Dressed in black pants and jacket, a conical red hood on her head, shaman Mai Yang ushered spirits out the front door with a sweeping gesture of her right arm and then struck a gong to persuade the remaining spirits inside the Hmong Funeral Home that they needed to move on.
For about 15 years, thousands of people passed through the doors of the building at the corner of Dale Street and Lafond Avenue in Frogtown for traditional funeral rituals. Now, the first Hmong-owned funeral home in St. Paul is owned by the city and it will soon come tumbling down.
On Wednesday, Yang's ceremony prepared the building for the transition from sacred place to rubble to new development. The ceremony is for the safety of the spirits, as well as the safety of the next people to use the property.
She used paper with swatches of bright red and gold that resembled money, and incense to coax the souls out of the building and back to their graves.
"This building helped us help our families for a long time," said Xang Vang, executive director of the Hmong American Mutual Assistance Association. It was a neighborhood landmark and a community center.
When the Hmong began to emigrate to the state in the 1970s and '80s, many had to forsake their traditions for a new way of life.
As a community was established in Frogtown and people earned wealth, old-world customs could once again become part of the mainstream, said Ilean Her, executive director of the Council on Asian Pacific Minnesotans.
Hmong farmers were able to buy land and use traditional methods. Churches and markets opened.