And she feels Hispanic Heritage Night, pres. by Modelo, taking place Saturday as part of the Kraken Common Thread commitment to inclusivity and unity within the team’s community, is an important part of mutual learning as well. Her mother, Sylvia Mendoza, had grown up moving around with her family due to the Navy postings of Tuiasosopo’s grandad and in a way also lacked strong roots. So, Tuiasosopo and her mother began researching the family’s history more extensively.
As a child, Tuiasosopo visited the Texas border-area property with Mexico where her great-great grandparents first settled after crossing the Rio Grande from their native Monterrey. But it was in her teens and adulthood she truly came to realize the family’s sacrifices made; enduring hardship, racism and stereotyping along the way.
“I’m truly a product of my ancestors who worked so hard and went through so many trials and tribulations to get to the United States and build a beautiful life for their family,” Tuiasosopo said. “And for me to have the freedom to be able to do something I love is very special.”
But while men in her family back then often worked as farming field pickers and the women more traditional homemaking roles, there were stark contrasts as well. Her grandfather, upon leaving the Navy, pursued higher education and later got into teaching. Her mother became an author and journalist. Tuiasosopo graduated from the University of Colorado with a master’s degree in marketing and eventually met her future husband, Timothy, a longshoreman whose last name she took as her own, before moving with him to the Seattle area.