Series Sherene Joseph Series Sherene Joseph

When Code Switching is Not Enough

I was a stranger in the country, which had been home for so many years. People had moved on, and I was no longer a little child. My friends were no longer there, and my parents had a new routine as empty nesters. I had become more South Indian than they wanted me to be, and they found my new habits different. I had learned to move adeptly between two cultures, but I was neither here nor there. 

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Series Michael Stalcup Series Michael Stalcup

Loving

Dad, a white man born in Kansas—
grew up in a time when plenty
folks who looked like them
were not allowed to wed,

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Series Naomi K. Lu Series Naomi K. Lu

To Bless My Chinese Self

I felt that I existed as a series of masks, appearing as others wanted me to, but without any sense of who I actually was. I waded through a depressive fog, wondering if there was any hope to feel at peace in the body that felt so foreign to me. 

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Series Jilan McQuilkin Series Jilan McQuilkin

I am both

I couldn’t see myself as both
not because I did not want to
but because society told me I couldn’t be
both

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Series Julie Yeeun Kim Series Julie Yeeun Kim

Psalm 17: A Prayer for Asian Americans

Over time, the soft yet profound distinctions between being Koreans in America and being Koreanamericans settled into our lives. Ye Eun yielded to Julie as I underwent a nearly complete transformation and became a cultural stranger to my ancestors. Yet to this day, no prayer moves me more than ones uttered in my mother tongue.

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Series Abigail Vilar Series Abigail Vilar

Where I’m From

I’m from “Did you eat yet?” and “Practice your piano,”
From “Don’t get to dark or you’ll smell like the sun”

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Justice & Culture Dr. Kathy Rim and Raymond Chang Justice & Culture Dr. Kathy Rim and Raymond Chang

On the “Ching Chonging” AAPI Communities Often Endure Within Institutions of Higher Education

Americans of Asian descent deserve to be treated with dignity and respect, and Keon’s public denigration of Asian languages and cultures contributes to the pernicious pattern of anti-Asian prejudice, discrimination, racism, and violence endured in our communities for generations.

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Justice & Culture, Article Ray Chang Justice & Culture, Article Ray Chang

A Year “2” Remember: A Journey Through Asian American History of the Years that End in “2”

We must do the good work of remembering and remembering actively. When we do this, we are able to better anticipate and address the issues that impact Asian American communities across the US and to work towards a justice for all that falls in line with the heart of God for healing and wholeness driven by the church.

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