APA Day 2022: Virtual APA Day at the Capitol
Join APIAVote-MI and the Michigan Asian Pacific American Affairs Commission (MAPAAC) on Thursday, May 12, 2022 to celebrate APIA Heritage Month.
Join APIAVote-MI and the Michigan Asian Pacific American Affairs Commission (MAPAAC) on Thursday, May 12, 2022 to celebrate APIA Heritage Month.
Until his death at the age of 106, Tyrus Wong was America’s oldest living Chinese American artist and one of the last remaining artists from the golden age of Disney animation. The quiet beauty of his Eastern-influenced paintings had a pioneering impact on American art and popular culture.
As America becomes more diverse, and more divided while facing unimaginable challenges, how do we move forward together? Told through intimate personal stories, PBS' "Asian Americans" five-part documentary series casts a new lens on U.S. history and the ongoing role that Asian Americans have played.
Geographies of Kinship weaves together the complex personal histories of four adult adoptees born in South Korea with the rise of the country’s global adoption program. Raised in foreign families, each adoptee sets out on a journey to reconnect with their roots, mapping the geographies of kinship that bind them to a homeland they never knew.
Join us at the Ann Arbor YMCA for a day of cultural games, crafts, performances, food and educational resources as we celebrate Asian American & Pacific Islander Heritage Month!
Please join Oakland University's AAPI Employee Resource Group in the celebration of AAPI heritage month through art and conversations with Chinese American painter Siyan Wong.
A Tale of Three Chinatowns explores the survival of urban ethnic neighborhoods in three American cities: Washington, D.C., Chicago, and Boston. Through the voices of residents, community activists, developers, and government officials, the film looks at the forces altering each community and the challenges that go with them, including the pressing issue of urban development and gentrification.
"Betrayed: Surviving an American Concentration Camp" tells the story of a group of Japanese Americans and their incarceration by the U.S. government during World War II. It also explores the long-term effects of this incarceration and the phenomenon of intergenerational trauma. More than 40 camp survivors and descendants bring an unparalleled immediacy and urgency to […]
The solo directorial debut of acclaimed film editor Li-Shin Yu. The film takes us back to the turn-of-the 20th-century San Francisco, when a deadly outbreak of bubonic plague in the city’s Chinatown and the hunt to identify its source led to an all-too-familiar spate of violent anti-Asian sentiment.
As America becomes more diverse, and more divided while facing unimaginable challenges, how do we move forward together? Told through intimate personal stories, PBS' "Asian Americans" five-part documentary series casts a new lens on U.S. history and the ongoing role that Asian Americans have played.
Weaving together never-before-seen archival footage and photographs, "Chinatown Rising" reveals a deeply personal portrait of a San Francisco neighborhood in transition. Chinatown activists of the 1960s reflect on their years as young residents waging battles for bilingual education, tenants’ rights and ethnic studies curriculum that would shape their community and nation.
Join the Michigan Pan Asian American Conference Saturday, May 28 from 9:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. for meaningful discussions, interactive activities, guest speakers and free lunch, all in the Canton High School Cafeteria.