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Restoring Culture to Combat Genocide: Rohingya Stories of Hope

RESTORING CULTURE TO COMBAT GENOCIDE: ROHINGYA STORIES OF HOPE
A CONVERSATION WITH YASMIN ULLAH AND MAX FRIEDER 

April 14, 12pm PDT (zoom)

The Rohingya of Burma have been called the most persecuted community on the globe. For decades, the Burmese military has sustained a genocidal campaign aimed at erasing the Rohingya through any means possible, including the stripping of rights - education, worship, livelihoods, citizenship and more. In the face of this relentless campaign, the Rohingya within Burma and throughout the world have persevered. Join us for a discussion with Rohingya activist Yasmin Ullah and Artolution executive director Max Frieder about the work that Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh are doing to restore culture through creative projects and finding stories of hope despite the obstacles and struggles the community faces. 

This event is part of Rising Up for Human Dignity: Resisting Cultural Erasure

Presented in partnership by: Never Again Coalition, Oregon Historical Society, Oregon Jewish Museum and Center for Holocaust Education, Portland State University's Holocaust and Genocide Studies Project, WorldOregon and The Immigrant Story, Japanese American Museum of Oregon, Portland Chinatown Museum, Native Arts and Culture Foundation, and Five Oaks Museum