Success Stories

IRCO is proud to share it’s success stories. Each successful transition into a new American life is due to the hard work and cooperation on the part of the client, agency and community.
 



Former IRCO Arts Program Client Featured in Local Gallery

E-mail Print PDF

Portland artist Minh Quang Phan was born in Saigon, Vietnam. After studying city planning and architecture, she worked as an educator and painter in both France and Vietnam. She came to the United States in 1995, where she has continued to work as a painter, producing watercolors on silk and also participating in IRCO’s “Arts for New Immigrants” program.  Inspired by her memories of South Vietnam she often paints landscapes, flowers, and still lifes. Although she grew up in the city, her mother often took her to visit the rural region of Bac Lieu, the memory of which inspired Minh Quang Phan’s paintings. “With my paintbrush,” she says, “I wish to present, and to regain for myself, the tranquility, the simplicity and also the poverty of my little country, Viet Nam.”

Minh Quang Phan is just one of thousands of Portland’s Vietnamese immigrants. The 2000 United States Census reports that Multnomah County is home to 11,102 Vietnamese. Portland is also home to large Filipino, Chinese, Korean, Cambodian, and Laotian immigrant communities.

Approximately 100,000 immigrants from the southeastern portion of Asia immigrated to the United States each year for a decade after 1975. During the 1960s and 1970s, the Vietnam War raged through Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos. In 1975, the U.S. withdrew its armed forces from the region, and the Southeast Asian governments that had been supported by the United States collapsed. In that year, the U.S. government began making changes to its immigration law so that people displaced by these wars could more easily immigrate to the United States.

See details of Minh Quang Phan’s gallery opening HERE

Tags: Arts For New Immigrants | Minh Quang Phan | Success Stories

Last Updated on Thursday, 29 July 2010 09:47
 

ILB Staff Exceed Expectations

E-mail Print PDF

The International Language Bank (ILB) is a financially self-sustaining, service-oriented department of the non-profit Immigrant and Refugee Community Organization (IRCO). ILB's purpose is to provide affordable, high-quality, and culturally competent translation and interpretation services to individuals and institutions across sectors of the community in Oregon, Southwest Washington, and beyond.

Last week we received a letter from a supremely pleased client of ILB’s; read it below.

Dear IRCO,
I would like to thank you for assigning me the best interpreter that I have ever had while I have been working for Aging and Disability Services in Multnomah County since 19993. I have had many interpreters through several interpreter services in my time here. Your interpreter was assigned to me on the 21st of this month and she has been assigned to me two more times since. Your staff is the type of person and interpreter that all of my co-workers would like to have as an interpreter. She was on time to our appointment, she interpreted exactly what I wanted to ask and her answers were perfect. She is very respectful to my clients and to myself. ILB’s interpreter was also given a compliment to me by my clients at the time of the home visit. The daughter of my client who was present at the home visit told me that your staff interpreted word for word what I said to my clients. The daughter also told me to keep her for all of my clients because of her exact interpretation and respectful manner. The daughter by the way, works for a governmental agency and has had problems with interpreters not interpreting correctly.
I may not be able to understand and speak Russian, but I can tell if the interpreter is doing their job or being disrespectful to me or my clients.
I really appreciate and commend your staff for the work that she does so we can take care of our wonderful clients. I cannot help my clients unless I have an interpreter who loves my clients as much as I do. Your staff has compassion and respect and it shows in her work.
 
Thank you again,
 
Sincerely,
A Multnomah County ADS Service Case manager
Mid-County Branch.

Tags: ilb | International Language Bank | Success Story

Last Updated on Tuesday, 27 July 2010 13:29
 

ASPIRE Shines, Garden and Children Grow

E-mail Print PDF

Check out the blog about the summer program IRCO’s ASPIRE program is running this year at Harrison Park, in partnership with SUN. Kids learning how to create a garden, growing in self-reliance and having fun!

Click HERE for blog!

 

Tags: ASPIRE | Garden | Harrison Park | SUN Partnership

Last Updated on Monday, 09 August 2010 13:15
 

IRCO Creates Leaders of Tomorrow

E-mail Print PDF

Meet Umulker Abdullahi, a young woman between her junior and senior year at Madison High School who is going to change the world. Born in a refugee camp, Abdullahi arrived to the U.S. when she was two years old with the rest of her immediate family. Abdullahi is driven, compassionate and practical “education is everything” she says. Her dream job is working with the United Nations promoting education in some capacity. Abdullahi has been recognized for years for her strong and passionate nature. High motivation and a desire to see real change has seen her land positions on the Mayor’s Education Cabinet, the Red Cross Club and several other community leadership positions.

Abdullahi has taken advantaged of almost every program available to her through IRCO, participating in Upward Bound, Workforce Investment Act programs and IRCO’s Madison SUN site where she single-handedly recruited and steered the site’s advisory leadership group. She attends all SUN advising meetings and is a Teaching Assistant for the IRCO SUN Site Program Manager Lua Masumi.

Abdullahi is excited for the future: college, career and changing the world all lay ahead of her- and she’s ready.

Tags: IRCO SUN Site | Success Stories | SUN | Umulkher Abdullahi

Last Updated on Thursday, 15 July 2010 13:44
 

IRCO Client, Now Employee, Rises Above

E-mail Print PDF

On July 4th, 2003 Shamsa Hussein and her father first touched U.S. soil as refugees from Somalia. Shamsa was 16 years old, did not speak a word of English and had never been to school. Yet just 3 years later she has graduated from Marshall High School with 15 college credits completed.

Shamsa was determined to succeed and she took advantage of most of what IRCO had to offer: she took English classes, youth services case management, family services, health education classes, job training, and employment services.  Now, six years after arriving in the U.S. she speaks English beautifully and articulately.

Working full time, Shamsa has learned to stretch a day. She works full time at IRCO while taking 16 credits at Portland State University towards degree’s in social work and public health.  In her spare time she takes occasional interpretation jobs from IRCO’s International Language Bank, volunteers at IRCO’s Africa House and helps people in the Somali community with interpretation, filling out housing forms and doing grocery shopping.  That’s all in addition to being the caregiver for her diabetic father.

With ten siblings and a mother still living in Kenya, Shamsa finds herself spending much of her pay check just keeping them afloat, “$200 U.S. can help a whole family of 12 over there, so I am happy to do it, but it is a lot” she says. Shamsa has just received her American citizenship and is planning a trip to her birth town Qoryoley, Somalia this summer. Taking a few friends and a PSU film student along, Shamsa plans on documenting the prevalence of orphaned children with no resources in the town, “What I hear of now, there are more children without parents there than with parents” Shamsa says. An apartment has been made available for them to use, and her first order of business is to get children off the streets, “clothes, an education…having a place to sleep, food cooking, this means so much to me” says Shamsa. With such a wealth of personal strength and perseverance, there is no doubt that Shamsa will continue to change lives.

Tags: IRCO Employee | Success Stories

Last Updated on Wednesday, 02 June 2010 09:37
 
  • «
  •  Start 
  •  Prev 
  •  1 
  •  2 
  •  Next 
  •  End 
  • »


Page 1 of 2
Section Success Stories