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  • Nakala Murry says her son doesn't understand what happened to him. "His words to me were: 'Why did he shoot me? What did I do?' "
  • Sunday, May 28, 2023 at 11 p.m. on KPBS 2 / Stream now with the PBS App. The film tells the story of a group of Japanese Americans and their incarceration by the U.S. government during World War II. It also explores the long-term effects of this incarceration and the phenomenon of intergenerational trauma. More than 40 camp survivors and descendants bring an unparalleled immediacy and urgency to the story.
  • The landmark plan outlines over 100 steps that federal agencies will take within a year. But the Biden administration says it will only work if other individuals and institutions take action too.
  • Campland on the Bay®, San Diego’s favorite waterfront campground, is the premier destination for year-round family fun in sunny Southern California this Thanksgiving weekend and throughout the holiday season. Celebrating 54 years of camping, Campland is where generations of families have created cherished memories along Mission Bay. With the recently launched Free Camping Program for underserved California youth and families, Campland has helped create more accessible and equitable opportunities for people to enjoy waterfront recreation on Mission Bay regardless of age, background, ethnicity, race, income level, or disability. Click here for more information about this event!
  • There's a looming debt crisis in many lower income countries. Low interest rates a few years back started the cycle. Then came a series of once in a generation shocks. Is there a solution?
  • The importance of religion in the lives of Americans is on the decline. That's according to a new report from the Public Religion Research Institute.
  • TJ the muppet joined actor Kal Penn and Korean American muppet Ji-Young this week to discuss the word of the day: confidence. He debuts during Asian Pacific American Heritage Month.
  • The first-of-its-kind poll of about 7,000 adults sheds new light on how Asians — both immigrants as well as those born in the U.S. — see themselves and others.
  • Villa Musica provides a curriculum from Carnegie Hall's education department to make music accessible to more students across San Diego County.
  • From the museum: Artist Lisa Ross describes their relationship to Uyghur shrines and culture as a story of “fate and possibly faith.” An avid traveler drawn to desert landscapes, the photo and video artist first visited the Taklamakan Desert along the former Silk Route of the Uyghur Region, officially called Xinjiang (or “New Territory) by the People’s Republic of China, in 2002. In the following decade, Ross visited over fifty holy sites nestled among sand dunes or the edges of remote oasis villages. Composed of hand-carved wooden branches and colorful flags made of silk and other fabrics, these open-air monuments are known as mazar, from the Arabic word for “shrine” or “mausoleum,” made by Uyghur pilgrims to mark the resting places of revered Muslim saints and their descendants. Ross’s work expanded through friendship and travel with Dr. Alexandre Papas, a French historian of Islam, and Dr. Rahile Dawut, a Uyghur ethnographer missing since 2017. With greater access to the Uyghur region and people, the artist began to explore other relationships in the landscape. In the prefecture of Turpan, local tradition situates beds in the open air to navigate the extreme heat of summer. Ross saw a poetic connection between the mazars and these outdoor beds, and the vast open space both occupied. Created with wood and fabric materials similar to the shrines, the beds mirror the rectangular burial markers commemorating saints, who are believed to rest in a state of eternal sleep. Following the period of the artist’s work in the region, historically unstable relations between the Chinese government and Uyghur people continued to worsen, resulting in what the US government now recognizes as genocide. Ross’s luminous photographs, first conceived as an homage to living shrines, have now become a moving visual elegy to the Uyghur homeland. They reflect the artist’s commitment to raising awareness about the atrocities against humanity currently ongoing in Xinjiang.In addition to the photographs on view, two films by Ross, entitled To Mark a Prayer and RISE, provide a glimpse into the way these sacred and beloved spaces function in the Uyghur homeland. Thoughtfully composed, poetic, and reverential in approach, Ross’s works capture the rituals and spiritual traditions associated with the desert mazars, as well as the beauty of everyday life in the region—and now represent an important archive of collective memory, histories of faith, and the perseverance of an endangered people and culture. Related links: San Diego Museum of Art on Instagram San Diego Museum of Art on Facebook Artist Lisa Ross' website
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