Professor Jane Hong, shares about anti-Asian exclusion and violence, and what faithful Christian discipleship can look like in Asian American bodies.
Why is remembrance so important to God? And how can that help us understand ourselves as part of the greater Asian American family?
“Being retired meant that I could do whatever God led me to do…. I had the freedom to read, learn, think and do as my conscience directed.”
On February 23, 1943, the Wartime Relocation Authority had granted him permission to leave the Poston concentration camp long enough to be ordained…
Under the guidance of urban missionaries “Tommy” and Esther Thompson, the Nagano boys came to see this diverse amalgam of ethnicities, cultures, and outlooks as a rich tapestry of lifelong friendships.
In the wake of the Rodney King trial, LAPD withdrew from Koreatown and South Central, leaving those ethnic neighborhoods to burn…
Uncle Cecil graduated with an engineering degree from USC around 1936 and discovered to his dismay that no one would hire him. In desperation, he took on a welder’s job at a fishing-boat repair shop in San Pedro. Very quickly he became a master…
Based on the research of Professor Gary Okihiro, Dr. Daniel D. Lee of Fuller Seminary’s Asian American Center (AAC) explored…