BSU Celebrates Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Across Campus

BSU Celebrates Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Across Campus
0Comments

Bemidji State University is celebrating the Asian American and Pacific Islander experience and heritage throughout the month of April. Led by the Center for Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, the university will host several events to recognize and celebrate AAPI student identities.

“Cultural celebrations and heritage experiences should be recognized not only in one the particular month, but throughout the year using multiple platforms,” Dr. Ye ‘Solar’ Hong, director of diversity, equity and inclusion, said. “Our purpose for hosting these events in April is to inspire and challenge our community to criticially think about and engage in issues that are a part of the Asian American and Pacific Islander experience.”

Asian American and Pacific Islander month is celebrated nation-wide in May to recognize the contributions made to American society by Asian American and Pacific Islander communities. Hong said the celebration is also a time for reflection and education on the AAPI experience and heritage within our community.

“It is imperative to engage the campus community with experiential learning opportunities to understand, support and advocate for the Asian American and Pacific Islander community,” Hong said. “This is especially important as we face the presence of anti-Asian hate and an ongoing global pandemic.”

The month’s celebrations began April 11 with an interactive and multi-sensory exhibition called the “Tunnel of Oppression” where posters, timelines and video presentations are on display in the university’s Hobson Memorial Union. The event is available for public viewing from 9 a.m.-3 p.m. every day until April 14.

The on-campus experiences offered throughout April invite the community into conversations surrounding oppression, heritage and support while enhancing awareness of the APPI experience.

“It takes everyone’s effort to enhance our communities,” Hong said. “Which is why these experiences are crucial to explore and work to understand.”

Solar Hong, tunnel of oppression presentation at Bemidji State

Tunnel of Oppression Presentation

Original source can be found here.



Related

The Registry shows 1 sex offender living in Hubbard County in February

The Registry shows 1 sex offender living in Hubbard County in February

There was no change in the number of registered sex offenders living in Hubbard County in February compared to the previous month, according to the Minnesota Public Registrant Search.

Krista Knudsen, Minnesota State Representative from the 5A District

Rep. Krista Knudsen shares legislative updates and commentary on Minnesota DHS commissioner

Rep. Krista Knudsen posted a series of tweets from March 7-8, including a legislative wrap-up and commentary on the state’s Department of Human Services commissioner.

Joe Gould, Commissioner

Beltrami County seeks community feedback on hazard mitigation plan update

Beltrami County is seeking public input as it updates its Hazard Mitigation Plan (HMP), which aims to address and reduce risks from natural hazards such as flooding, tornadoes, windstorms, winter storms, extreme temperatures, wildfire, and drought.

Trending

The Weekly Newsletter

Sign-up for the Weekly Newsletter from NC Minnesota News.