How to Talk to Our Asian Families About Black Lives Matter

How to Talk to Our Asian Families About Black Lives Matter

December 3, 2020

Organized by KPWA, in partnership with KORE, YCAR, & RCPS at York University

Date: Thursday, December 3, 2020
Time: 6:30 – 8:30 PM EST
Medium: Zoom
Admission: Free

 

View PDF version of this event poster and description (328KB)

About the Event

How can we talk to our Asian parents, siblings, friends, and families about the Black Lives Matter movement and anti-Black racism? How can we work to dismantle the stereotypes, tropes, and divisive narratives that strain the relationship between Asian and Black communities? How can we hold space for the lived experiences of intergenerational anti-Asian racism and trauma while also fighting anti-Black systems within our communities? And how can we do this with consideration to the specific contexts, nuances, and cultural barriers involved with being members of a racialized community?

Join us for an in-depth discussion on how we can engage our Asian family members (as well as ourselves) in challenging but critical conversations about anti-Black racism.

Featuring a panel discussion with Jenna Tenn-YukPamela Uppal, and Emily Jung. Moderated by Erin Kang.

 

 

Panelists’ Bios

 

ERIN KANG (She/Her)

Founder, Stories of Ours & Co-Founder, Dressed in Layers

Erin Kang is a practicing facilitator, independent educator, and storyteller local to Toronto. Her work lies at the intersections of anti-oppressive pedagogy, community collaborations, and creative arts. She is the founder of Stories of Ours, a grassroots project which aims to deepen community, invite solidarity, and challenge dominant narratives through intentional acts of storytelling and creative arts. She is also the co-founder of Dressed in Layers, a project using hanbok (traditional Korean clothing) to explore notions of home, land, and community. Erin is currently the Project Lead for Reimagining Governance at the Ontario Nonprofit Network.

 

JENNA TENN-YUK (She/Her)

Writer, Speaker, Facilitator

Jenna Tenn-Yuk is a writer, speaker and facilitator who empowers people to share their stories and truths. She has spoken internationally at Harvard, The Walrus Talks and TEDx, exploring the complexities of race, faith and queerness. Her writing has been featured in BroadviewCBCOttawa Citizen and The Huffington Post. She is a founding member of the Asian Canadian Women’s Alliance and is on a coalition of queer-affirming Christian groups in Canada. Jenna believes in the power of storytelling to break silences, connect people and change the world around us.

 

PAMELA UPPAL (She/Her)

Board Member, Laadlyian

Pamela cares deeply about how women experience the world and so over the past 10 years she has focused on building gender equitable systems by bridging frontline work, research initiatives, and public policy advocacy activities. She led a nonprofit organization as a student volunteer, was a frontline worker at a multi-service agency, designed diversity trainings, and collaborated on multiple research projects exploring gender and race. Currently, she is a policy advisor at the Ontario Nonprofit Network (ONN) leading its future of work, decent work for women, and care economy policy files with gender and intersectional lenses. Through her consultancy work she advises various stakeholders on tackling complex social issues through policy, programs, and outreach. Her community involvement includes sitting on the board of Laadliyan - celebrating and empowering daughters, mentoring young women and girls interested in social justice work, and building informal networks for collective action.

 

EMILY JUNG (She/Her)

Interim Marketing & Communications Manager, Theatre Passe Muraille

Emily is an artist/artsworker working in Toronto with a focus on the Canadian nonprofit arts sector. She has been working in cultural organizations such as the Toronto International Festival of Authors and Theatre Passe Muraille with a keen interest in Canadian cultural policy, nonprofit labour advocacy and community centric fundraising. Her visual artworks explores the relationship between women and their ancestors using a subliminal space, and was most recently exhibited at Cultural Pluralism in the Arts Movement Ontario's The Gathering Fall 2019: IBPOC Women in the Arts. At the moment, she is pursuing independent research on equity and rights for emerging artists/artsworkers in nonprofit arts & arts management education.

 

**While non-Asian folks are welcome to attend this event, please note the discussion will be focused on how members of Asian diasporas can reflect, learn, and commit to fighting anti-Black racism.**

 

This event is in partnership with the Korean Office for Research & Education (KORE), York Centre for Asian Research (YCAR), and the Resource Centre for Public Sociology (RCPS) at York University.

This event is also part of an ongoing series of anti-racism conversations organized across other Korean Canadian (and non-KC groups). Recent events include: