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Hmong Americans celebrate their New Year in Siskiyou County

Residents celebrate Hmong New Year's in Siskiyou County with soccer, food and singing on Oct. 19, 2024.
Justin Higginbottom
/
JPR
Residents celebrate Hmong New Year's in Siskiyou County with soccer, food and singing on Oct. 19, 2024.

Hmong residents, who have roots in several Southeast Asian countries, gathered for celebrations in the California town of Weed.

On Saturday, hundreds of cars packed the parking lots and lined the streets near the town of Weed鈥檚 recreation center. The big turnout was thanks to the local Hmong community, which has a large presence in rural Siskiyou County. This weekend they celebrated their New Year, an important holiday in Southeast Asia as well as immigrant communities in North America.

With a snow-dusted Mt. Shasta in the background, Hmong Americans showed off brightly-colored, often jingly, traditional clothes against the area's go-to cowboy wear. They mingled around a soccer tournament, listened to singers compete from rival speakers and browsed stands selling handcrafts and medicine from Asia. Hmong food, which resembles Thai cuisine, was free for visitors. Organizers made sure they knew it.

At one stand, a basket of tennis balls were on sale for $3 each, which might seem strange to first-time attendees. But Mou Ying Lee, a liaison between the Hmong community and the county, explained that the celebration is a time for courtship. That鈥檚 where the tennis balls come in.

鈥淚f you see a girl that you like, then you say 鈥楳ay I have the honor to toss the ball to you?鈥欌 said Lee

The game of catch can provide an effective icebreaker. After all, Lee met his wife at a Hmong New Year gathering.

Justin Higginbottom
/
JPR
Hmong Americans wearing traditional clothes celebrate Hmong New Year's in Weed, California on Oct. 19, 2024.

The annual celebration occurs at the end of the harvest season. And many Hmong have continued a tradition of small-lot farming in Siskiyou County, buying up land in the subdivision Mount Shasta Vista, now home to hundreds of families.

In the last decade, local authorities have cracked down on Hmong farmers using water in the arid region to illegally grow marijuana. The Asian Law Caucus sued the county after an ordinance banned transporting water without a permit, which lawyers said unfairly targeted the region鈥檚 Hmong community. That ordinance was later repealed.

According to Lee, the Hmong are used to living outside of the government鈥檚 reach as ethnic minorities in the mountains of Thailand and Laos.

鈥淲e are the freedom people. When [it] comes to law, it's hard to understand,鈥 said Lee.

That sentiment isn鈥檛 so far out of place in Siskiyou County, birthplace for the State of 老夫子传媒 movement that seeks to wrest local control from Portland and Sacramento.

For this new year, the crowds didn鈥檛 seem too worried about water rights or the plummeting price of cannabis. Much of the work for the harvest is now over. And there鈥檚 plenty of people to toss a ball to.

Justin Higginbottom is a regional reporter for 老夫子传媒. He's worked in print and radio journalism in Utah as well as abroad with stints in Southeast Asia and the Middle East. He spent a year reporting on the Myanmar civil war and has contributed to NPR, CNBC and Deutsche Welle (Germany鈥檚 public media organization).