San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Artist, tireless advocate for immigrants

- By Sam Whiting

When Jenny Do arrived in San Jose as one of the first beneficiar­ies of a pilot project for the Amerasian Homecoming Act, which allowed immigratio­n of children fathered by American men during the Vietnam War, she was 18 with a mother and a younger brother to support.

She knew little English, but she learned fast and got a county job helping low-income people like her. It was the start of a rapid advance through college and law school, then into private practice and public service.

Do opened a gallery in San Jose to provide a venue for Vietnamese American artists. She became executive director of the Friends of Hue Foundation, which operates children’s shelters in central Vietnam. When San Jose’s Coyote Creek flooded in 2017, she organized a local relief effort and a Vietnamese community response team. When COVID-19 hit in 2020, she mobilized a food drive to deliver to elderly people in quarantine.

“Jenny was like three or four persons working at the same time,” said her former husband and law partner, Dan Do. “She was involved in so many things at once that I would become exhausted simply by being alongside her.”

When she was just 41, Do was recognized as Woman of the Year by the state Assembly and separately received the Lifetime Achievemen­t Award from the city of San Jose. Those honors came in 2007, which was also the year she was diagnosed with breast cancer. That gave her one more cause: tearing down the taboo among Vietnamese women discussing breast cancer or illnesses of the reproducti­on system.

Do created and exhibited personaliz­ed art related to her cancer for 15 years after her diagnosis. Do fell into a coma on July 30. She died Aug. 4 at Stanford Hospital. She was 56.

“Jenny was such a vibrant person who energized everyone around her,” said Santa Clara County Supervisor Cindy Chavez, who adjourned Tuesday’s Board of Supervisor­s meeting in Do’s honor. “Her can-do spirit gave people confidence that they could accomplish anything.”

Do’s given name was Phuong Thanh Dang. She was born Feb. 20, 1966, in the coastal city of Vung Tau and grew up in Saigon. She never knew her father, but was told he was an American civilian in Vietnam for the war effort. She was 9 when Saigon fell to the North Vietnamese. Her mother took Do and her brother to the docks, where they hid in hopes of boarding a ship out.

“That was the beginning of her dark years,” said Dan Do, who also grew up in wartime Vietnam. “Because she was a child of the enemy, her mother was afraid of acts of revenge from the anti-American crowd.” To hide, they volun

teered to move into what was called “a new economic zone,” in the isolated countrysid­e.

Their home was confiscate­d when they left Saigon, then their valuables were taken when they moved to the countrysid­e. Unable to make a go of it, they returned to Saigon and had to beg for shelter in their former home.

Do attended school by day and worked at night making baskets out of rattan to help support the family. In the village, “She was ostracized and mocked and bullied because of her fair skin,” Dan Do said. “If something was stolen, she was always accused of being the thief.”

It got so bad that Do walked into her neighborho­od police station and asked to go to her father’s homeland of America. The United States government had recently launched a pilot program to repatriate children fathered by U.S. military personnel. When she and her family were accepted for immigratio­n, Do changed her first name to Jenny after Jenny Cavilleri, the character played by Ali MacGraw in “Love Story.” It was her favorite film and one in which the heroine dies of cancer at a young age.

She arrived in the U.S. with her mother and brother in 1984, and after a few months of processing in Texas, they came to San Jose, where her mother had cousins. Her first job was as a clerk in the central intake unit of the Center for Southeast Asian Refugee Resettleme­nt. She then advanced to the position of eligibilit­y worker with the county, doing case management for low-income public assistance recipients.

“She was very frank and honest and she had a passion for what she did,” said her ex-husband, who was an analyst with the county refugee program. “She really cared about the Amerasian cause, of bringing youth over from Vietnam. It was a reflection of her own life.”

As such, Do never gave up the futile search for her own father, a search that ultimately landed her as a guest on the “Oprah Winfrey Show.”

The Dos married in 1990 and bought a small house in West San Jose. A year later, their son, Alan Do, was born. She’d earned her undergradu­ate degree from San Jose State University while working fulltime. She later entered Lincoln Law School in San Jose.

The less sleep she got, the more she got done. After passing the California bar exam on the first try, she and her husband became law partners in an office downtown. In the early 2000s, they opened Greenrice Gallery next door to their law office. The gallery hosted up to four exhibition­s a year, with many of the shows raising awareness of human traffickin­g and gender inequality. After Do was diagnosed with cancer, she staged an exhibition to deal specifical­ly with its stigma in the Vietnamese community.

Among the pieces in the show was an abstract painting indented to depict the spreading of cancer cells in her own body. She also included photograph­s of herself before and after surgery to remove a lump in her breast.

In 2008, not long after her diagnosis, she closed the gallery. That same year she went to Vietnam to visit cancer clinics in Ho Chi Minh City, and later published a travelogue titled “Eucalyptus Road” in the Viet Tribune, a Vietnamese­language newspaper in San Jose.

In 2015, Do was named Trailblaze­r of the Year by the California Senate. She also received a proclamati­on from the Santa Clara County Board of Supervisor­s commending her for her dedication to arts and culture, which included a term on the San Jose Arts Commission.

But she wasn’t finished. She made a run for a seat on the San Jose City Council and her campaign was gaining momentum when her cancer returned as stage 4. Her doctor gave her up to 90 days to live. She reluctantl­y quit the race to undergo treatment. Those 90 days became seven more productive years

Do’s dying wish was that the Ao Dai Festival in San Jose, which she launched in 2011, continue in order to display the diversity of Vietnamese culture. The festival, celebrated in midMay every other year, has been dormant since COVID. But its organizers are determined to bring it back as a tribute to Do.

“Jenny Do spent her life giving voice to the voiceless, whether they were refugees, or children, or the homeless,” said Supervisor Chavez. “I miss her terribly,”

A memorial service will be held at 2 p.m. Sept. 18 at the City Hall Rotunda, in San Jose.

In 2010, Dan and Jenny Do separated after 20 years of marriage. In 2017, Do became involved with Dr. Lawrence Dong, a neonatolog­ist at Kaiser Santa Clara. They were married at a Japanese garden in Saratoga in July. They hoped to have years ahead of them, Dr. Dong said.

“Jenny was an amazing vibrant exciting person with a huge heart and soul,” he said. “She always wanted to help others.”

In addition to her husband, of Palo Alto, she is survived by her mother, Mrs. Ngat Dang; her brother, Tuan Dang; her son, Alan Do; and her former husband and long-time “comrade in arms,” Dan Do, all of San Jose.

Donations in her name may be sent to the Friends of Hue Foundation, P.O. Box 1823, San Jose, CA 95109.

“Jenny Do spent her life giving voice to the voiceless, whether they were refugees, or children, or the homeless.”

Cindy Chavez, Santa Clara County Supervisor

 ?? Mark Costantini / The Chronicle 2005 ?? Lawyer-artist Jenny Do, though diagnosed with breast cancer in 2007, “energized everyone.”
Mark Costantini / The Chronicle 2005 Lawyer-artist Jenny Do, though diagnosed with breast cancer in 2007, “energized everyone.”
 ?? Provided by Dan Do ?? Jenny Do’s gallery in San Jose provided a venue for Vietnamese American artists.
Provided by Dan Do Jenny Do’s gallery in San Jose provided a venue for Vietnamese American artists.

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