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CSPP Alumna Awarded Peace Prize Posthumously

樱花视频
Published on: 12/06/2012
Last Updated: 05/08/2023
4 minute read

KoreAm Journal , News Report, Posted: Dec. 05, 2012

The California Wellness Foundation is posthumously honoring Su Yon Park this month with its Peace Prize Award in recognition of her efforts to prevent violence and promote peace in Oakland neighborhoods, where she worked for eight years. Park, who battled breast cancer, passed away Sept. 20 at the age of 41 in San Francisco.

Born in Korea, Park grew up in Las Vegas, Nev., and studied at Redlands University, then got her Psy.D in 2000 from California School of Professional Psychology in San Francisco. A licensed psychologist, she joined the Children鈥檚 Hospital and Research Center Oakland in 2004 and helped establish a mental health clinic on the campus of Youth UpRising, adjacent to a local high school. As the sole clinician serving youth in a community ravaged by multigenerational poverty, violence and high rates of post-traumatic stress disorder, she is credited with helping to 鈥渘ormalize mental health鈥 by making services more accessible. The center now boasts the highest rate of mental health utilization among Alameda County adolescent health clinics.

Olis Simmons, president and CEO of Youth UpRising, recalled when Park first showed up for work at the organization. She admitted she was skeptical of how this Korean American woman would handle working in a neighborhood that was 鈥渕ostly black and brown鈥 and challenged by violence and poverty. But Simmons soon learned that this 鈥淜orean chick is gangster.鈥

Simmons, who would become close friends with Park, later found out that Park had lost her mother at age 5, then her father at age 11, and was raised by an aunt and uncle. She believes that background may explain why Park connected so deeply with the youth, many of whom had experienced terrible trauma and felt abandoned. 鈥淣ow I understand why Su moved into a neighborhood where none of the people looked like her, and never missed a beat,鈥 said Simmons. 鈥淚f you can see their hearts and their needs, then you can connect with them, and connecting with them is the only way to really help them. And she learned that as a child.鈥

Park served as a surrogate parent to many youth, and one teenage girl in particular used to call her 鈥渕om,鈥 said Simmons. After Park鈥檚 death, this girl, Danielle, met Park鈥檚 parents (her aunt and uncle) and said, 鈥淥h, you鈥檙e Mom鈥檚 parents!鈥

Danielle is 鈥渞eally dark-skinned, really voluptuous, long eyelashes, big weave, and this Korean family is looking at her like, 鈥榳hat the hell are you talking about?鈥欌 recalled Simmons, laughing. 鈥淪u had that relationship with a lot of people. The No. 1 lesson she told Danielle was, no matter what, it鈥檚 going to be OK. You have to keep showing up and doing your best, and no matter what, it will be OK. For so many children, no one is there to do that.鈥

Hundreds celebrated Park鈥檚 life Oct. 12 at a memorial at Youth UpRising.

Park is also credited with helping to strengthen mental health services in West Oakland by forging partnerships with a local school鈥檚 principal, teachers and students. Realizing the impact of violence on youth in the area, she provided training for teachers and school staff to assist students exposed to trauma.

On Dec. 12, the California Wellness Foundation鈥檚 will honor Park, along with two others, at a ceremony that is part of a larger violence prevention conference in Los Angeles. In recognition of their efforts to prevent violence and promote peace, the honorees are also given a cash award of $25,000 each.

Park is survived by her parents, Yong and Sook Park, four sisters (Mindy Leigh, Hee Tsutsui, Ju Lawrence, and Cindy No), and her loving nieces, nephews, and numerous other relatives.

Information on tributes or donations on behalf of Su Park can be found at:

Source:

Ha, J. (2012, Dec. 5). Mental Health Clinician Awarded Peace Prize Posthumously. KoreAm Journal, December 2012. Retrieved from

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