Assunta Ng
Assunta Ng | |
|---|---|
| Occupations | Journalist; publisher |
| Known for | Founder and publisher of the Sing Tao Daily (San Francisco) |
Assunta Ng is Chinese-American community organizer and the publisher of Northwest Asian Weekly and Seattle Chinese Post, based in Seattle's Chinatown/International District.
Biography
[edit | edit source]Ng was born in China and raised in Hong Kong.[1] Ng got her first name, which means ascension, from an Italian priest when she was baptized.[2]
In 1971 at age 19, she immigrated to the United States from Hong Kong to attend the University of Washington (UW).[3] Ng wanted to relocate to the U.S. because her parents had low expectations for daughters and Ng did not want to become a housewife, which was what was modeled to her as she was growing up. At that time, she had the perception that only in America could a woman be free. After the first year, Ng supported herself for the rest of her college education. Her first job was as a dishwasher in a school cafeteria, and it paid $2.50 an hour. Ng also baby-sat and worked in restaurants to keep afloat.[2][4] She wrote for the Daily newspaper while at the UW, and she earned a bachelor's degree in international studies and education from the UW in 1974, a teaching certificate in 1976, and a master's degree in communications in 1979.[5]
Post-college, Ng taught social studies to children of immigrant families at Mercer Junior High School. She observed that many were lost in a strange new system. It was during this time that she became aware of the lack of information available to the local Chinese community. In 1982, Ng started with $25,000 of her own seed money and founded the Seattle Chinese Post. A year later in 1983, Ng founded the Northwest Asian Weekly, a Pan-Asian English-language weekly.[6][4]
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In 1986, Ng was one of 15 women who joined the Seattle chapter of Rotary International, before the parent organization allowed women to join.[6]
In 1996, Ng founded Women of Color Empowered, a tri-annual networking luncheon series that honors women of color who have made an impact in their local communities.[7][6] Through her nonprofit, the Northwest Asian Weekly Foundation, Ng has organized programs and scholarships to help disadvantaged youth and women, and she has raised more than $3 million for various charities and scholarships for foster children, University of Washington, Washington State University, Seattle University, and Seattle Community Colleges.[1]
In January 2023, Ng closed the Seattle Chinese Post after her husband was diagnosed with cancer a year earlier and she decided to retire. The Northwest Asian Weekly ceased its weekly print edition and became online-only. In September 2023, The Post was donated to the Tacoma-based Asia Pacific Cultural Center. In May 2024, the Asian Weekly was sold to four investors.[8]
See also
[edit | edit source]References
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- American women company founders
- American company founders
- Living people
- Hong Kong emigrants to the United States
- 21st-century American women
- University of Washington College of Arts and Sciences alumni
- American journalists of Chinese descent
- American women journalists of Asian descent
- Women magazine editors
- Alumni of the University of Hong Kong