The store, which specializes in items from around the Pacific Rim, is the last of its kind in a neighborhood once known for its thriving Pacific Islander population.
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"If we were thriving 30, 50 thousand strong between the 1950s to the 1980s, then all of a sudden today we're 3,359 anybody would look at that and say what happened?" said Gaynorann Siataga, of the Pacific Islander Community Hub.
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What happened, according to Siataga, was the rising cost of living in San Francisco hit the Pacific Islander community hard - driving many out of Visitacion Valley.
But a new resolution going in front of the Board of Supervisors Tuesday hopes to change that.
It would create the city's 10th cultural district - similar to those already established in places like Japantown, the Mission and the Castro.
This one would focus specifically on the Pacific Islander community.
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"It is important that everyone has a voice, everyone is heard, and everyone is connected to the resources that this city has," said president of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors, Shamann Walton.
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The idea has been years in the making.
The hope among many Pacific Islanders is not just for the district to reinvigorate their community, but also to shine a spotlight on a group that is often times forgotten.
Despite being small in absolute numbers, the Pacific Islander community has greatly contributed to both the Bay Area and the country as a whole.
Many Islanders fought for the US Army during World War II, helped build infrastructure throughout the American West and worked in agriculture in and around San Francisco.
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"A lot of our folks, and we're talking about our ancestors, grandparents, have migrated to this country for the American Dream," Siataga said.
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The board is expected to pass Tuesday's resolution.
A win Siataga says is not just for her community, but for everyone.
"Whoever wants to sit here and work with us and rock with us, we're down," said Siataga.