2024 Asian Diaspora Jam

2024 Asian Diaspora Jam

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Friends, Family, Community and Collaborators!

We invite you to join us in the 4th Asian Diaspora Jam, which brings together 25-30 changemakers from the diverse Asian community landscape. Together, we create a supportive space to explore our connection to ancestry, our roles in and relationships to social justice movements, and what it takes to heal our relationships with one another as peoples of Asian descent who have some intersection with North America.

This space was a refuge. I didn’t know until I found myself in this circle of compassion and acceptance that my ancestral wounds that I’ve held for so long were ready to surface, to be seen, and begin to heal.
– Fumi Tosu, 45, Founder, Dandelion House
Catholic Worker, Portland, OR (Japanese)

 

Thank you for the deep and very felt sense of collective community care. I have never before experienced such a loving container that was skillfully and lovingly held by each and every person in the space. I am leaving with an embodied experience of slowing down, and a new belief (going against my inner critic) that there is time and space for all of us. Thank you for being a healing balm for my spirit.
– Elli Nagai-Rothe, 42, Founder, The Ripple Collective, El Sobrante, CA
(Multiracial Asian American of Japanese, Chinese and German ancestry)

 

THIS JAM IS FOR YOU BECAUSE…

This Jam is for anyone who has considered their place in North America as a person of Asian descent.  We welcome anyone who has grappled with, proudly embraced, or questioned an Asian identity.

This Jam will explore questions such as…

  • What’s alive for me with my Asian American / Asian Diasporic identity?
  • How do I relate to the paradox, complexity, and liberatory possibility of being Asian in North America?
  • How am I healing with and from the complexities of family and community in my life? How am I navigating the many life experiences I have had?
  • What is the difference between appropriation and honoring Asian Diaspora ancestral wisdom and practices and how do I participate or distance myself from them?
  • How can our connections form the foundation for powerful, collective movement toward healing and transformative justice?
  • How does my Asian identity relate to my contributions in the world?

Have you grappled with these or other questions? If so, you’re not alone!

What are your questions?  Bring them to the JAM.

We invite you to be with us. Join us at the Asian Diaspora Jam, where we will co-create a space of support, mystery, and revelation.

You came at such a needed time in my life, when I needed a reminder of what it meant to be in community, to give and receive love, and when I most needed to see what truly makes me who I am… I felt like I found so much: I found my voice again, my ability to truly see others, I found the confidence and self-trust to be myself, I finally found so much to love within myself.
– Catherine Cheung, 22, student, counselling psychology,
Alberta, Canada (Cantonese-Vietnamese)

 

WHAT IS A JAM?

For nearly 25 years, more than 180+ YES! Jams have happened all over the world, on six continents. Modeled in the spirit of a musicians’ jam, they are co-created spaces of visionaries and changemakers, bringing together many voices, stories, energies, purposes, skills and inspirations to become something more than the sum of our parts.

Jams work on three levels of change & transformation:

  1. The Internal. A place for each one of us to explore our own journeys and histories, to heal our individual wounds and to come into our most authentic selves so that we can better fulfill our unique purpose.
  2. The Interpersonal. We are harmed in relationships, so we must heal in relationships. We come together to share our collective journeys, our cultures, our ways of grieving and our ways of healing, our histories of struggle and our stories of resilience.
  3.  The Systemic. Our individual identities and our collective stories are molded in a larger context. By becoming clearer about how these systems influence our lives, we can have a larger impact in the broader world around us.
Thank you for this opportunity to meet my unhealed material around belonging to Chineseness and Asianness. Thanks for creating a container to repair and re-evaluate that old story. Thanks for curating such a sweet and quirky collection of humans.
– Kan Yan, 39, Executive Coach and Consultant,
Berkeley, CA (Chinese heritage)

 

A NOTE ON THE USE OF Asian Diaspora

We are using the broad term Asian Diaspora as a complex identity and organizing framework. Our intention to co-create a welcoming and meaningful space is combined with our intention to include as many as possible who want to be here. However, we recognize that identity can have deep personal, interpersonal, and systemic significance and it is very easy to flatten and essentialize the very complex, unresolved, and conflicting histories within our communities.

With Asian Diaspora, we welcome (and are not limited to) anyone who identifies as East / South / Southeast / West / Central Asian; Filipinx; indigenous to these areas; stateless; and/or part of a diasporic community with multiple migrations. We welcome adoptees, refugees, people with mixed and multiracial ancestries, and individuals with any or no immigration status in North America. We have deliberately chosen to make this an Asian Diaspora Jam, rather than an Asian Pacific Islander Jam as it was named in the past. We are taking the lead from Pacific Islander (also known as Pasifika) community leaders, who want PI to be disaggregated from Asian Americans in order to speak truth to the reality of the Pacific Islander experience. For more information on this important distinction, please check this out.  

We, too, know the heartbreak of feeling invisible in spaces where our hearts wanted so much to be seen. So we are sincere about imagining this space as one in which both ease and challenges regarding “Asian Diaspora” identity can be explored and engaged with gentleness and curiosity, if those questions are present for you. And we are still exploring whether “Asian Diaspora” is the right framing for this Jam. So we hope you will join us with wonder and openness to consider what this Jam could be in the future!

This week has planted seeds of friendship, healing, and possibility. I was seeking to meet and connect on a personal level, with people who live at intersections of cultural healing, social change, art, and spirituality. This was exactly it!  I’m walking away feeling shaken. In a good way. In a way that I don’t even know I’ll know until the fruits of connection, courage, and strength being emerging mysteriously from my life. Courage. That’s what this jam is inviting me to step more into. I’m so grateful. 
– Serena Bian, 27, Special Advisor for US Surgeon General,
San Francisco, CA (Chinese diaspora)

 

I STILL DON’T GET IT. WHAT ARE WE GONNA BE DOING?

A Jam is a co-creative container. It’s going to be built and shaped by all of us with the support of a facilitant team (facilitators who are also participants).  A Jam is not a conference, it is not a training, and it is not a typical gathering.  

Our community will not have a rigid agenda. Instead, the team of organizers and facilitators will draw from all of your applications and from what’s alive in them, put all of it in a big pot, stir them around and come up with a draft flow of experiential activities and see what comes out!  None of us come with all of the answers. Instead, we will co-create the space together — using circles, conversations, spiritual practice, artistic expression, silence, and play — to explore our questions, bring more of our whole selves, and live into our answers, and new questions (!), using the depth and power of the experiences and knowledge in the room and beyond. 

Thank you again for cracking open the space that is my heart. I feel a part of my Asian family. This jam was about giving myself space and permission to be fully in myself, my gifts, my wants, and my needs.
– Salma Vir, 34, artist, salmathegiant.com,
Taos, NM (mixed African American and South Asian)

 

DATES, LOCATION, TIMING & COSTS

The Jam will begin at 2PM Pacific Time on Sunday, March 10th, and end with clean-up on Thursday, March 14th wrapping up before noon. There will be a lot of opportunities to connect through one-on-ones, participant-led open optional sessions, and fun community games that we will play together throughout the week.  We recommend leaving as much space and time as possible this week to fully sync in and fully JAM!  We promise, the more space and time you give yourself this week, the more you will bring to and receive from the Jam.  

The Asian Diaspora Jam will take place at the Ben Lomond Quaker Center, near Santa Cruz, CA. Participants will share rooms in doubles and triples.

Tuition for the Jam is offered on a sliding scale of $200-$1300, with the at-cost price being $900. Broken down, $450 covers food, lodging and supplies, and $450 covers honoraria for the organizers and facilitants. We invite you to give what you can, and to give generously. Any amount above the at-cost amount of $900 helps us provide scholarships to support the broad spectrum of participation on which this event thrives (and is tax-deductible). 

We never want money to be a barrier in participating: We will do everything we can to make it work for you to attend. Partial scholarships are available. For those who are able, payment above the at-cost tuition helps us provide scholarships to support the broad spectrum of participation on which this event thrives. We are also happy to work with you on a payment plan. 

If you have any questions or concerns, please feel free to write to us at asiandiasporajam[at]gmail.com.

I feel whole, complete, energized, positive, hopeful from all the interactions that creatively stretched me. To see myself in community – where I stood on which side of the room or in-between – was humbling to see how I’ve been processing those questions – over 50 years of individual work and community work. And to see where others stood on the spectrum of consciousness. Thank you, Jam, for inviting me to share and contribute – mostly out of my comfort zone, because I’ve never shared “who I am, what I am”, HERE and NOW – especially emerging from the pandemic.

– Patti Jo (PJ) Hirabayashi, 73, Culture bearer of Taiko,

the Japanese drum, TaikoPeace (Partnerships, Empathy,

And Creative Empowerment), San José Japantown, CA,

unceded traditional lands of the

Muwekma Ohlone people (Japanese American)

 

I’M IN! WHAT’S NEXT?

Registration is now closed

We can’t wait to Jam with you!

Kazu, LiZhen, Minna, Nandita, Shilpa & Tiff

You inspired me to work on myself, to name and face my fear, to strengthen skills to express my deep feelings. Deep gratitude for showing me a path forward!
– Phuong Pham, 36, Vice President of Knowledge & Communications,
SoCal Grantmakers, Long Beach, CA (Southeast Asian, Vietnamese)

WHO IS PUTTING THIS JAM ON?

 

To register for this event please visit the following URL: https://yesworld.org/registration-closed/ →

 

Date And Time

2024-03-10 to
2024-03-14
 

Event Category

 
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