Marny Xiong Memorial Library dedicated at St. Paul school

Arlington High grad rose to become St. Paul School Board chair before early death.

September 30, 2022 at 12:01AM
A new mural at Washington Technology Magnet School, formerly Arlington High, shows Marny Xiong, the late St. Paul school board chair who died of COVID-19 at age 31. The mural by artist Mwene Kajunju was unveiled at the dedication of a memorial library at the school where she graduated. (Photo provided by St. Paul Public Schools)
A new mural at Washington Technology Magnet School, formerly Arlington High, shows Marny Xiong, the late St. Paul school board chair who died of COVID-19 at age 31. The mural by artist Mwene Kajunju was unveiled at the dedication of a memorial library at the school. (St. Paul Public Schools/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

Marny Xiong, the late St. Paul school board chair who died of COVID at age 31, was celebrated Thursday with the dedication of a memorial library at the North End area school where she graduated 15 years ago.

Family members unveiled a mural by the artist Mwene Kajunju in the library at Washington Technology Magnet School, formerly Arlington High.

A blue curtain was pulled aside to reveal a smiling Xiong. A quote from her read: "To close the education gap for all students across the district, we must understand the intersections of poverty, race, and social inequity that impacts our public education ...."

Her mother hugged the artist's rendering.

During a memorial event later at the school, St. Paul Mayor Melvin Carter said: "To me, she was very much a sister," a rare soul, he added, who represented not just the Hmong community, but also African Americans, Latinos, an entire district.

"I miss her leadership. I miss her smile. I miss her laugh," Carter said.

Xiong, the daughter of Hmong refugees, grew up on the East Side and was a product of St. Paul Public Schools. She graduated from University of Minnesota Duluth. When elected in 2017, she was an administrative manager at Hmong International Academy in Minneapolis.

She rose quickly to the school board chair's position. In the months just before her death in June 2020, Xiong worked closely with Superintendent Joe Gothard and others to help settle a teachers strike cut short by the then-looming pandemic.

Xiong was perhaps best known for giving voice to students, most notably those who came forward nearly four years ago to promote the idea of making ethnic studies a graduation requirement. Its eventual passage occurred last December. Gothard noted it would have been the final month of her term in office.

"I will be your champion," she told student leaders at the time.

Students were called upon by family members Thursday to read poems at the event.

Board Chairman Jim Vue, who in 2020 was appointed to fill Xiong's seat, read the board resolution written at that time in her memory. Gothard said Xiong's legacy would reach beyond the mural at the former Arlington High.

"Her work is everywhere in what we do," he said.

about the writer

about the writer

Anthony Lonetree

Reporter

Anthony Lonetree has been covering St. Paul Public Schools and general K-12 issues for the Star Tribune since 2012-13. He began work in the paper's St. Paul bureau in 1987 and was the City Hall reporter for five years before moving to various education, public safety and suburban beats.

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