How We Thrive: Asian American Healing, Co-Presented by CAAMFest

Thu May 16 2024 at 07:00 pm

KQED | San Francisco

KQED
Publisher/HostKQED
How We Thrive: Asian American Healing, Co-Presented by CAAMFest
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Cultural stigmas and intergenerational traumas make navigating mental health in the Asian American community complex, but modern day practitioners and healers offer expansive frameworks for a holistic approach. Hosted by Bay Area journalist Cecilia Lei, join KQED and CAAMFest for an empowering evening to redefine community resilience by honoring all parts of ourselves.
The event will feature comedy by Kristee Ono; a discussion between licensed therapist Soo Jin Lee of the Yellow Chair Collective, healing practitioner Angela Basbas Angel and community activist, author and filmmaker Satsuki Ina; and a tasting of bites by Chef Yana Gilbuena.
Guests:
Soo Jin Lee, a licensed therapist and executive director of Yellow Chair Collective, as well as co-founder of Entwine Community, has carved a significant path in mental health advocacy, deeply influenced by her experiences as an undocumented Asian immigrant. Her approach to mental health care, centered on understanding and addressing the unique challenges of similar communities, has led her to co-author the impactful book, “Where I Belong: Healing Trauma and Embracing Asian American Identity.” Soo Jin’s work, recognized on platforms such as NPR, PBS, CBS, CUNY, and Buzzfeed, reflects her commitment to culturally sensitive services and the importance of community support in healing and identity formation.
Satsuki Ina is a consulting psychotherapist specializing in trauma. She is cofounder of Tsuru for Solidarity, a nonviolent, direct-action project of Japanese American social justice advocates working to end detention sites. Ina has produced two documentaries about the World War II incarceration of Japanese Americans, Children of the Camps and From a Silk Cocoon. Her work has been featured in the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, TIME, Democracy NOW! And the documentary And Then They Came for Us. Her new memoir, The Poet and the Silk Girl: A Memoir of Love, Imprisonment, and Protest, details her parents’ incarceration during World War II. A professor emeritus at California State University, Sacramento, she lives in the San Francisco Bay Area.
Angela Basbas Angel is a healing practitioner, gardener, artist, medium/channeler and ceremonialist. She has continued her indigenous lineage as a traditional healing practitioner (Bontoc and Ibaloi tribes-Igorot, Philippines). In 2013 she began coordinating free holistic and traditional healing clinics with the Bay Area’s Healing Clinic Collective. She is a certified clinical herbalist and integrates indigenous ancestral medicine in her classes, including Ninunong Gamot, Philippine Folk and Ancestral Medicine and Decolonizing Wellness. Angela is a spiritual strategist and proponent of healing justice and decolonization.
Kristee Ono is a San Francisco based stand up comedian exploring depression and food obsession with an unwarranted optimism entertaining enough that no one has asked her to stop as of yet. A little dark, a little weird, a lot of burritos. She is a host and co-creator of KALW Into The Fold, an exploration of burritos and burrito people. She is the co-host of Mental Health Comedy Hour, where comedians use humor to destigmatize mental illness.

Yana Gilbuena, a Philippine-born, critically-acclaimed, ancestrally-taught chef, started SALO Series as a way to educate folks about the history, culture and rich heritage embedded in Filipino cuisine. Their work centers on the decolonization/reindigenization through food. Their pop-up, the Salo Series, seeks to celebrate the beautiful pre-colonial tradition of eating with one’s hands, called Kamayan, and disrupt the western constructs of dining.
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Event Venue & Nearby Stays

KQED, 2601 Mariposa St, San Francisco, CA 94110-1426, United States,San Francisco, California

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