One morning when my neighbor and I were having tea, the wailing siren interrupted our casual chatting. She is a Chinese woman who lived most of her life in the Philippines. After the alarm ended, she remarked, “I can’t believe that they play this same alarm so regularly! If my Ahmah hears this, she would have a heart attack!” This was no exaggeration. I chuckled sadly in sympathy. “Hearing this same alarm,” my mother had told me, “would make my grandma’s knees wobble, lips quiver.” We quietly sipped our tea and resumed watching her toddlers play, under the same siren our grandmothers frantically collected their children and entered the darkness of bomb shelters, thinking only to survive that short distance, those few seconds. In silence we remembered our grandmothers and thanked the American pilots who ended the bombings. This is a special tribute to World War II as we approach Pearl Harbor Day, Dec. 7th.
About Author
yvonne.liu.wolf
Yvonne Wolf was born in Taiwan and educated in the U.S. and Europe. She has extensive experience living and working internationally (Denmark and Japan). She is fluent in English, Mandarin, and Danish, and has studied Japanese, Spanish, and Greek. Between work and personal travel, she has visited more than 20 countries and well-traveled within the U.S. and Canada. She has worked with organizations and business executives focusing on communication strategies working with Chinese and East Asian partners. Among her many skills is mediating across cultural misunderstandings.