April 03, 2008
Tibet
may be on the far side of the world, but the Chinese government’s
attack on political protesters there has been very much in the local
newspapers — and very much in the thoughts of Jigme Ugen.
Ugen, a second-generation Tibetan refugee, is the executive vice president of 14,000-member SEIU Healthcare Minnesota. Ugen was born in 1972 to a Tibetan family living in exile in Darjeeling in India.
TIBETAN PROTESTS NO EXCUSE FOR VIOLENCE
Joint statement of Gerry Hudson, executive vice president of SEIU and Jigme Ugen, executive vice president of SEIU Healthcare Minnesota
WASHINGTON, DC—Gerry Hudson, executive vice president of the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) and Jigme Ugen, executive vice president of SEIU Healthcare issued the following statement today:
“Over
the past few weeks, those of us engaged in the work of social justice
have watched with dismay as long-simmering tensions between Tibet and
China have boiled over into escalating violence.
“The Service Employees International Union (SEIU),
as an international union representing more than 600 Tibetan Americans
and as an organization committed to human dignity and justice for all,
calls on the Chinese government to show restraint and reject outright
tactics of oppression in its response to protests in Tibet.
“We
call on the Chinese government to show respect for human rights in
Tibet, with regard both to current detainees and future protests.
Furthermore, we hope that China will address the concerns of all
Tibetans by opening meaningful dialogue with the Dalai Lama.”
Gerry Hudson, executive vice president of SEIU,
leads the work of the union’s Long Term Care Division, which represents
nearly 500,000 nursing home and home care workers nationwide. He is
renowned for his work on environmental justice, and he continues to
lead SEIU’s efforts to win quality, affordable healthcare for all,
immigration reform, and other major initiatives by strengthening the
union’s partnerships and alliances with community groups.
Jigme Ugen, executive vice president of SEIU
Healthcare Minnesota, was the first Tibetan American elected to office
in the U.S. labor movement. Jigme has a lifelong commitment to
organizing from the fight for a Free Tibet, to healthcare workers, to
the 2002 campaign for the late U.S. Senator Paul Wellstone (D-MN).
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“I
grew up with the American Dream in the foothills of the Himalayas,” he
said. “I listened to Leonard Cohen and Lynyrd Skynyrd.” He majored in
English at Delhi University and studied Shakespeare.
When
Ugen decided to emigrate to the United States, he sought help from a
U.S. Senator with a reputation as a strong advocate for the Tibetan
people — Minnesota’s Paul Wellstone.
“Paul was my sponsor to
America,” Ugen said. “I had complications with the paperwork… I sent
him a letter and he replied. He helped me with the process. He wrote
about three letters.”
Ugen came to Minnesota in 2001 to join family here. Minnesota, he noted, has the second largest Tibetan community in the U.S.
After
arriving in the United States, he said, the dramatic disparities of
wealth he witnessed shocked him. “That’s when I woke up to the real
American Dream.”
He learned Wellstone was running for re-election and walked into the campaign office one day to volunteer.
He
took a stack of voter registration cards, returning soon with 300
signed cards. “I said, I’m sorry, I couldn’t get all 500,” he recalled.
His success astounded campaign staff.
Ugen finally met Wellstone in person. “He called me the mysterious Tibetan guy,” Ugen recalled.
Ugen joined the Wellstone campaign staff, working on canvassing and community outreach.
He
was no stranger to political activism, however. After attending college
in Delhi, he did volunteer work as a community organizer and teacher.
Plus, as a Tibetan exile, he said, the duty to protest, to organize,
and be politically active is “inbred.” Ugen has served as general
secretary for the Tibetan Youth Congress, an organization advocating
for complete independence for Tibet.
Working with Wellstone
for social and economic justice, Ugen said, became the biggest
influence in his life. “He brought out a passion in me I didn’t have
before,” he said. “That little piece of Paul Wellstone will always be
with us.”
After Wellstone’s tragic death in 2002, Ugen took
advice from Wellstone to heart: “Paul always said, if you believe
change can be made, go work for SEIU.”
In 2003 Ugen, went to work for SEIU
Local 113 as an organizer. “The first assignment was to run a strike
vote,” he recalled. He moved next to different roles in the organizing
department, then became a business representative.
SEIU Local 113 became SEIU
Healthcare Minnesota last year and, in December, Ugen won election to
the office of executive vice president — his first run for union office.
Ugen’s
election marked the first time a Tibetan refugee has won union office
in the U.S. That was big news in the close-knit Tibetan community. Ugen
received congratulations from the Dalai Lama, the political and
spiritual leader of the Tibetan people.
Ugen’s history as an immigrant helps him connect with the many immigrants who are members of SEIU Healthcare Minnesota. He said he asks them, “What is your dream? Where do you want to be in 10 years?” Helping SEIU members to realize their dreams, he said, “I can go back to where I started with my American Dream.”
For Ugen, his work at SEIU
is about listening, building bridges between a diverse membership, and
helping them work together for social and economic justice.
“At the end of the day, I’m a trade unionist, not an immigrant, not a Tibetan,” he said.
“I truly believe if I adopt a country and the country adopts me, it’s my responsibility to make it a better place.”