Asians for Collective Liberation in Spokane’s Post

As a culmination of our month-long series of events, we are thrilled to invite you all to the screening of the award winning documentary documentary films, YAI NIN and LIQUOR STORE DREAMS at ACL Spokane’s Asian American Heritage Month Closing Reception! Date/Time: Thursday, May 30 at 5 - 7:30pm, doors open at 4:30pm Location: Garland Theater | 924 W Garland Ave, Spokane, WA 99205 Reserve your FREE tickets here: bit.ly/interwoven-films We would like to thank the following partners and sponsors for their generous support in making this year’s Asian American Heritage Month 2024 a meaningful celebration: Empire Health Foundation, Better Health Together, Expo ‘74 50th Celebration, Spokane Public Library, Eastern Washington University, Gonzaga University, KH Consulting, Providence, KYRS, YWCA Spokane, Community Health Plan of WA, Community Colleges of Spokane, SNAP, WA Commission on Asian American Pacific Affairs (CAPAA), Spark Central, Auntie’s Bookstore, Wishing Tree Books, Spokane Hmong Association, Muslims for Community Action and Support, Peace & Justice Action League of Spokane, Greater Spokane Progress, SCAR Spokane, Spokane NAACP, and Garland Theater. For more information and full calendar of events, visit: https://lnkd.in/g_8PQx2G ____ About the films: YAI NIN (13min) is a documentary short film about a Thai businesswoman and family matriarch, Ninlawan Pinyo - the director Champ Ensminger’s ‘yai,’ or grandmother. She is the proprietor of a brand of Thai sausage made in Chiang Mai, and has lived above her factory her entire life. The film depicts Nin at her home in Chiang Mai, watching over her factory while interacting with her family in America through technology. While her relationship with her children - all now American with their own kids - is strained by distance, she takes on the role of mother figure for the workers and caretakers that live and work around her. https://www.yainindoc.com/ LIQUOR STORE DREAMS (85mins) is an intimate portrait of two Korean American children of liquor store owners who set out to bridge generational divides with their immigrant parents in Los Angeles. Growing up a daughter of Korean immigrants who ran a liquor store in a South LA neighborhood, director So Yun Um decided that what she wanted to do more than anything else, was become a filmmaker, much to the bemusement of her father. In this vibrant and bold film, So turns the camera on herself, her community and her friends, and documents a rarely seen slice of the American dream as she struggles with creating her own path in life. https://lnkd.in/gh7gQm_T

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Kaitie Dong

Community Organizer, Senior Policy Analyst, and Trainer

1mo

Wow! I LOVE this documentary!

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