Video
This documentary highlights the voices of an underrepresented Asian American community — AAPI Adoptees — who grapple with their own racial and cultural visibility within the AAPI community itself.
Published August 26, 2021
Three AAPI adoptees tell their stories of exploring their identity.
Despite public outcry from the Asian American public against the increase in anti-Asian hate, on March 16th, the Atlanta Spa mass shootings shook the nation. This documentary highlights the voices of an underrepresented Asian American community — AAPI Adoptees — who grapple with their own racial and cultural visibility within the AAPI community itself.
Our story follows three AAPI adoptees – a social media creator, an adoptee research scholar, and an adoptee-focused podcast co-host – as they share their unique experiences as both an adoptee and Asian American.
“As far as growing up, I think a lot of people like to ask, ‘When did you find out that you were adopted?’ And I’m like, ‘Well, my entire family is white.’ It really wouldn’t have taken me that long.”
“I’m a cis Asian male, straight male, who never really identified as an Asian before. But clearly, this was having an impact on me. I didn’t know what to say or what to do.”
“Adoptees have been speaking loudly for quite some time – waiting to be heard – about what actually the experience is like for them.”
Rhiannon Clements and Nash Consing are Voices 2021 students. Yumi Araki and Vishakha Darbha edited the short documentary team.
Rhiannon Clements is a senior at Clarkson University and an intern at North Country Public Radio.
Nash Consing is a recent graduate of UNC Chapel Hill and a reporting and video intern with FiveThirtyEight.
Yumi Araki is the managing producer of podcasts at America’s Test Kitchen where she edits and produces the narrative podcast Proof.
Vishakha Darbha is the associate audio producer on the New York Times Opinion audio team, where she works on their flagship podcast, The Argument.
Clarkson University
Video
Virtual 2021
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The Asian American Journalists Association (AAJA) is a membership nonprofit advancing diversity in newsrooms and ensuring fair and accurate coverage of communities of color. AAJA has more than 1,500 members across the United States and Asia.