity-graduations/ Mon, 16 May 2022 18:23:02 +0000 https://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=160512 Three women smiling women looking at patches Man in yellow stole holding certificate Group in yellow stoles Woman donning stole Group applauding Group wearing red stoles Man accepting certificate man and two women--one holding certificate People sittitng at table in masks Woman holding certificate with balloons in background group sitting at table wearing black stoles Man speakig at podium Young woman holding certificate and smiling Patrick Hornbeck speaks to audience with rainbow colored balloons in bakcground Dozens of senior students celebrated at Diversity Graduation ceremonies in early May, toasting to their accomplishments while honoring their culture and identity.

The celebrations took place from May 2–6 at the Rose Hill and Lincoln Center campuses, honoring students from the Black, Latinx, LGBTQ, and Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) communities. Seniors received colored stoles, certificates, and other items that symbolized their identity.

Juan Carlos Matos, assistant vice president for student affairs for diversity and inclusion, said the events drew a lot of excitement this year, with students buzzing about the celebrations beforehand and younger classmates leading the planning process.

“I think being able to create a tradition that folks look forward to and a culminating experience that connects back to people’s identity and culture is an important thing for the Fordham community,” he said.

Dorothy Bogen is a Fordham College of Rose Hill sophomore who served as a programming coordinator for the LGBTQ History Month committee of the Office of Multicultural Affairs, which ran the Diversity Graduations.

In her role she also led the planning for other events, including the Lavender graduation ceremony for LGBTQ seniors, which featured an appearance from theology Professor Patrick Hornbeck, Ph.D.

“Professor Hornbeck gave an inspiring speech (even with a fire drill interruption!) and it was awesome to feel the joy and the energy in the room as students were called up to receive their stoles,” said Bogen, an American Studies and Film and Television major from Cleveland. “We also got to connect with the Rainbow Rams (the alumni group for Fordham LGBTQ graduates), and their representatives also gave great speeches on both campuses.”

Arianna Chen, a Fordham College at Rose Hill senior from Wayne, New Jersey, attended the AAPI ceremony. She said she was grateful that the Office of Multicultural Affairs hosted these events and took the time to “acknowledge and celebrate the unique experiences held by students of varying identities.”

“It was important for me to participate in the Diversity Graduation ceremony because my identity has been a key part of my Fordham experience, not only as a DEI student activist, but also just a student of color navigating a predominantly white institution,” she said.

Chen received an AAPI stole and ACE (Asian Cultural Exchange) pin that she said she is “so looking forward to proudly donning at [her]Commencement ceremony.”

Matos said there was a “mix of support, love, and joy” at the events, each of which featured a recorded greeting from Joseph M. McShane, S.J., president of Fordham.

“Students being able to celebrate with their peers and be celebrated was a huge deal,” he said.

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Friends from Distant Quarters: Celebrating Lunar New Year with Fordham’s Newest Alumni Group https://now.fordham.edu/fordham-magazine/friends-from-distant-quarters-celebrating-lunar-new-year-with-fordhams-newest-alumni-group/ Thu, 24 Feb 2022 21:23:38 +0000 https://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=157726 Story and photos by B.A. Van Sise, FCLC ’05. Above: Mark Son, a 2010 Fordham Law graduate, and his son Aaron set off confetti poppers during Lunar New Year celebrations in Manhattan on February 12, 2022.It begins with a roar: lion dancers are marching through the streets brigaded by drummers pounding away, snare and bass, with children smashing cymbals to their sides. It is nearly mid-February, the second weekend of the perennial Lunar New Year celebrations that roll across Gotham’s Chinatown every winter, and the parade up Mott Street is a carnival of color and noise; all of this is, by tradition, to scare away the bad spirits, the evil things that lurk around hostile corners, the menaces that loom large over all new years. The lion dancers, two aside in unwieldy costumes, are darting in and out of fish stalls, jewelry shops, any place with an open door and a want for blessing. One cannot hear the keening of demons scurrying out, but the whole thing is impressive enough that one is sure it must be happening.

Here, in a poorly lit first-floor food court on Mott Street, members and guests of the Asian American and Pacific Islander Alumni at Fordham Affinity Chapter turn their heads, suddenly, when the ruckus rambles through the door. Chinatown’s lions have arrived to let the Fordham Rams know about the Year of the Tiger.

Across two large tables, this sprawling, multigenerational group is united by some shared heritage and a lot of shared history: Their families came from China, Korea, and Burma, and now they’ve brought their own spouses and children to dine over char siu bao, congee, rice noodles with dried shrimp, sesame balls with red bean paste, fry bread, and kimchi. Tea tops the table all over: some steaming, some iced with boba bubbles.

An adult helps a young child cut food using plastic utensils.Everyone here has some connection to Fordham University. Sure, the school was founded in 1841 primarily for Irish, Catholic immigrants by an Irish immigrant who became the first archbishop of New York, but today it’s everybody. “Is it not delightful,” Confucius asked more than two millennia ago, “to have friends coming from distant quarters?” Some are alumni, some are current students; one man, a Navy lifer, is here just because his two kids went to Fordham and he’s proud about it.

The group formed just a year ago, but that’s not surprising: The pandemic period has been particularly turbulent for Asian Americans, with sporadic incidents of anti-Asian aggression growing more and more frequent. The FBI estimates a 73% increase in such events across the country in 2020, with many of them occurring in New York City. This has led to waves of protest and acts of solidarity amid concerns about how anti-Asian bias is affecting young people in particular.

“I got involved last year,” says Mark Son, a 2010 Fordham Law graduate and one of three co-leaders of the group, which was founded by the Hon. Christopher P. Lee, FCRH ’71, LAW ’79. “I was worried about the anti-Asian-American hate crime. I think it was very important to do this sort of work, trying to keep a voice present in the conversation.”

Son, a principal law clerk with the New York State Supreme Court in the Bronx, views the community and its foundation as a building block to social justice, growth, and learning. “Students had expressed concern,” he adds, “and we wanted alumni to create a network. Even within the Asian American community, we have different subsets: Chinese, Koreans—Kyaw,” he points to Fordham senior Kyaw Hein, eating pork dumplings and listening in on the conversation—“is from Burma. We have a guy from Tonga. So it’s a learning experience for us, as well.”

Edwin Wong, another co-leader of the group, notes how much things have changed from the time he earned an M.B.A. at Fordham’s Gabelli School of Business. “In 2004, it was getting there,” he says of the University’s growing Asian American population, “and now we’ve got lots of Koreans, Chinese, Filipinos, and South Asians—a distribution list of more than a thousand people. Before, people took it for granted, but now people are getting engaged with the community.”

Edwin Wong, pictured at the Chinese Consolidated Benevolent Association in Manhattan, February 2022.
Edwin Wong at the Chinese Consolidated Benevolent Association in Manhattan. He co-leads the Asian American and Pacific Islander alumni group, along with Mark Son and J. Iris Kim, GABELLI ’07.

While at Fordham, Wong says he started what he calls the Fordham Asian Business Network for students and alumni eager to draw on the collective strength of a growing community in a shrinking world. “You need a network, so I started that,” he says, noting that he and many of the alumni in the group would love to see Fordham launch an Asian American studies program that would grow to become as prominent as the University’s departments of African and African American and Latin American and Latino studies, which have their roots in the late 1960s. (This work is already underway: With support from two University grants—an Arts & Sciences Deans’ Challenge Grant and a Teaching Race Across the Curriculum Grant from the chief diversity officer—a group of 10 Fordham professors is developing a curriculum for a minor in Asian American studies.) Son says that he looks forward to seeing “a community that’s more welcoming,” with more Asian Americans teaching as professors and in leadership positions.

With their small children bedecked in maroon college apparel, some toddling if they’re able to walk at all, the alumni say they plan to return to the neighborhood in just a week, when the largest new year celebrations will kick off. “My hope is that in the future,” says Wong, “we could have a Fordham group march in the larger Manhattan Lunar New Year parade, the same way that Fordham participates in the annual St. Patrick’s Day Parade.”

After lunch, they all move through streets chockablock with onlookers and revelers wearing masks, playing games, throwing small fireworks against the sidewalk, and shooting off confetti poppers. The group rambles through the narrow lanes, lingering on Bayard Street, home to many iconic businesses such as the Mei Lai Wah Bakery and the Chinatown Ice Cream Factory. At the Chinese Consolidated Benevolent Association, President Justin Yu welcomes the group, offering them—you guessed it—more food. They talk about both Fordham and their community’s future in a changing world for Asian Americans while nibbling on sweet sponge cake.

It’s not hard to see, as parents unwrap snacks for their littlest, who they have in mind. After all, it’s a new year.

Lion dancers strut down Mott Street in Manhattan's Chinatown neighborhood during Lunar New Year celebrations on February 12, 2022.
Lion dancers strut down Mott Street on February 12, 2022.

Learn more about the Asian American and Pacific Islander Alumni at Fordham Affinity Chapter on the group’s web page and its Facebook and Instagram accounts.

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Class of 2021 Diversity Graduation Celebrations https://now.fordham.edu/commencement/commencement-2021/class-of-2021-diversity-graduation-celebrations/ Wed, 12 May 2021 16:45:53 +0000 https://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=149159 Photos by Chris Taggart and courtesy of the Office of Multicultural AffairsMembers of the Class of 2021 celebrated their heritage and culture at four Diversity Graduation Celebrations from May 4 to 6; Latinx graduation; Black graduation; AAPI (Asian American and Pacific Islander) graduation; and Lavender graduation, for LGBTQ students.

When their names were called, graduates were honored with special stoles, pins, and other items celebrating their culture. Faculty and staff offered words of praise and encouragement, both virtually and in person. Speakers included Chief Diversity Officer Rafael Zapata, political science professor Christina Greer, and Joseph M. McShane, S.J., president of Fordham.

Orange stole with fower pin Male graduate with orange stole at Latinx graduation Rafael Zapata speaking with balloons in background Graduate receiving orange stole and pin at Latinx graduation Graduate receiving orange stole at Latinx graduation Graduate receiving orange stole at Latinx graduation Graduates with orange stoles and balloons at Latinx Graduation Graduate rewith orange stoles at Latinx graduation Students posing in front of rainbow balloons at LGBTQ Lavender Graduation Students posing in front of rainbow balloons at LGBTQ Lavender Graduation with lavender stoles Student receiving white rose at LGBTQ Lavender Graduation Students posing in front of rainbow balloons at LGBTQ Lavender Graduation with lavender stoles Woman at podium with screen behind her Students posing in front of rainbow balloons at LGBTQ Lavender Graduation Student receiving white rose at LGBTQ Lavender Graduation Studnet clapping at LGBTQ Lavender Graduation Students posing with diplomas in front of ballons at Black graduation celebration Professor Christina Greer at Black graduation celebraiton on screen Student with purple hair at Black graduation celebration Studnet receiving rose at Black graduation celebration Student with Black stole at Black graduation celebration Juan Carlos Matos on screen at Black graduation celebration Student on screen at Black graduation celebration Students posing with balloons at Black graduation celebration Students with yellow stoles at AAPI graduation celebration Student with yellow stole at AAPI graduation celebration Student receiving yellow stole at AAPI graduation celebration in red dress Student with log white dress at AAPI graduation Student speaking at podium at AAPI graduation Patches with country names and flags at AAPI graduation Student receiving yellow stole at AAPI graduation celebration Student with yellow stole at AAPI graduation celebration Student with Rafael Zapata at AAPI graduation Student holding diploma at AAPI graduation Student receiving yellow stole at AAPI graduation celebration Students with yellow stoles and diplomas at AAPI graduation Yellow stole that says Class of 2021

Celebrations were held at both the Lincoln Center and Rose Hill campuses. They were sponsored by the Office of Multicultural Affairs and the Office of the Chief Diversity Officer in conjunction with the President’s Office and Senior Week.

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Students Celebrate Lunar New Year with Weeklong Festivities https://now.fordham.edu/arts-and-culture/students-celebrate-lunar-new-year-with-weeklong-festivities/ Wed, 17 Feb 2021 17:54:41 +0000 https://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=145757 Firework shows, street parades, and big family meals—that’s what a typical Lunar New Year looks like. But like everything else, COVID has affected the biggest holiday of the year for many people of Asian descent.

Friday, Feb. 12, marked the beginning of this Lunar New Year, and while large gatherings were not possible, Fordham’s Asian American & Pacific Islander (AAPI) Committee still wanted to host a special week of events for students to celebrate. The festivities included virtual and in-person events at both Rose Hill and Lincoln Center that took place all of last week, to usher in the incoming Year of the Ox.

“I really thought it was beneficial to celebrate Lunar New Year this way,” said Noreen Samantha Bautista, FCRH ’21, AAPI’s cultural programming coordinator. “Having programming for the whole week I felt did the holiday justice.”

Kenneth Tang, FCLC ’25, member of the Fordham AAPI committee at Lincoln Center, said AAPI had seven events planned out beginning on Monday of last week. The events included a virtual trivia night, tabling on campus where students could pick up traditional red envelopes and chocolate coins, a virtual viewing of the Netflix film Over the Moon, and a build-your-own ox and lantern event at Rose Hill.

Bautista said she was pleased to see non-AAPI students interested in learning more about the Lunar New Year celebrations during the tabling event at Rose Hill.

“I even overheard one conversation,” she recounted. “They were like, ‘Oh, I got a red envelope,’ and then they asked me what it was. And then I told them, ‘You give it to your loved one, and usually put money in it.’ And they were like, ‘Oh, I’m going to do that right now.’ So it was cool to see things expanding and spreading cross-culturally.”

Though celebrations were toned down, one positive from this year was the cross-collaboration between campuses. The Rose Hill and Lincoln Center AAPI committees usually function independently of each other, said Gabrielle Abrazaldo, FCLC ’23, AAPI’s programming liaison. But this year’s planning was a true joint effort.

“It came to that point where I think that the committee started to blur,” she said. “We didn’t know who was in which campus because we were all online at the same time. We just saw ourselves as one group, which was really nice.”

Every Asian country celebrates the Lunar New Year a little differently, and Bautista said she wanted to make sure everyone felt represented. “We wanted to make sure that all of the subcommittee members of AAPI had a voice because I know this was also a very intimate holiday, and everyone celebrated it their own way.”

Tang, whose family is of Chinese descent, said that his family usually has a big celebration. “Normally we just get as many family members as possible, and then gather around a big table to eat a really big dinner,” he said. “After the dinner, we usually just hand out red envelopes, and call it a night.”

While Lunar New Year isn’t typically celebrated amongst Filipino communities, Bautista and Abrazaldo both appreciated being a part of the holiday this year. “It was still fun to learn more about the holiday and celebrate with my AAPI family,” said Bautista.

“When I joined the community last year, it was my first time really understanding what Lunar New Year was,” Abrazaldo said. 

“It was nice to be able to not only learn more about it but help create on Fordham’s campus an experience that they would enjoy. Especially during COVID, since a lot of people can’t get to their families, having that virtual component and being able to celebrate regardless of the pandemic going around I think was really important.”

AAPI students during a Zoom virtual event. Photo by Gabrielle Abrazaldo
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