Girl talk of a different variety
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Young Chang
It’s girls like Luzelena Pinzon who inspire Angela Mason to keep
fighting world problems that seem too big for one person or one group.
Pinzon is a five-year regular at the Shalimar Learning Center in Costa
Mesa, where local kids between first and 12th grades can get academic
help. She was tutored first in math, and now receives help in whatever
subject she needs to work on.
Her parents, immigrants from Mexico who were schooled only through the
6th grade, are proud of their daughter. This year’s Newport Harbor High
Homecoming Queen, Pinzon was recently accepted to San Diego State
University. She wants to pursue a career involving kids and counseling.
Her story of success has spread throughout Shalimar and touched the
leaders of Women of Vision, a support group for World Vision, an
organization that helps children. Members of the women’s group come from
Costa Mesa, Newport Beach and Laguna Beach.
Pinzon, 18, will speak at a luncheon held by Women of Vision Saturday
in Irvine. She will be joined by Mason, executive director for World
Vision, who will talk about sufferings caused by child prostitution, war
and depravity in third world countries.
“We’re looking at what we call the ‘Girl Child,’ ” said Bobbi
Dauderman, a Women of Vision member and chair of the luncheon. “It’s
talking about the lack of opportunities for young girls, particularly
growing up in underdeveloped countries, that do not experience flowering
into full womanhood.”
But Pinzon is a success story, Dauderman said. The Costa Mesa girl
said she is grateful for her parents -- how they’ve always supported her
to go beyond the distance they were able to go.
“They couldn’t finish school because they had to work and take care of
their family,” she said. “They always told us to do what they couldn’t
do, and they’ve always offered us what they couldn’t do.”
Mason travels around the world offering, in effect, the same thing:
opportunity.
She’s loaned $75 to a woman in Uganda whose husband died of AIDS so
she could start a business with the money -- the woman paid Mason back,
improved her own home, bought land, grew food there and made more money.
Mason has walked through areas planted with landmines (she doesn’t know
how she missed them all) to help people. She’s held young girls dying of
AIDS who contracted the virus after being tricked into child
prostitution.
She said she sees the most horrendous things but also learns stories
of hope and triumph.
“I love that word -- triumph,” she said. “It means somebody beat the
odds. I see courageous women and girls in some of these girl stories I
do. And I want to get back and talk about them.”
When Mason is overseas, in places where hygiene and sanitation are
lagging, she’s always grateful for a good shower because it’s there that
she can cry without anyone hearing.
After a “good weep,” she has herself a “good wash” and then a “good
pray.”
“I’m the world’s biggest coward. I am very very ordinary,” Mason
insists. “I’m petrified of airplanes and I force myself to fly all over
the world. I’m an ordinary woman who’s found herself in some
extraordinary situations.”
Pinzon, who is also modest in talking about herself, says she is
excited about speaking at the upcoming luncheon. Communication is
important to her -- part of the reason she would like to work in
counseling or therapy.
“And it’s good to express [yourself] and let people know what you
think and how you feel and where you want to be,” she said.
FYI
WHAT: “The Tragedy and Beauty of Being a Girl” -- a luncheon, silent
auction and art exhibition
WHEN: 11:30 a.m. Saturday
WHERE: The Atrium at Bistango Restaurant, 19100 Von Karman Ave.,
Irvine
COST: $100. Fund-raiser for Women of Vision.
CALL: (949) 644-5671
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