Southern Utah University’s newly renamed Pacific Islander Student Association presented their showcase “Rooted in Resilience” from March 17-19. The event highlighted dances and music from six regions including Fiji, Tonga, Aotearoa (known also as New Zealand), Tahiti, Hawai’i and Samoa.
“The dancers have been practicing six days a week since the beginning of spring semester,” said Anu Tufuga, the coordinator of student connection and completion and PISA advisor. She explained that hundreds of hours of work go into making the showcase a truly remarkable event.
The showcase is PISA’s main event each year and is the highlight of the spring semester for Polynesian and Pacific Islander students at SUU. For SUU students who moved to Cedar City from the islands, PISA is their second home.
As they walked into the SUU Auditorium, attendees were handed programs that detailed each dance and its cultural significance. Each section performed four or five songs and the audience cheered and even threw dollar bills on stage during their favorite dances. At the end of the night, the over 40 dancers crowded the stage for one final bow.
“Coming together and sharing our Pacific Islander cultures with the university and Cedar City community is important for us,” said Tufuga. “But more than anything, it’s about bringing everyone together because we’re a family.”
Article by: Aspen English
Photos by: McKayla Olsen

