Who is she?
Inspired by the travails of her Korean parents,
Patsy Surh O’Connell has dedicated the last
20 years to preserving and celebrating the
diverse cultures of Washington State’s Asia
Pacific community.
During World War II, the Japanese Army
accused Patsy’s father of espionage. He was
incarcerated in China for nine months. His
pregnant wife was allowed only intermittent
visits. “My mother would take my brother
Ronny and clean clothes for my father to
change into because his soiled clothes were
full of lice. Japanese interrogators would toss
the prisoners out of the window. My father
told me it was the scariest time of his life.”
Patsy was born in war-torn Shanghai in 1943.
The Surh family soon moved to Seoul. Patsy
was 7 when the Korean War broke out. The
invading North Koreans—“they looked just
like us”—took over the Surhs’ large home to
use as offices. Patsy’s father was forced into
hiding. The family eventually fled to safety
in Busan, the port city at the bottom of the
Korean peninsula.
Patsy moved to the U.S. in 1963 to continue
her education. The legacy of her parents lives
on in the Asia Pacific Cultural Center she
founded in 1996. “Our communities will have
a place to gather, express their cultures, tell
their stories and connect with each other.”