History
compiled by Ching-In Chen, Janet Gee, Peter Kiang, Vivian Lee, Helen Liu, Michael Liu, Shauna Lo, Shirley Mark, Don Misumi and Wen-ti Tsen
We at Asian American Resource Workshop would like to thank our countless volunteers and members, many of which have gone un-acknowledged. There have been many who have taken great leadership in generating and implementing all the projects and community work AARW has undertaken. You are the ones who have made the organization what it has been and we celebrate your hard work.
1979 - 1984
Located at: 27 Beach St., Boston
Founders: Fred Ho (staff, 1979), Ramsay Liem, Michael Liu (1979-1980); Program Director, Peter Kiang (1980-1986)
Asian American Resource Center is established, spun off from the Boston Chapter of Pacific Asian Coalition (PAC) and similar to other established Asian American organizations as Visual Communications, LA, Kearny Street Workshop, SF, Basement Workshop, NYC, etc. 1977
Incorporates as Asian American Resource Workshop, November 10th, 1979
Organizes the first Boston exhibition of Asian American artists, 1979
Organizes Asian American poetry, music and art coffeehouses, including the first performances by Southeast Asian refugee groups, 1980 onward
Conducts art and culture workshops and classes, 1980 onwards
Produces Asian American history and heritage calendars, 1980, 1982
Leads workshops on Asian American history, identity and issues for schools and agencies, 1980 onwards
Forms AARW Media Group and Chinese Folksinging Group, 1981
Organizes Asian Lunar New Year celebrations that include pan-Asian and African American performances, 1981 onward
Shows the first Asian American produced feature film, Hito Hata, Raise the Banner, 1981
Collaborates in organizing Boston hearing of the Commission on Wartime Relocation and Incarceration of Civilians, 1981
Sponsors annual Day of Remembrance events to commemorate the World War II internment of Japanese Americans, beginning in 1982
Sponsors China Film Week and Asian American International Film Festival, 1982, 1983
Co-sponsors AARW Teachers' Conference with Children's Museum, 1984 onwards
Commemorates the 100th Anniversary of Chinese Exclusion Act with a multi-media production that includes the publication of booklet, Our Roots in History, 1982
Initiates local Vincent Chin Support Committee, which evolves into the pan-Asian community coalition, Asian for Justice, 1983
Produces videos, Boston Chinatown History, Staying Well, and a bilingual series on Chinatown culture, 1983-85
Organizes Chinatown Cable Television conference, 1983
Co-organizes Dragon Boat Festival, 1983
Sponsors Asian American Artists Exhibition, 1984
1985 – 1989
Directors: Julian Low (1984-1986), Carlton Sagara (1986-1987); Executive Director: Fred Dow (1987-1989)
Sponsors the Asian American Studies Seminar, 1984
Produces video, Pei Lee: Portrait of a Chinese Teenager, 1984
Leads campaign to bring justice for the stabbing death of Anh Mai, 1985
Organizes East Wind, an art and culture forum, 1985
Sponsors Asian American Studies Teachers Conference, 1985
Works with community in support for Long Guang Huang, victim of police brutality, and produces the video, Long Road to Justice: The Case of Long Guang Huang, 1985
Presents AARW Film & Forum Series, 1985-86
Organizes Asian/Pacific American Heritage Week events. 1986-1992
Produces the documentary video, Against the Zone, 1986
Co-develops Southeast Asian Studies Curriculum Development Project with Chelmsford Public Schools and the Southeast Asian community, 1986
Institutes Summer Internship Program, 1987
Produces the play, Paper Angels, with ECASU (East Coast Asian Student Union), 1987
Conducts an assessment of civil right needs of Asian Americans in Boston with the report, To Live in Peace: Responding to Anti-Asian Violence in Boston, 1987
Produces documentary video on garment workers, Through Strength and Struggle, 1987
Organizes Asian/Pacific American Heritage Week: 10th Year Celebration, America is in the Heart: The Strength and Spirit of Asian Americans Through Art and Culture, 1989
Presents the film: Who Killed Vincent Chin, 1989
1990 – 1994
Located at: 34 Oak St., Boston (1991–1993), 160 Kneeland St., Boston (1993–2002)
Executive Director: Michael Liu (1990–1995)
Publishes the first Massachusetts Asian Pacific American Directory, 1990
Initiates Leadership Training Project to mentor and train young people to become effective leaders
Initiates the creation of Asian Pacific American Agenda Coalition, 1991
Researches and produces the background paper, Recognizing Poverty in Boston's Asian American Community for Boston Foundation's Boston Persistent Poverty Project, 1991
Publishes The Asian American Comic Book, 1992
Produces Day of Remembrance programs, 1992, 1993
Produces the multi-media art installation: Welcome to Asian America, Challenging the Myths, 1993
Organizes the Korean American and African American Relations Program
Collaborates on Media Education Project, with Roxbury Community News and Hispanic Office for Planning and Evaluation to document the media's biased portrayals of community of color
Launches the Chinatown Voter Education/Registration Project with Chinese Progressive Association
Initiates the SafetyNet Violence Prevention Project to help victims of anti-Asian violence.
Plays key role in the Coalition to Protect Parcel C for Chinatown, 1993
Organizes book parties and receptions for Gish Jen, Laurence Yep, David Henry Hwang, Jade Ngoc Huynh, Roberta Uno, Karin Aguilar-San Juan, et al., 1991-1994
1995 – 1999
Executive Directors: Koshy Mathews (1995), Michael Liu (1995-1996), Tracey Tsugawa (1996-1998), Anne Marie Booth (1998-2002)
Organizes art exhibit for Day of Remembrance: Threading History: The Japanese American Experience, 1995
Produces art installation, Welcome to Asian America 2: Visualizing a New World, 1995
Organizes Welcome to Asian America:'96: Drama, Poetry, & Dance, 1996
Initiates Neighborhood Information Network (NIN), formerly Community Information and Technology Project
Organizes Asian American Film Festival at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Co-sponsors the 1st Boston Asian American Creative Music Festival, 1997
Publishes The Massachusetts Asian Pacific American Directory, 1996, 1998
2000 – 2004
Located at: 33 Harrison Ave., Boston (2002-present)
Executive Directors: Anne Marie Booth (1998-2002), Eun-Joung Lee (2002-2004); Director of Programs: Ching-In Chen (current)
Brings back the potluck discussion series, 2000
Brings Fred Korematsu, a Japanese American who challenged the constitutionality of the
Japanese American internment, to the Boston area as part of its Asian American Film & Video Festival, 2001
Co-sponsors 60th anniversary Day of Remembrance program, After Pearl Harbor and 9/11: Civil Liberties Under Threat, 2002
Joins 12 APA groups to call on New Hampshire attorney general to prosecute the killing of Thung Phetakoune, an elderly Laotian American, by his neighbor, 2001
Co-produces CreAsian, a pan-Asian art festival, with Boston Center for the Arts, 2001
The Sticky Rice Project: Uniting Asian Americans Through Anti-racist Education is born, 2001
Launches the Eating History program, a series of discussions for the Asian American community in greater Boston to learn about our diverse histories and communities, 2002
Joins in the nation-wide demonstrations against Abercrombie & Fitch, for retailing racist T-shirts featuring demeaning images of Asians, 2002
Co-sponsors a community briefing on Asian American women's issues, 2002
Co-sponsors a roundtable discussion about the Asian American student movement with Azine, 2002
Hosts a talk with activist author Helen Zia, Our Face in America: Wen Ho Lee and Our History of Mistaken Identity, 2002
Over 200 community members, including youths, attend Eating History, Beyond Shaq and Yao: A Cross-Community Dialogue about Black-Asian Relations, 2003
Joins with other Northeast and Asian American groups to protest the US invasion of Iraq, 2003
2005-2009
Located at: 33 Harrison Ave., Boston (2002-present)
Executive Director: Michael Liu (2006-2007)
Director of Programs: Ching-In Chen (2004-2006)
Co-sponsored Day of Remembrance program, “Evidence Cooking & Civil Liberties – From the Korematsu Case to Guantanamo Bay”, 2005
Continued to offer The Sticky Rice Project: Uniting Asian Americans through Antiracist Education workshops, 2005-present
Continued to present Eating History, popular educational forums on historical and contemporary issues affecting Asian Americans, 2005-2006
Presented “Iraq, Inc.: A Profitable Occupation” book reading/film screening with Pratap Cahtterjee, 2005
Co-sponsored “Aloft” book reading & discussion by Chang-Rae Lee, 2005
Co-sponsored the 3rd National Asian Pacific Islander American Spoken Word & Poetry Summit, Boston, 2005
Helped organize community against demolition of the Gaiety Theater. 2005
Helped rally support against the deportation of Cambodian-American community activist and artist Thea Som, 2005
Participated in May Day Rally for Immigrant Rights, Boston, 2005
Co-sponsored press conference announcing publication of “A Report on Due Process in the Handling of Immigration Detainees in Boston,” 2005
Produced the 2005 Boston Asian American Film Festival, Institute of Contemporary Art, 2005
Co-sponsored “One Tribe” book reading by M. Evelina Galang and writers/artists forum on the anthology, “Screaming Monkeys: Critiques of Asian American Images” at Simmons College, 2006
Presented “From Next to Now: Asian American Arts Weekened,” 2006
Formed AARW Writers Group, Fall 2006
Worked together with four other API groups on “A Little Peace, Dessert Tasting Fundraiser, ” 2006-present
Helped rally community support for 4 young victims of police brutality in Quincy, 2006-2007
Screened “Sentenced Home,” a film about Cambodian American deportees, with discussion by filmmaker and film subject, 2006
Hosted talk by Bob Watada, father of court-martialed Lt. Ehren Watada, who refused to deploy to Iraq, 2006
Joined Copley Square rally in support of immigrant workers & their families affected by the ICE raid in New Bedford, 2007
In collaboration with three API groups, developed curriculum and implemented the Activist Training Institute (Year 1), 2007
Co-sponsored “A Community Reflection on the 25th Anniversary of the Death of Vincent Chin,” 2007
Co-presented “God of Luck” book reading & discussion of the Chinese Experience on Both Sides of the Pacific by Ruthanne Lum McCunn, 2007
Presented “A Free Life” book reading & discussion on writing by Ha Jin, 2008
Produced the 2008 Boston Asian American Film Festival at various venues, 2008
Collaborated on two Volunteer Fairs for local Asian American community organizations, 2008
Cooperated with the Institute for Asian American Studies at UMass Boston’s on their report: “Interest and Action: Findings from A Survey of Asian American Attitudes on Immigrants, Immigration, and Activism,” 2008
Presented “The Snake Dance of Asian American Activism: Community, Vision, and Power” book reading & discussion by Michael Liu, 2008
Hosted AARW Member Talk Back meetings, 2008-2009
Co-presented “The Heart’s Traffic” book reading by Ching-In Chen, 2009
Co-sponsored pre-broadcast screening of Arthur Dong’s “Hollywood Chinese” at the WGBH Studios, 2009
Co-presented exhibit of “The Garment Worker’s Story” from “The Asian American Comic Book,” 2009
In collaboration with two API groups, revised curriculum and implemented the Activist Training Institute (Year 2), 2009
Co-presented panel discussion, “Snake Dancers: A Panel of Lifelong Asian American Movement Activists,” 2009
_________
Become a member!