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"We wanted to produce Tribute and Remembrance: Asian Americans After 9/11 so that we can tell the stories that are seldom
told or understood. We realize that some of the stories may be painful for some to hear again or even for the first
time, but we believe that the acknowledgement of the different experiences that people faced throughout the crisis
is vital to our healing process and to the rebuilding of American unity."
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-- Cao K. O., Executive Director
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Tribute and Remembrance: Asian Americans After 9/11, commissioned by the Asian American Federation of New York, produced
by Renata Huang, and narrated by David Henry Hwang, is a 69- minute documentary that examines the multitude of ways the
September 11th tragedy impacted the Asian American community. Broken down into five major parts, the first segment
focuses on the economic devastation of New York City’s Chinatown; the second segment follows a South Asian taxi cab
driver who has watched his weekly earnings fall by 75% to illustrate the hardships experienced by the city’s taxi
drivers; part three touches upon the selective detention of Islamic and South Asian immigrants through the
story of the break-up of a Pakistani- family, after the main breadwinner is detained by the INS; the much stigmatized
subject of mental health is examined in the fourth segment; and in the fifth segment, 3 families share the memories of
their loved ones lost in the tragedy. The documentary does end on an upbeat note, however, by highlighting the many
philanthropic efforts of everyday Asian Americans, in the midst of their hardships.
To purchase a copy of Tribute and Remembrance: Asian Americans After 9/11, on VHS download the order form.
Tribute and Remembrance: Asian Americans After 9/11 was funded by the W.K. Kellogg Foundation.
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