
HARRY H. DOW MEMORIAL
LEGAL ASSISTANCE FUND



39th Annual Celebration
Friday, December 13, 2024
Program: 6:00-9:00 PM
China Pearl, 9 Tyler St.
Boston Chinatown


Keynote

Keynote Speaker
Christine Chen
Christine Chen has served as APIAVote’s Executive Director since 2011, and was the organization’s founding executive director from 2006-2008.. During her tenure she has bolstered and expanded APIAVote’s work into 28 states. APIAVote’s research and polling of Asian American voters and their regional trainings and field programs have strengthened local grassroots programs in reaching and mobilizing Asian American and Pacific Islander voters. Through all these efforts, APIAVote has played a key role in elevating the Asian American and Pacific Islander electorate to an unprecedented national level in recent years.
Profiled by Newsweek magazine in 2001 as one of 15 women who would shape America’s new century, Chen served from 2001 to 2005 as national executive director of the Organization of Chinese Americans (OCA), one of the leading APIA civil rights organizations in the country. Leading an organization with more than 80 chapters and affiliates across the nation, she worked with OCA’s national board, executive council, chapter representatives, members and funders while managing a staff of 13.
Chen is well-known by activists across the country. Her track record in building coalitions and working at the grassroots and national levels established her as one of the strongest voices in the APIA community. She has more than two decades of experience in organizing and advocating on issues such as immigration, hate crimes, affirmative action, census, racial profiling, voting rights, election reform, and various derogatory and racist media incidents. Her role as a trusted coalition builder has her effectively building relationships with key Congressional offices including the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus, federal agencies, and multiple presidential administrations.
Throughout the years Chen has been a member of the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights executive committee. She has also served on numerous boards such as the National Council of Asian Pacific Americans, Demos Board of Trustees, Conference on Asian Pacific American Leadership (CAPAL), Youth Vote, Gates Millennium Scholarship Advisory Council, advisory board for the Progressive Majority Racial Justice Campaign, and the Board of Advisors for the Midwest Asian American Students Union, East Coast Asian American Students Union and the Asian Pacific American Medical Students Association. In 2003, she was a founding member of the Asian and Pacific Islander American Scholarship Fund and also in 2006, a founding member of Asian and Pacific Islander American Vote.
Chen is a member of the Committee of 100 and was a member of Gold House’s A100 in 2020 and 2024. She was also a Resident Fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School’s Institute of Politics during the 2022 spring semester. Chen currently serves on the Kennedy Center Community Advisory Board, Center for Asian American Media, OCA Northern Virginia Chapter, and the advisory board for CAPAL. She is also a member of the Election Assistance and Policy (EAP) Standing Committee at the American Political Science Association.
Awardees

Long Arc of Justice Awardee
Suzanne Lee
Suzanne Lee worked in the Boston Public Schools (BPS) for 35 years, first as a teacher and later as a principal. She led a high-profile turnaround at the Baldwin School in Brighton, uplifting a low-achieving and divided school into a nationwide model for school improvement. She then headed the Josiah Quincy Elementary School for 10 years, where she instituted the City Connects program, and served as a cluster leader for 15 schools. During her tenure, Josiah Quincy was named one of the Best 100 Elementary Schools in Massachusetts.
As a community leader for over five decades, Suzanne helped immigrant mothers launch the first Chinese Parents Association, supported unemployed garment workers in securing Boston’s first bilingual training programs, and worked closely with the Boston Foundation to address persistent poverty in the city. She was lead founder and longtime chair of the Chinese Progressive Association, a founding member of the Massachusetts Asian American Educators Association, and served on the Massachusetts Advisory Council on Bilingual Education and the English Language Learners Task Force for BPS.
Since retiring from BPS, Suzanne has remained active in the greater community. She is a member of the Women’s Pipeline for Change and ran for Boston City Council in 2011 and 2013. Currently, she serves on the boards of the Chinatown Community Land Trust, BEST, and Boston Senior Home Care. She also works as a leadership development coach for BPS, the Women Pipeline for Change, and community organizations to build the capacity of women leadership in advancing equality, justice, and democracy.
Suzanne was the first in her family to attend college, earning degrees from Brandeis University and Harvard University. In 2016, she received an Honorary Doctor of Laws degree from University of Massachusetts for her 40 years of dedication to bringing communities and institutions together to serve the children of Boston.

Justice in Action Awardee
Carolyn Chou
Carolyn Chou is the Director of Homes for All Massachusetts (HFA MA), a coalition of tenant organizing and housing justice organizations across Massachusetts. At HFA MA, Carolyn supports building organizing infrastructure across the state and the power of tenants and working-class homeowners to advocate for the housing policies that will keep them in their homes and stabilize their communities. Prior to her time at HFA MA, Carolyn spent 10 years as Executive Director of the Asian American
Resource Workshop (AARW), where she supported leadership development and community organizing around housing and immigration. Through her work at AARW, Carolyn supported building the leadership and organizing capacity of Vietnamese American young adults in Dorchester—the heart of the Vietnamese community in Boston. Alongside young adult organizers, Carolyn has helped build the Dorchester Not for Sale formation in the neighborhood, which brings together a diverse set of neighborhood residents to fight for good jobs, truly affordable housing, and equitable planning. Carolyn is a queer, mixed-race, Chinese American organizer, living in the Dorchester neighborhood of Boston.

AALAM/Dow Fund Scholarship Awardee
Ethan So
​Ethan So is a Hong Kong American—growing up in both suburban Boston and Hong Kong. He is a 3L at Northeastern University School of Law (NUSL). Currently, Ethan is finishing an internship with the American Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts. Previously, Ethan interned at the Greater Boston Legal Services’ Asian Outreach Center, conducting legal services for underprivileged Asian Americans in Cantonese, and at the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court in Justice Dewar’s chambers. Within NUSL, Ethan served on the executive board for the Asian Pacific American Law Student Association. In the future, he plans to pursue a career in public interest and support language access advocacy projects. Ethan graduated from Colgate University in 2021 with a B.A. in History. For his honors thesis, he conducted archival research on immigration relief for Hong Kong residents rior to the 1997 Handover of Hong Kong. Outside of law school, Ethan reads fantasy novels and rock climbs.