Sunday, January 23, 2022

Rachele Sullivan, nee Rachele Cordova Pasco, December 17, 1967 – January 17, 2022: "I will be a most excellent Ancestor. When my Creator Calls me home. I love you all so very much. Hugs, Rachele" via IG @sullivanrachele UPDATE: Vote to name Rachele Sullivan Park here bit.ly/ParkSurvey11

Beloved by so many, Rachele Sullivan (nee Rachele Cordova Pasco) drew her last breath in the full moon’s light close beside family on 17 January 2022 in Pittsburg, California (USA). *****We now send much love to Rachele’s only son, Sebastian Sullivan; her mother, Raquel Cordova Pasco (m. Ernesto Abatayo Pasco, RIP); her sisters Josiebel Pasco Vargas (m. Jay Vargas, SF), Ernestine Pasco Sanchez (m. Dario Sanchez, Pittsburg), and Erleen Pasco Rosendo (m. Felipe Rosendo, Jr., San Jose); and to all the many nieces, nephews, cousins, aunts and uncles in five generations of extended families who’ve traditionally gathered – in celebration as well as sadness – for decades. Many traveled to be with her before she transitioned. Now Rachele joins honored ancestors – her beloved father, Ernesto Abatayo Pasco and his parents, Josefa Abatayo Pasco and Florentino Pasco, as well as her maternal grandparents Felimon Maypa Cordova and Hombelina Ibabao Cordova. In this season of Philippine festivals in the family’s ancestral province, Aklan’s Ati-Atihan drumbeats pulse with spirits welcoming all home. ***** Rachel would speak of her birthplace as Yelamu (San Francisco) on Ramaytush Ohlone lands. Through the hard work and sacrifices of nurturing immigrant parents Raquel and Ernie, all Pasco sisters attended Star of the Sea Elementary School and graduated from Presentation High School. From childhood on, the Pasco sisters valued lifelong family friendships of the Filipino American Association of Star of the Sea Church (FAASTAR), an organization co-founded by their parents and other Filipino immigrant families in the 1970’s. While quite young, the Pasco sisters and friends organized and led FAASTAR’s first youth group. Family elders also invited the children to activities of other pioneering Filipino organizations in San Francisco and beyond. Deeply grounded in family/community, Rachele’s commitments to community service, forged since childhood, would spiral out to include advocacy and grass roots organizing in increasingly diverse communities. *****
In the video, "FOLSOM FOREVER - Frameline Q&A for Encore excerpt preview," Rachele relates how her work with Folsom Street Fair began.(Screenshot is edited from the 2013 YouTube video.) She describes in more detail the impact --the camaraderie, the lessons learned, memories, fierceness -- of the leather community on her life in the 2015 HIV Story Project and the National AIDS Memorial Grove’s 2016 video interview, “Unsung Heroes: the Leather Community’s Response to AIDS.” Most recently, the SF Leather and LGBTQ Cultural District @SFLeatherDist tweeted a photo of the ribbon cutting (actually a leather cord ;) ceremony to open the district: “We are saddened to hear of the passing of Rachele Sullivan. Rachele was one of the founders of the LEATHER and LGBTQ Cultural District. She worked tirelessly to help launch the District and was the first chair of our Land Use Committee.”
Folsom Street’s FB page includes additional tributes for Rachele and notes that: “Her impact on our communities and on Folsom Street’s growth and commitment to safety and inclusion cannot be overstated. We would not have the Playground, our current safe space for women of every kind, and all trans and nonbinary people at our fairs if it were not for her tireless work.” Additionally, Rachele's "longer history of volunteering for an AIDS & HIV clinic in San Francisco” is cited in the 2021 volume of “Worldwide Leaders in Healthcare” where Rachele is listed as a Registered Nurse and Recognized Traditional Healer.
Though Rachele launched her professional nursing career with a degree from the College of Marin decades ago, she continued her education through her lifetime journey as a healer. As recently as August 2021, @Swedish health system of Seattle announced Rachele’s Doula Diversity Scholarship Award: "...she has routinely sought education from elders and culture bearers in the healing arts, traditional midwifery and birthwork -- and in turn, she has educated others in the ways of alternative medicine practices, the modern model of medicine and best nursing practices." In an online nursing profile, Rachele describes her work as a recognized Traditional Healer who has been a holistic nurse for over three decades: “I call myself a hilot practitioner, which is a healing tradition that comes from the Philippines. What I do falls under the definition of a Hilot practitioner and beyond. A healing session with me is based on what a person needs to help them feel lighter in body, mind, and soul. I am given permission to enter their realms - all of their elements, their spiritual bodies, etheric bodies, etc. It’s like peeling layers, and the layer that is most stuck calls to me, whether the person wants to address it or not” expressed Rachele. https://www.issuewire.com/rachele-pasco-sullivan-rn-registered-nurse-1681287055167981?utm_source=twitter - In addition to combining indigenous healing methods with contemporary nurse’s training, Rachele brings her unique gift of intense spiritual energy, evident since childhood, to each loving connection during her healing practice. Healer/artivist/truthspeaker Sammay wrote of finding in Rachele: “…a seer sent to earth (dressed in all-leather tyvm) to elevate the entire village. a messenger entrusted with the prophecies of the divine. A living embodiment of our ancestors’ most radiant of dreams. With a boisterous laughter and vivacious stride – you walked between worlds and navigated many realms in your service to our healing.”
Indeed, Rachele expanded all our horizons as she intentionally lived a life so full of heart and meaning, embodying all she values. Rachel began her 50th birthday celebration at a Filipino arts event in the South of Market (SOMA) neighborhood; went on to support a cultural fundraiser for indigenous peoples; toasted boba over cake and birthday songs sung by a kindred spirit healer, all before meeting up with community brothers at a leather bar. Rachele’s work would have ripple effects that are global: Working with kindred spirits – close friends and other healers – they’d facilitate workshops with Yoruba spiritual leaders as well as with indigenous people of the Pacific Northwest and beyond. Coming full circle, Rachele actively shared passions for family history and ancestral knowledge with the youngest generation of family. One day Tita Rachele mapped out and drove four generations of family, including her mom's young great-grandchildren, on a road trip through family history: They first joined a Philippine Independence Day cultural celebration organized by an aunt in Tracy (CA); stopped to pay respects at the gravesites of family ancestors who’d been among the first in the clan to settle in California, and enjoyed Filipino food in Stockton (CA) before watching the Little Manila Rising (http://littlemanila.org ) showcase at San Joaquin Delta College where “Granny” (Rachele’s mom) had studied as a teen in the 1950s. ***** Dearest Rachele, As a mother, daughter, sister, aunt, niece, cousin, ally, healer, teacher, nurse, organizer, mentor and fabulous friend who transforms the world near and far – you will be missed by families/communities across the globe. Your loving spirit and wisdom will continue to guide us forever as we share your legacy while fully embracing your last words @sullivanrachele on IG: "I will be a most excellent Ancestor. When my Creator Calls me home.. I love you all so very much. Hugs, Rachele” *****((The family thanks our communities for all the many ways you've supported Rachele, especially in these recent months. A Venmo account @PascoSullivan has been created to fund funeral costs and other expenses. Any additional funds raised will go towards supporting her son, Sebastian, as he faces moving into adulthood without his beloved mother. )) *****Photo credits: (top photo) - Tita Rachele bringing Easter bunny rabbit's treats to grand-nieces and nephews in 2016, photo by AJM @ForCommunities; screenshot edited from video "FOLSOM FOREVER - Frameline Q&A for Encore excerpt preview"; 19 Janurary 2022: tweet @sfLeatherdist (collaged by ajm); tweet @swedish Health System of Seattle, WA; screen cap from multimedia gift to Rachele from The Bangka Journey / "Balik Sa Dagat" visionary Mylene Cahambing

2 comments:

Diyan said...

Thank you for writing this. So beautiful to hear all the things she touched with family, friends& so many communities. Miss you& love u always ate Rachelle 💓 fly free mama godfairy🏵🌠🖤

Sebastian Sullivan said...

Thank you for the article.