6 episodes

The Found in Translation Podcast is a Pan-African sociopolitical education interview series reflecting on modern Afrodiasporic history and the legacy of the black radical tradition in an updated context.

To keep up with future episodes and additional resources please subscribe to our monthly newsletter. A link is in the footer of our website: foundintranslation.online

Follow us on Instagram @ foundintranslationdmv

Reach out to us at info@foundintranslation.online Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/foundintranslation/support

The Found in Translation Podcast The Found in Translation Podcast

    • Education

The Found in Translation Podcast is a Pan-African sociopolitical education interview series reflecting on modern Afrodiasporic history and the legacy of the black radical tradition in an updated context.

To keep up with future episodes and additional resources please subscribe to our monthly newsletter. A link is in the footer of our website: foundintranslation.online

Follow us on Instagram @ foundintranslationdmv

Reach out to us at info@foundintranslation.online Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/foundintranslation/support

    Found in Translation: Dahwula Suah

    Found in Translation: Dahwula Suah

    0:00- Dahwula’s introduction

    0:32- “Where are you from?”

    2:28- Early adolescence in America, culture-based discrimination

    3:21- Experience in ESOL classes

    6:46- Lack of exposure to language and culture outside of home life

    7:37- Bullying cultivating a seed of resentment towards Dahwula’s African background

    10:48- The rift between the African Americans and Africans

    13:51- Complex feelings about culture as an adolescent

    15:12- “I didn’t care about the culture until other people started caring about the culture”

    15:51- Absorbing American culture

    17:58- The risk of culture as a trend

    19:53- The cultural experience of food

    20:14- Dahwula’s favorite Liberian food

    21:40- Learning through observation as a child

    26:49- “The internet taught me to question more”

    34:28- Dahwula’s response to being put in boxes as an adolescent

    40:54- Mutual understanding in communities of other immigrant children

    42:25- “Where are you currently in your identity journey?” + Dahwula’s reflections on self- autonomy

    44:53- The sacrifice that comes with finding a middle ground of self-autonomy

    45:46- “What do you define as your culture?”

    47:22- Permanent connection to Liberian culture

    49:39- Utilizing art to advance culture and break boxes of expectations

    52:06- The evolution and maturity of African culture

    53:25- The evolution of Dahwula’s interest in fashion

    55:25- Dahwula’s influences and inspirations

    58:32- The outdated “American Dream”

    59:00- Dahwula’s American Dream

    1:00:37- Liberia as a vacation spot for Dahwula, not a permanent residence

    1:04:12- 48% of the way self-actualized

    1:06:55- “What do you see for the future of your culture?”

    1:07:31- “The thing about culture is you don’t necessarily need to relate to understand something”

    1:08:16- The importance of building cultural bridges



    Found in Translation is a Pan-African documentary interview series exploring the cultural intersectionality of African descendants across the global diaspora. Guests reflect on the layers of their identity and the role of culture in the modern world.

    To keep up with future episodes and additional resources please subscribe to our substack newsletter: foundintranslation.substack.com

    Follow us on Instagram @foundintranslationpodcast

    If you'd like to provide feedback or if you're interested in sharing your story on the show please email us at foundintranslationpodcast@protonmail.com


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    • 1 hr 8 min
    Found in Translation: Zoe Akinbodunse

    Found in Translation: Zoe Akinbodunse

    Found in Translation is a Pan-African documentary interview series exploring the cultural intersectionality of African descendants across the global diaspora. Guests reflect on the layers of their identity and the role of culture in the modern world.

    To keep up with future episodes and additional resources please subscribe to our substack newsletter: foundintranslation.substack.com

    Follow us on Instagram @foundintranslationpodcast

    If you'd like to provide feedback or if you're interested in sharing your story on the show please email us at foundintranslationpodcast@protonmail.com


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    Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/foundintranslation/support

    • 1 hr 13 min
    Found in Translation: Ola

    Found in Translation: Ola

    This episode features Found in Translation’s Creative Director, Ola.
    Ola is cultural thinker specializing in questioning domestic and international power structures as it relates to the African Diaspora and other marginalized communities. Her purpose revolves around finding political systems, linking them to structural histories of inequality and human rights struggles to open dialogue for progressive solutions.

    Intro/Outro Music: Happy Ending by Kelela

    The Found in Translation Podcast is a Pan-African sociopolitical education interview series reflecting on modern Afrodiasporic history and the legacy of the black radical tradition in an updated context. Follow us on Instagram at @foundintranslationdmv

    If you'd like to provide feedback or if you're interested being the show, please email us at foundintranslationpodcast@protonmail.com


    ---

    Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/foundintranslation/message
    Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/foundintranslation/support

    • 48 min
    Found in Translation: Kenzo Cole

    Found in Translation: Kenzo Cole

    In this episode, Uche Ezejiofor speaks with Sierra Leonean recording artist Kenzo Cole about their experience as a queer, gender non-conforming first generation Sierra Leonean in America.

    Dazed magazine’s 2017 article covering the House of Kings and Queens, a secret, self-constructed LGBT sanctuary in Sierra Leone: https://www.dazeddigital.com/art-photography/article/36873/1/lee-price-photos-of-sierra-leones-lgbt-community-where-gay-is-a-sin 

    Curated by MIT Press Direct, the following are a selection of political cartoons drawn by African artists expressing the push factors of emigration from Africa: https://direct.mit.edu/afar/article/53/3/30/93187/Migration-Emigration-and-Immigration-African

    Intro/Outro Music: Decisions by Kenzo Cole



    Found in Translation is a DMV-based Pan-African cultural platform and documentary podcast interview series exploring the cultural multidimensionality of African descendants across the global diaspora. Guests reflect on the layers of their identity and the role of culture in the modern world.

    Follow us on Instagram at @foundintranslationdmv

    If you'd like to provide feedback or if you're interested in sharing your story on the show please email us at foundintranslationpodcast@protonmail.com


    ---

    Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/foundintranslation/message
    Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/foundintranslation/support

    • 1 hr 6 min
    Found in Translation: Black August

    Found in Translation: Black August

    On this episode, we discuss George Jackson and the origins of Black August, our individual and collective revolutionary potential, and the power of Black August in supporting a Pan-Africanist framework for black liberation.

    Texts mentioned:

    Soledad Brother by George Jackson

    Uses of the Erotic by Audre Lorde

    Sister Outsider by Audre Lorde

    Black Marxism: The Making of the Black Radical Tradition by Cedric Robinson



    Found in Translation is a DMV-based Pan-African cultural platform and documentary podcast interview series exploring the cultural multidimensionality of African descendants across the global diaspora. Guests reflect on the layers of their identity and the role of culture in the modern world.

    Follow us on Instagram at @foundintranslationdmv

    If you'd like to provide feedback or if you're interested in sharing your story on the show please email us at foundintranslationpodcast@protonmail.com


    ---

    Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/foundintranslation/message
    Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/foundintranslation/support

    • 1 hr 13 min
    Found in Translation: Frehiywot Kassa

    Found in Translation: Frehiywot Kassa

    2:52 Introduction

    3:30 Ethiopia’s regional distinctions

    4:06 The current regional conflict in Ethiopia

    6:33 The media’s role in misrepresentation of Ethiopia

    8:53 Tribal differences in cultural traditions

    11:11 The Visa lottery

    14:25 Story: Arriving in New York

    17:22: The importance of honesty in communicating the American experience to those abroad

    19:35 Exchanging American currency

    22:07 The role of immigrant advocates

    22:55 "The people who arrived here first should take responsibility for [the safety and comfort of] newcomers"

    24:00 Fear of deportation

    25:01 "you don't just come here and relax" 

    26:40 "America is uniquely challenging", mental colonization, cultural erasure by assimilation to whiteness

    30:08 "is America glamorized?"

    31:12 The impossibility of hiding your identity as an immigrant

    34:04 The experience of immigration to America from an uncolonized African country

    37:18 The Ethiopian Orthodox Calendar

    38:49 America as a closed society

    41:20 The importance of finding community

    42:02 "When I travel somewhere the first things I look for are where the Orthodox church and Ethiopian restaurants are"

    42:28 Food as a connection to culture

    43:24 "The more I make what they make, the more it feels like they're living again, so it means everything to me"

    44:19 "What inspires the importance of you holding your culture close to you?"

    45:39 "I'm not gonna cut your hand and keep it with me"

    46:25 Ethiopian culture post-civil war 

    48:35 "How your re-learning of Ethiopian history shaped your worldview and understanding of who you are?"

    51:48 "The African immigrant experience is so consistently centered around education"

    58:40 The stress and emotional invisibility of education and immigration

    59:27 "No one knows who I am here"

    59:53 African misrepresentation in American media

    1:02:01 The importance of "informing our own" 

    1:06:09 Mitigating the emotional toll of immigration

    1:07:29 Imagining alternatives to traditional community resource networks

    1:11:46 Perspectives on America's future 

    1:13:03 Returning to Ethiopia

    1:14:38 "No matter what condition I go back to, I feel like I'll be happier there"

    1:17:24 Perspectives on Africa's future



    Found in Translation is a Pan-African documentary interview series exploring the cultural intersectionality of African descendants across the global diaspora. Guests reflect on the layers of their identity and the role of culture in the modern world.

    To keep up with future episodes and additional resources please subscribe to our substack newsletter: foundintranslation.substack.com

    Follow us on Instagram @@foundintranslationpodcast

    If you'd like to provide feedback or if you're interested in sharing your story on the show please email us at foundintranslationpodcast@protonmail.com


    ---

    Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/foundintranslation/message
    Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/foundintranslation/support

    • 1 hr 19 min

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