PeacePlaza
x = independently organized TED event

Theme: Also

This event occurred on
March 24, 2018
San Francisco, California
United States

We live in an increasingly multiple world, where people, places, systems, and concepts can hold different identities, attributes, and characteristics in a single body. It’s the diversity within that leads us to the paradoxes and puzzles, confusion and contradictions, synergies and serendipities.

Located at the intersection of the Japantown and Fillmore neighborhoods of San Francisco—which themselves have their own multiplicities—this year’s TEDxPeacePlaza event will explore the theme of “Also”. Six provocative speakers will share their thoughts on duality and multiplicity, explaining how their ideas, identities, stories, and experiences coexist in ways we might not expect.

Join us on March 24th, 2018 at New People Cinema on 1746 Post Street in San Francisco to explore concepts and ideas worth spreading.

New People
1746 Post Street
San Francisco, California, 94115
United States
Event type:
Standard (What is this?)
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Speakers

Speakers may not be confirmed. Check event website for more information.

Diana Tsuchida

Diana Emiko Tsuchida is an independent writer and the creator of Tessaku, an oral history project that shares stories about the Japanese American incarceration. Her work has been featured on NPR’s “Code Switch”, NBC’s “Asian Pacific America”, Discover Nikkei and the Center for Asian American Media. Her grandfather was a vocal resister against the incarceration and was sent to the Citizen Isolation Center in Leupp, Arizona and the Department of Justice camp in Crystal City, Texas. Her father and grandmother spent the war in Tule Lake.

Jin Lee

Dr. Jin Lee is an Oxford-trained child neuro-psychologist who has founded three startups, most recently BabyNoggin, an app that helps expecting parents track their baby’s development through various stages of pregnancy and that also offers early detection and screening of developmental delays. Dr. Lee’s passions have also led her to work in innovation centers and venture capital funds for America’s 4th largest health insurance company and 3rd largest nonprofit hospital system.

Milagros Phillips

Milagros Phillips specializes in transforming relationships between the races using a powerful approach that leaves participants empowered and hopeful. Her program, “Race Demystified: A Compassionate Approach to the Healing of America,” has proven to be a powerful tool, which she has been called upon to facilitate at Fortune 100 Companies, colleges, universities and communities throughout the country. Ms. Phillips’ historically grounded approach for looking at Race, gives us a new understanding of our current challenges, raising our consciousness and developing new approaches that help improve personal and professional relationships. Ms. Phillips was the Founding Executive Director of “The National Resource Center for the Healing of Racism.” She has served as Expert in Residence for the W.K. Kellogg Foundation. Michigan State University uses part of her model to train their diversity facilitators and has lectured in the US, Mexico and Europe.

Ny Nourn

As a teenager, Ny Nourn became trapped in an abusive relationship with a much older man. Weeks after Ny turned 18, her boyfriend killed the boss at her after-school job in a fit of jealousy. The murder went unsolved for three years until Ny went to the police. After providing a confession, Ny was arrested and charged with aiding and abetting murder. A judge sentenced Ny to life without the possibility of parole. Like Ny, upwards of 90% of incarcerated women experience domestic violence or sexual assault before their incarceration. After years of advocacy in prison, Ny finally won parole from the governor. On her release date, however, immigration officers arrested her as she left prison. Ny had been born in a refugee camp in Thailand after her mother fled genocide in Cambodia under the Khmer Rouge. Although Ny was a permanent resident, her conviction made her an “aggravated felon” subject to mandatory deportation. In November 2017, after an outpouring of community support, Ny walked out of jail as a free person for the first time in over 16 years.

Sonia Rao

Sonia Rao brings her multi-instrumental talents – she grew up studying violin, piano, guitar, and flute – into the world of pop. Her songs have been featured on more than 35 shows including MTV’s Jersey Shore, ABC’s The Vineyard, and CBS’ The Bold and The Beautiful. As a finalist on NBC The Voice, Sonia opened up about being first generation and being an Asian American artist. She has been invited to speak and perform at four TEDx conferences, speaking most recently about gender inequality, just one of the issues she holds dear. Sonia released her third album in August 2016 and is on tour now. For more information about Sonia Rao, her new album, and tour dates, please visit soniarao.com. Learn more at on Facebook at facebook.com/musicsoniarao or on Instagram @soniarao.

Thy Tran

Trained as a professional chef, Thy Tran established Wandering Spoon to provide cooking classes, culinary consultation, and educational programming for businesses and nonprofit organizations. Thy is also the founder and director of the Asian Culinary Forum, a nonprofit dedicated to educating the public about Asian food around the world. She co-authored The Essentials of Asian Cooking, Taste of the World, and the award-winning guide, Kitchen Companion. Her work has appeared in numerous other books, such as Asia in the San Francisco Bay Area: A Cultural Travel Guide, and she has written for The Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, San Francisco Chronicle, Saveur and Fine Cooking. In her creative projects, she focuses on book arts and literary nonfiction about food, the rituals of the kitchen, and the many ways eating and cooking both connect and separate communities around the world.

Organizing team

Glenn
Fajardo

Organizer