17 episodes

What does it mean for you to be in solidarity with others? How have you been impacted by anti-Asian discrimination? What comes to mind when you hear the name “George Floyd?”

These are some of the questions we asked our community members to reflect on this past year.

A Diversity Equity & Inclusion practitioner recounts a startling encounter in the Minneapolis skyways at the start of the pandemic and a tv news videographer shares his reflections on his work covering the murder of George Floyd.

The MinneAsianStories Podcast, co-produced by CAAL, The Uptake, and WFNU Frogtown Community Radio,

MinneAsianStories Podcast CAAL, The Uptake & WFNU Frogtown Community Radio

    • Society & Culture
    • 5.0 • 8 Ratings

What does it mean for you to be in solidarity with others? How have you been impacted by anti-Asian discrimination? What comes to mind when you hear the name “George Floyd?”

These are some of the questions we asked our community members to reflect on this past year.

A Diversity Equity & Inclusion practitioner recounts a startling encounter in the Minneapolis skyways at the start of the pandemic and a tv news videographer shares his reflections on his work covering the murder of George Floyd.

The MinneAsianStories Podcast, co-produced by CAAL, The Uptake, and WFNU Frogtown Community Radio,

    "Adoptee liberation is also connected to our shared liberation"

    "Adoptee liberation is also connected to our shared liberation"

    For our final episode of the MinneAsianStories Podcast: Season 2, we continue our look at adoptee justice organizing in Minnesota. Our host Julia Gay chats with community organizer and founding board member of CAAL Margie Jo Eun Joo Andreason about how transracial and transnational adoptees in Minnesota are creating adoptee centered spaces for processing, healing and joy.

    Margie reflects on her work with the Network of Politicized Adoptees (NPA), an all-volunteer group of transracial adoptees working at the intersection of social justice and adoptee rights. Listen in on how Margie found her way to adoptee justice organizing and connects her work to the broader movement for shared liberation.

    You can learn more about the Network of Politicized Adoptees at npa-mn.org. And you can find some incredible photos from past and recent gatherings with NPA and a full transcript of this episode at calmn.org/podcast/margie.

    • 35 min
    "Our healing is rooted in decolonizing ourselves"

    "Our healing is rooted in decolonizing ourselves"

    For our final two episodes of the MinneAsianStories Podcast: Season 2, we're exploring how Asian Minnesotan transnational adoptees have been shifting the dominant narrative around adoption to center adoptee voices and experiences. Our MinneAsianStories Correspondent Hannah Kinzer chats with educator, writer, and DEI consultant Dr. SooJin Pate about the decolonizing process of reclaiming one's history, narrative and story as a transracial and transnational adoptee.

    SooJin reveals how policy and colonial power have fueled transnational adoption and made Minnesota the "Land of 10,000 Adoptees." She shares her reflections on adoption and how adoption is woven into Asian Americans movements and communities in Minnesota.

    Check out SooJin's podcasts, the Antiracist Parenting Podcast and Decolonize Yourself, and book From Orphan to Adoptee: US Empire and Genealogies of Korean Adoption.

    Visit caalmn.org/podcast for a full archive of all of our previous episodes.

    • 39 min
    "We've always had queer Hmong artists as a part of SOY"

    "We've always had queer Hmong artists as a part of SOY"

    This week on the MinneAsianStories Podcast: Season 2, we continue our celebration of Pride Month with our look at Shades of Yellow (SOY), the first Hmong LGBTQ+ organization. Our host Julia Gay chats with Xay Yang, Queer Justice Director and Mental Health Therapist at Transforming Generations and former SOY participant and volunteer.

    Xay shares her fondest memories from her time working with SOY. From the Hmong Pride flag designed by Ka Oskar Ly to a painting of a Hmong man wearing a rainbow patterned traditional Hmong hat, Xay reflects on how art was an integral tool for SOY's organizing and a creative pathway for redefining the intersections of queer and Asian identities.



    S U N A H's Song:

    (3) S U N A H - Unique - YouTube

    Links to Transforming Generations' website and events:


    Website: www.transforminggenerations.org
    Drag Tale Times (July 9 and Aug 13)

    June's DTT: Drag Tale Times ft. Jasmine D. Cassadine | Facebook


    Pride Events: Facebook
    Zaj Sawv Leadership Retreat - August 19-21, 2022, more info to come later

    Other organizations with Hmong LGBTQ+ programming across the US:

    Home - Freedom, Inc. (freedom-inc.org)

    Hmong American Women’s Association – HAWA’s mission is to advocate for social justice within the Hmong and Southeast Asian community through collective and inclusive action. (hawamke.org)

    Hmoob | La Crosse | Cia Siab, Inc. (ciasiabinc.org)

    Hmong Queer Suab | Facebook

    • 45 min
    “We were finally able to celebrate that part of ourselves”

    “We were finally able to celebrate that part of ourselves”

    Happy Pride Month! As we transition from Asian American, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander Heritage Month to Pride Month this June, we are thrilled to highlight the significant work and contributions of queer Asian Minnesotan organizers in our community.

    This week on the MinneAsianStories Podcast: Season 2, our host Julia Gay chats with Ka Oskar Ly, multidisciplinary artist and cultural producer and the former Interim Executive Director of Shades of Yellow (SOY), the first ever Hmong LGBTQ non-profit organization.

    Ka shares how SOY got started in 2003 as an informal social and safe space reaching Hmong, and later pan-Asian, LGBTQ communities locally and globally. Listen in as Ka reflects on the influential role SOY played in empowering a new generation of queer Asian leaders in our community.

     You can find photos of the colorful Hmong pride flag Ka designed on our website at www.caalmn.org/podcast/ka.

    • 44 min
    "How do you get men to support your organization?... You don't"

    "How do you get men to support your organization?... You don't"

    This week on the MinneAsianStories Podcast: Season 2, our host Julia Gay chats with Gaoly Yang, the former Executive Director of the Women’s Association of Hmong and Lao (WAHL), the first Hmong and Lao women's organization in Minnesota.

    Gaoly reflects on her early days of gender-based organizing and what inspired her to help found the first ever Hmong and Lao women's organization in Minnesota, in spite of backlash from men in her community.

    Visit www.caalmn.org/podcast for more stories from our Asian Minnesotan community.

    • 28 min
    "Education should be used as a tool for liberation"

    "Education should be used as a tool for liberation"

    MK draws on the metaphor of root systems and waterways to highlight the healing bonds between community members amidst the toxic effects of racism. She shares her perspective on Ethnic Studies organizing and how she has incorporated lessons from mothering and movements across the country into the local fight for Ethnic Studies in our schools.



    We want our school systems to be places of joy that inspire imagination, cultivate curiosity, and ensure that all children can learn and grow. Asian Minnesotans have lived in and contributed to the state for generations, yet Asian Americans are often excluded in the curriculum across all subjects. The Coalition of Asian American Leaders is a proud member of the Ethnic Studies Coalition. To learn more and get involved, visit www.ourschoolsmn.com.



    For more stories from our Asian Minnesotan community, visit www.caalmn.org/podcast. The MinneAsianStories Podcast, co-produced by CAAL, The Uptake, and WFNU Frogtown Community Radio.

    • 27 min

Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5
8 Ratings

8 Ratings

King.fam ,

Entertaining and profound look at the Asian Minnesotan community

This is such a great podcast for Asian Americans and particularly Asian Minnesotans. It shares stories that are very personal but also very profound and inspiring. It highlights the challenges and triumphs of the Asian experience while reflecting the amazing diversity and resilience of the families who’ve built this community. And the storytellers are fantastic! Bravo

gensdumonde ,

Unique perspective to the American experience

Unique perspective to the American experience

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