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DESCRIPTION:A discussion with Nancy Hom, Oscar Peñaranda, and Min Paek\nModerated by 
 Alison Satake\nan Activist Imagination event\n\nJoin Kearny Street 
 Workshop, the Manilatown Heritage Foundation and a panel of activists, 
 artists, and organizers for a compelling, honest, and probing discussion 
 about activism, the arts and community.\n\nAs part of Kearny Street 
 Workshop's 35th anniversary celebration, KSW is launching Activist 
 Imagination, a series of conversations with community activists and artists 
 and arts exhibition with visual artists Bob Hsiang, Christine Wong Yap, and 
 Donna Keiko Ozawa.\n\nThe first AI event takes place Tuesday, November 27, 
 at International Hotel Manilatown Center, located at 848 Kearny Street, at 
 Jackson. The Journey So Far: 35 years of activism, features panelists Nancy 
 Hom, Oscar Peñaranda, and Min Paek, and is moderated by Alison Satake. The 
 discussion, which encourages questions and comments from attendees, will 
 take a look at the last three and a half decades of activism and arts in 
 our communities--what forms has activism taken? what methods have proven 
 effective or ineffective? what lessons can we learn from looking back, and 
 how can we find inspiration for the present and future of engaging in 
 activity that effects real social and political change?\n\nTuesday, 
 November 27 , 2007 @ 7 PM\nInternational Hotel Manilatown Center\n868 
 Kearny Street (at Jackson)\nSan Francisco, CA 94108\nFree.\n\nThe Activist 
 Imagination project is made possible in part by a grant from the Creative 
 Work Fund through support from the Walter and Elise Haas Fund, The William 
 and Flora Hewlett Foundation, and the James Irvine Foundation. Activist 
 Imagination is also supported in part by a grant from the San Francisco 
 Foundation and from KSW's members and individual donors.\n\nFor more 
 information contact KSW at 415.503.0520 or info@kearnystreet.org, or visit 
 us online at www.kearnystreet.org\nAbout the moderator and panelists\nNancy 
 Hom is an artist, writer, organizer, and arts administrator with over 30 
 years of experience in the non-profit arts field. Widely known for her 
 silkscreen artwork, she has created numerous images for community events, 
 political and social causes, and has been a graphic designer and children's 
 book illustrator. She is currently  a freelance curator, grantwriter, and 
 arts consultant for several small non-profits in the Bay Area. Her visual 
 and written work has been published in numerous books and anthologies. In 
 her 30+ years of involvement with San Francisco based Asian American arts 
 organization Kearny Street Workshop, she served as its Executive Director 
 from July 1995 through September 2003. She received a San Francisco Arts 
 Commission Individual Artist Grant as a visual artist in 1995. She was 
 awarded a Gerbode Fellowship in 1998, nominated for the 1999 Women of 
 Achievement Awards, and received the KQED Local Hero Award in 2003.  She is 
 on the boards of Heyday Institute and the Asian American Women Artists 
 Association, and is an advisory board member of Kearny Street Workshop. She 
 serves on the Community Arts Distribution Committee of the Zellerbach 
 Family Foundation\n\nA longtime community activist, advocate for ethnic 
 studies in the schools, teacher and writer, Oscar Peñaranda was born in 
 Barugo, Leyte , in 1944. He attended the Philippine Normal School in Manila 
 . At 12, his family moved to Canada , and later relocated to San Francisco 
 , California . At San Francisco State University, Oscar graduated with a 
 B.A. in Literature and an M.A. in Creative Writing. After graduating, he 
 became an activist whose involvement has included participation in the 
 longest-running student strike, which lasted from 1968 to 1969. Since then, 
 he has spent many years teaching in northern California , including Everett 
 Middle School and, more recently, James Logan High School in Union City, 
 California . However, his expertise is not limited to creative writing and 
 English composition, as his curriculum has included the teaching of Tagalog 
 to second-generation Filipinos. Beyond the classroom, his studies in Ethnic 
 and Filipino Heritage has spurred him to lead organizations such as the 
 Filipino American National Historical Society (FANHS) and the Filipino 
 American Educators Association of California (FAEAC). Currently, Oscar has 
 two published works, voicing his passion and life stories called Seasons by 
 the Bay and Full Deck.\n\nMin Paek is the Founder and Executive Director of 
 the Korean American Women Artists and Writers Association (KAWAWA), San 
 Francisco. Min Paek has served on the Taxicab Commission as the General 
 Public representative since April 2003. In 1986, Ms. Paek founded Korean 
 American Women Artists and Writers Association (KAWAWA) and since has been 
 working as an Executive Director. In 1993, she co-founded Korean/African 
 American KAWAWA Intercultural Youth Program with Mr. Lefty Gordon. In 
 addition, she is a moderator of online Korean Studies Discussion List, PhD 
 candidate in Korean Studies Program at Hamburg University, Germany. Ms. 
 Paek holds an M.A. in Inter-Art and B.A. in Conceptual Art from San 
 Francisco State University.\n\nBay Area local, Alison Lee Satake has worked 
 with various Bay Area non-profit organizations on issues of education, 
 environmental justice, and media for the last seven years.  Most recently, 
 she led workshops and forums for KQED on the complex issues of modern China 
 and U.S. immigration.  An aspiring non-fiction book author, she currently 
 is sharpening her craft at UC Berkeley's Graduate School of Journalism 
 (expected M.J. '09).  She received her B.A. ('98) from Barnard College in 
 New York City. \n\nKEARNY STREET WORKSHOP is a San Francisco-based 
 multidisciplinary Asian Pacific American arts nonprofit organization. 
 Founded in 1972 and now celebrating our 35th anniversary year, the mission 
 of Kearny Street Workshop is to produce and present art that enriches and 
 empowers Asian Pacific American communities.Our vision is to achieve a more 
 just society by connecting Asian Pacific American (APA) artists with 
 community members to give voice to our cultural, historical, and 
 contemporary issues.\nThrough our programs, KSW:\n\n* nurtures the creation 
 of new and innovative artwork inspired by the APA experience\n* brings 
 forth the stories of diverse communities\n* develops artists and leaders in 
 the Bay Area\n* encourages inclusivity through collaboration and community 
 involvement\n* promotes cross-cultural and intergenerational understanding 
 and\n* celebrates the spirit of our community\n\nFor more information, 
 visit www.kearnystreet.org \n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2007/11/06/18458588.php
SUMMARY:The Journey So Far: 35 Years of Activism
LOCATION:International Hotel Manilatown Center\n868 Kearny Street (on Jackson)\nSan 
 Francisco, CA, 94108
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2007/11/06/18458588.php
DTSTART:20071128T030000Z
DTEND:20071128T030000Z
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