Article 1: In brief, Hmong Food Helps Us Remember Who We Are: Perspectives of Food Culture and Health among Hmong Women with Young Children is a research conducted by Wa Vue, Cindy Wolff, and Keiko Goto to learn of Hmong women with young children view on the cultural food impact on health and socialization. The researchers reached out to women in the Hmong community who are mothers who have at least one child or more to conduct the research. The research is to learn how culturally appropriate impact Hmong mothers and their children’s health. In the same way, to learn the importance of how important culture food is to be consumed to benefit the health of an individual in that culture. The research found that in the Hmong community, Hmong cultural …show more content…
Children ages of nine to eighteen years old from the Hmong community in Minnesota were self-reported measures to collect information. Mulasi-Pokhiriyal and Smith found that the influences of Westernization and ideal of body image have impacted the growing generation of Hmong, an Asian ethnic group that migrated from Laos and Thailand to America after secretly assisting America with the Vietnam War conflict. The children reported that they have learned while living in Laos and Thailand, big and pulp images of a female were an ideal body image that was accepted for its believed wealth, health, and social lifestyle. While, on the other hand, a skinny and thin female would be found to lack of nutrition, health, and wealth. Highly influential in the Western culture, Hmong children now partake in disorder eating habits, be pressure to be skinny for their lack of finding a spouse by their elders, and find it to be a norm to achieve a require Western ideal body images. It can be found that body shaming and body image issue is now a growing issue in the Hmong …show more content…
As a young girl, I faced many body issues due to the influence of the media and family. In 2016, society has influenced Hmong parents to endorse the American ideal beauty and body. The influenced Hmong parents do not endorse the heavier beauty and body anymore. How do you see the information relating to your ethnic identity development? Throughout my life, I have been identified as a big girl. When I was in sixth grade, my height was 5’0 ft. and weighed 115 lbs. I was bullied by other Hmong children about me being too tall and too fat my grade. As an adult now, I am still facing body image issues. My body size is too big and I am too obese, which it is the result why I am still single and unwed. Society and the media have been influenced and blind children, adult and family member to see what is an ideal beauty and body. How useful is the information for social work practice? As a social work, the definition of ideal beauty and body by society and media has influenced many children and adult. A social worker can help and educate clients about appreciating their self and their body. The social worker can influence clients to endorse themselves and people around them. Clients will be able to develop positive attitudes toward ideal beauties and
The cultural collision and difference is described through the development of the story of Lia Lee who happens to be quite young, sick, and unable to stand for herself and her beliefs. Lee is a Hmong child and the narrative is an account of the blow by blow recount of the struggles and challenges as the two colliding cultures as they fight over the soul and the body of Lia Lee the Hmong sick girl. Lia’s outcome and ultimately her well-being is inevitable bound by the challenges of ensuring her best interest by all individual in her presence from both sides. The narrative indicates the complicated nature of the relationships inbound the two sides and thereby uncovers the power struggles from their intertwined relationships. Fadiman provides a scrupulous, fair, compassionate, and thorough presentation of the events thus providing an unbiased and balanced view of the sequential events.
Conclusion: The rich and vibrant culture of the Hmong people is slowing dying and its traditions will soon perish as well. The Hmong community have moved so far from their origin, and little at a time a piece of them were lost and some becoming distance to their own cultures.
The Hmong community in Aubigny-sur-Nère, France: the case study of a successful dialogue with the local authority to recognize the Hmong cultural identity. Introduction : The Hmong community is originally an ethnic group from China who, following persecutions, moved to Indochina (French colony), to settle in what will become later Laos. Several years later, the Hmong were “forced” to take part in the Indochina wars alongside with the French (1946-1954), and the American Secret War (1962-1975) to respectively fight against the Japanese imperialism and the “Vietnamization".
Social workers have several responsibilities. They have to provide service, justice, and dignity to a client. They have to possess integrity, competence, and patience. Social workers need to possess knowledge of human rights, and how to perform scientific inquiry. Social workers occasionally have cases in which problems ensue and a solution is not found within a certain time frame.
The Hmong Community is very new to the American society. In the last thirty years, more and more Hmong families had immigrated into the United States. While Minnesota has the largest Hmong population and California is second to that, Hmong resides all over the United States. Some of the popular states include Wisconsin, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Massachusetts. I decided to write my personal essay on the Hmong community because I am a Hmong woman fighting to reason and understand issues within my community.
I highly value culture and diversity in our society because it is a huge part of every American’s life, especially mine. I grew up as a Hmong American who was split in-between two distinct cultures, and I struggled of managing through two different cultures and their culture values. I developed many different perspectives on various topics and with the further exposure to health and higher education, I began to appreciate diversity, especially within my Hmong population. I realized the intersectionality of identities and the socioecological concerns a Hmong person may come across as they progress through life.
Many minority cultures in new areas commonly struggle to find ways to fit in with the American world around them while also keeping their own traditions; these themes are apparent in the poem “Some Old Hmong Woman” by Mayli Vang and “Without Title” by Daine Glancy. When groups of people move to different countries, especially America, it isn’t always easy to fit in. This theme is clear when comparing these two poems. Mayli Vang talks about some old Hmong woman who “lives in the yellow high-rise/projects of North Minneapolis.” This is a very big cultural shift due to the fact that she is used to living in a smaller community with fewer people and is more connected.
Hmong Community on Child Maltreatment Child maltreatment happens to any child regardless of their ethnicity groups, age, education, financial status, or living condition. Among the race/ethnicities in the United States, Asian has the lowest rate of living in poverty and the lowest rate of child abuse (IRP, 2012). Understanding the impact that poverty has on child maltreatment challenged the writer to look at a certain ethnicity group. The Hmong community is a group of people that can relate to both poverty and child maltreatment. Studies had shown that poverty has an impact on child abuse, yet there are not many reports made from the Hmong community in regards to child maltreatment.
Moreover, there is a misconception that Hmong people must identify themselves as Lao-Hmong simply because our parents and grandparents were from Laos. This stigmatism or ideology is what fueled the passion to promulgate Hmong people and their culture. More important, as older generations pass on, the knowledge of the culture, tradition, and heritage among Hmong-Americans will be lost if we remain stagnant. The time is now; we must collaborate and share our culture, our tradition, and our heritage. We must tell our Hmong story.
Ideas of what beauty should be are a simple influence by the media. These ideals can be a simple commercial that projects the image of beauty as thin, certain skin type, and hair length. A lasting impression is made on all who view these images. Fiji was once unbiased as to weight and outward appearance of others. The women would greet each other without remarks or negative tone toward one another.
Modern social workers are frequently tasked with certain objectives by their agencies, which leave little room for any work beyond specific treatments and timeframes (Gitterman & Knight, 2016). Although social workers are bound to the set of ethics put forth by the NASW, practitioners are often limited to focusing on the issues of the individual rather than the larger societal issues that may be behind those concerns. Additionally, many social work students end up working in direct practice, rather than macro work. There is a need for social workers to engage at the macro level in order to facilitate community organization and empowerment. Critics suggest this theory may not take into account the unique experiences of each individual and perhaps key characteristics of the individual or group are not taken into consideration (Sadan, 1997).
Men and women nowadays are starting to lose self-confidence in themselves and their body shape, which is negatively impacting the definition of how beauty and body shape are portrayed. “...97% of all women who had participated in a recent poll by Glamour magazine were self-deprecating about their body image at least once during their lives”(Lin 102). Studies have shown that women who occupy most of their time worrying about body image tend to have an eating disorder and distress which impairs the quality of life. Body image issues have recently started to become a problem in today’s society because of social media, magazines, and television.
Social workers are trained to assist in the interactions between the individual and his or her social environment. Julia, stated that once she truly explains what the role of a social worker is, her clients tend to need her more and they trust her. For example, her agency is in the process of providing health care services for family in need. One family, she helps needs her help desperately. She tries her best to help them in any way as possible and she doesn’t stop until she has fully achieved her goals as a social worker.
“Body dissatisfaction, negative body image, concern with body size, and shape represent attitudes of body image. ”(Dixit 1), women are so obsessed with looking good that they are missing out on enjoying
Body shaming is one of the biggest problems in today’s generation. It is the practice of making critical, potentially humiliating comments about a person’s body, size or weight. It is obvious that all of us come in different shapes and sizes but society and the media puts a lot of pressure on us with beauty stereotypes and standards to deem some as healthy and some not. Recently, there has been a lot of controversy recently about body image and body shaming, especially among teenagers. Body shaming is an extremely personal concept and can take a negative toll on a person.