Archive for the ‘community event’ Category

Join us August 7 for a Community Speak Out Meeting on Social and Mental Health Care

Friday, August 6th, 2010

The Afghan Health Partnership Program will host a community speak out and educational seminar meeting tomorrow, August 7, at the Centerville Community Center in Fremont.

Title: Community Speak Out Meeting: Social and Mental Health Care Needs in the Afghan Community

Session 1:

Recognition of Fazl Ghani Mogaddedi, Author

Session 2:

Keynote Speaker: Dr. Khalili Rahmany, Clincial Pscychologist, President, APAA
“Mental Health Concerns within the Afghan Community”

Additional Presenters:

Dr. Ray Grimm, Human Services Department, City of Fremont
Ihande Weber, LCSW, Mobile Mental Health, City of Fremont
Additional respected members of the community

Where:
Centerville Community Center
3355 Country Drive
Fremont, CA

When:
August 7, 2010
Program begins: 4:00 PM
Dinner: 8:00 PM
Event concludes: 10:00 PM

Please RSVP by calling Dr. Ahmad Zamani at 510-677-6402

This event is made possible by Afghan Care, The Afghan Coalition, Union Bank, N.A., The California Endowment and MHSA Alameda County.

North-American Islamic Shelter for the Abused Fundraiser May 1, 2010

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

nisa_logoMembers of the Afghan community and Afghan Coalition staff will be attending the North-American Islamic Shelter for the Abused (NISA) 8th Annual fundraising event. NISA is a non-profit organization dedicated to preventing domestic violence through education, prevention, and intervention.

Strengthen the Family, Strengthen the Ummah
Saturday, May 1st, 2010 at 6:00 p.m.
http://www.asknisa.org/events.html (Event Tickets)
MCA Banquet Hall 3003 Scott Blvd. Santa Clara, CA 95054
$20 online / $30 at the door | Baby sitting $5 per child / $10 per family
http://asknisa.org/2010-AnnualEventPostcard.pdf (Event Flyer – PDF)

SPEAKERS
- Sheikh Alaeddin El-Bakri Notable Scholar
- Imam Tahir Anwar Scholar and Resident Imam at SBIA
- Dr. Mohamad Rajabally President of NISA
http://www.asknisa.org | 1-888-ask-nisa (275-6472)

A conference for both the head and the heart

Wednesday, December 9th, 2009

By Bruce Green
Afghan Coalition Board Member

Afghan Coaliton at Global Knowledge Conference

From Left to Right: Teri Lindgren, Rona Popal, Dr. Mohammad Qayoumi, Hamid Nekrawesh, Bruce Green and Qasim Tarin

In 1979 two events shook the world: The Iranian Revolution and the Soviet Invasion of Afghanistan. These events caused millions of refugees to scatter around the globe thereby creating the cultures of the Diaspora. Thirty years later the California State University East Bay (CSUEB) hosted the first Global Knowledge Conference where scholars gathered to present research and discuss the dynamics of this Diaspora.

The historic event took place October 22 – 24, 2009. The venue at CSU East Bay was appropriate for two reasons: First, the East Bay of the San Francisco Bay Area is home to some of the largest communities of Afghans and Iranians and secondly, the president of CSUEB, Dr. Mohammad Qayoumi, is a member of this Diaspora from Afghanistan.

The opening evening reception featured art and music from accomplished members of the Diaspora such as sculptor Sami Nadi and master of the Rubab, Homayun Sakhi. Friday’s dinner featured the Shahrzad Dance Academy performing traditional Persian dances. Original verses were recited by poets Najia Karim and Nosratollah Nooh.

This was a conference for both the head and the heart, featuring scholarly presentations as well as emotional personal narratives.

As the host of this noble gathering, Dr. Qayoumi set the stage with his presentation on the ancient history of Persia. Scholarly workshops from CSUEB faculty covered topics such as “How to Meet the Informational Needs of Afghan Women” by Dr. Valerie Smith and “Causes of High Divorce Rates among Diaspora Afghans” by Dr. Farid Younos, and the results of an extensive survey on “Health and Well-Being of Afghans in Northern California” presented by Dr. Carl Stempel.

Keynote speakers included Dr. Alam Payind, the director of the Middle East Studies Center, Ohio State University, who had just returned two days previously from Afghanistan to bring a fresh report of conditions and attitudes there. Dr. Shafiq Shamel from Stanford University shared his insights concerning “New Directions in Afghan and Iranian Scholarship.” The wrap-up plenary session featured Rona Popal, executive director of the Afghan Coalition and journalist Mizgon Zahir-Darby, discussing “Emerging Issues within the Diaspora.” The final emphasis was on the needs of the new generation, who represent both challenges and great potential for blessing.

The entire conference was videotaped and hopefully will be available for viewing on the CSUEB website in the near future. A published form of the conference will also be produced so the lessons can be passed on to others and the benefits of this effort can be multiplied.

Links:

Presentation by Afghan Coalition Board Member Teri Lindgren, Ph.D., UCSF, “Impact of Sept. 11 on Afghan Women’s Community Participation”

Presentation by Afghan Coalition partner Carl Stempel, Ph.D., CSUEB, Social and Experimental Influences on the Health and Well-Being of First Generation Afghans in Northern California”

Presentation by Afghan Coalition partners Aida Shirazi, Ph.D and Mehra Shirazi, Ph.D., UCB, “Afghan Immigrant Women’s Breast Health Knowledge and Behaviors”

For links to other wonderful presentations from the conference, please click here.

Presenter Biographies

Discussion on the Global Politics of Afghanistan and Pakistan at Stanford

Monday, November 9th, 2009
Global Politics of Afghanistan and Pakistan - event flyer

Global Politics of Afghanistan and Pakistan - event flyer

THE ABBASI PROGRAM IN ISLAMIC STUDIES is hosting an event on the global politics of Afghanistan and Pakistan at Stanford University.

Thursday, December 3rd 2009, 4:30-6:00 pm
Encina Hall Central, CISAC Central Conference Room
616 Serra Street, Stanford CA

A Discussion Session with:

  • Tahir Andrabi, Economics, Pomona College
  • Shahzad Bashir, Religious Studies, Stanford University
  • James Caron, South Asia Studies, University of Pennsylvania
  • Robert Crews, History, Stanford University
  • Gilles Dorronsoro, The Carnegie Endowment
  • Jamal Elias, Religious Studies, University of Pennsylvania
  • Shah Mahmoud Hanifi, History, James Madison University
  • Fariba Nawa, Journalist, Fremont
  • Thomas Ruttig, Afghanistan Analysts Network
  • Lutz Rzehak, Humboldt University
  • Farzana Shaikh, Asia Programme, Royal Institute of International Affairs
  • Amin Tarzi, Middle East Studies, the Marine Corps University

FREE AND OPEN TO PUBLIC

[Co-sponsored with CISAC, Center for South Asia, Department of History, CREEES]

For more information about the Abbasi Program, please see http://islamicstudies.stanford.edu or contact the program office at abbasiprogram@stanford.edu

Conference on Afghan and Iranian Diaspora in the Bay Area

Wednesday, September 30th, 2009

Global Knowledge Conference - Afghan and Iranian Diaspora Cultures and Communities in the Bay Area

This October, please join the Afghan Coalition and our colleagues for the Global Knowledge Conference: Afghan and Iranian Diaspora Cultures and Communities in the Bay Area. The event will take place Thursday-Saturday, October 22 – 24.

Location: Biella Room, Library & Music Building 1055
25800 Carlos  Bee Blvd., Hayward, CA 94542
$35 through Oct. 15
$50 at the door (space permitting)
Campus parking $7 per day

The Conference Agenda

I. Thursday, Oct. 22, 5-7 p.m., Biella Room, University Library
Reception, art exhibition, and short documentary and discussion

II. Friday, Oct. 23, 3-8:30 p.m. Music Building 1055
Plenary,  “Framing the Afghan and Iranian Diasporas,” will feature Farid Younos, CSUEB lecturer and radio and TV commentator, a welcome by CSUEB President Mohammad Qayoumi, keynote address by Alam Payind, director of the Ohio State University Middle East Studies Center, poetry and dance, and a buffet of Afghan foods.

III. Saturday, Oct. 24, 8:15-6:30 p.m., Music Building 1055
Plenary:  “1979 – 30 Years Hence” will feature Fatemeh Keshavarz, author of  “Jasmine and Stars: Reading More Than ‘Lolita’ in Tehran,” sessions on “Community Research in the Local Afghan Diaspora” and “Social Activism in Iranian Diaspora,” Personal and Immigration Narratives, roundtable discussion on “New Directions in Afghan and Iranian Scholarship,” and a Closing Plenary, plus a buffet of Iranian foods, and both Afghan and Iranian sweets.

Conference Details
Afghan Coalition Executive Director Rona Popal will be presenting along with Parvin Ahmadi, assistant superintendent of the Fremont Unified School District; Nushi Safinya, director of Studies for International and Multilingual Students at St. Mary’s College; and Vida Samiian, dean of the CSU Fresno College of Arts and Humanities.

The conference will lead off with a reception, art exhibition, short documentary and discussion from 5-7 p.m. Oct. 22 in the Biella Room of the University Library.  Yuko Kurahashi of the School of Theatre and Dance at Kent State University will present her short documentary on the making of “Beyond the Mirror,” a theatrical  performance by the Bond Street Theatre of New York and the Emile Theatre of Kabul, and a discussion will follow.

The conference opening plenary at 3 p.m. Oct. 23 in the Music Building 1055 will bring together Farid Younos and Nushi Safinya on “Framing the Afghan and Iranian Diasporas,” with Diedre Badejo, dean of the CSUEB College of Letters, Arts, and Social Sciences, moderating.

Najia Karim will set the stage for dinner and a short Iranian dance performance by reading Afghan poetry. Later,  CSUEB President Mohammad Qayoumi will introduce Payind’s keynote address.

The conference will resume on Oct. 24 with the plenary, “1979 – 30 Years Hence,” with two parallel sessions on  “Community Research in the Local Afghan Diaspora” and “Social Activism in Iranian Diaspora.” Sessions will highlight personal immigration narratives by Abubakr Asadulla, M.D., of the CSUEB Student Health Center, Sahar Haghighat, a CSUEB graduate student. The sessions will be followed by a roundtable discussion on “New Directions in Afghan and Iranian Scholarship” and a closing plenary.

The conference is co-sponsored by the Afghan Coalition; the California State University; Fresno College of Arts and Humanities; Zale Video and Film; CSUEB Associated Students Inc.; Balkh Bakery & Deli; and Nushi Safinya, Director, Studies for International and Multilingual Students, St. Mary’s College.

To register, send your name, address, phone number, e-mail address and a check for $35 per person, payable to CSUEB CLASS, to:

Global Knowledge Conference
CLASS, MB1501, CSUEB,
25800 Carlos Bee Blvd., Hayward, CA 94542.

Conference information and updates are at: http://class.csueastbay.edu/Global_Knowledge.php
CSUEB welcomes persons with disabilities and will provide reasonable accommodation upon request. Please notify event sponsor a minimum of two weeks in advance at 510-885-3183 if accommodation is needed.

Afghan Soccer Club for Youth

Tuesday, February 17th, 2009
picture_1171

Afghan Soccer Club members with their coach Mr. Wais Omer.

The Afghan Soccer Club is a Bay Area-based Afghan youth soccer group that is organized under the umbrella of the Afghan Coalition, a non-profit community building organization. The mission of the Afghan Soccer Club is to promote access to sports, healthy lifestyle choices and leadership for youth, with an emphasis on low income immigrant youth who would not otherwise have such opportunities.  The Club also seeks to  serve as the premier center for sports in the Afghan community and to improve the quality of life in our local communities by increasing unity, visibility and civic pride through sports.

The primary purposes of this program are to teach the fundamentals of soccer, leadership, discipline, and the importance of teamwork to all of the participants. The Afghan Soccer Club program aims to be a safe, fun and exiting experience for every athlete child and youth who participates. The ultimate goal of the program is to teach young people how to be more successful and healthy in other areas of their lives.

The Afghan Soccer Club has 5 teams and 44 players including Afghan boys and girls in grades 1-8. To date, over 53 Afghan youth have participated in this club, and a few have won awards in soccer tournaments.

All youth soccer teams are organized and coached  by Afghan volunteer trainers Mr. Wais Omer, Mr. Nazir Baba Karkhil and Laila Mojadidi. The program began in September 2008 with recruiting and meeting with youth, families and coaches.  In October and December the group put on its first youth soccer tournaments. The youth practice Tuesdays and Sundays at Park Elizabeth in Fremont.

We have received very positive responses from our community and have discovered that soccer is one of the best ways to bring parents and youth together to have fun and learn about each other. We would like to expand this program to reach more youth and improve the emotional and physical health of the community.

We are seeking help in identifying community partners and funding for the project. If you have ideas or if you would like to raise funds on behalf of the group, please contact us.

Lamer Popal is receiving award from AFSO.

Youth are excited to play

Lamer Popal is receiving award from AFSO.

Youth member receiving award from AFSO.

CSUEB year-long focus on Afghanistan and Iran, programs in April and October 2009

Friday, February 6th, 2009

Two lectures, one on “Literature and the Making of Ethnic Americans,” and the other on the “Hyphenated Lives” of Muslim Americans will be presented by the Cal State East Bay College of Letters, Arts, and Social Sciences (CLASS) as it continues its year-long series focusing on Afghanistan and Iran.

“Literature and the Making of Ethnic Americans: Literary Expressions of Afghan and Iranian American Identity 30 Years On,” by Persist Karim, Associate Professor of Comparative Literature at SJSU, will be presented from noon-1:30 p.m. Wednesday, April 8 in the Biella Room of the University Library, 25800 Carlos Bee Blvd., Hayward.

Soheila Amirsoleimani, associate professor of Persian at the University of Utah, will speak on, “Hyphenated Lives: Muslim Americas in the United States” from 2-3:30 p.m. Tuesday, April 28, also in the Biella Room.

Both events are free and open to everyone.

Karim will investigate the ways that the Afghan and Iranian communities have forged an ethnic community and identity through literature and the ways they’ve challenged and grappled with representations of their countries, cultures and experiences through poetry, fiction and nonfiction. Amirsoleimani will discuss the ways that these two communities, compelled by the events of the Iranian revolution and the Soviet In vasion of Afghanistan in 1979, have begun to deal with the impact of those events and the ways they have shaped their communities and the second generation.

Karim teaches literature, creative writing and Middle Eastern Studies at SJSU. She is the editor of Let Me Tell You Where I’ve Been: New Writing by Women of the Iranian Diaspora (2006) and co-editor of A World Between: Poems, Short Stories and Essays by Iranian-Americans (1999). She has written numerous articles about Iranian American literature and is working on a collection of essays about Middle Eastern American communities.

Amirsoleimani specializes in medieval Perso-Islamic history and classical Persian literature.  Her articles on various Persian texts have appeared in Islamic and Iranian studies journals in the U.S. and Europe.

The CSUEB series began in the fall with the exhibit, “Afghanistan: Hidden Treasures from the National Museum, Kabul,” at the San Francisco Asian Art Museum, combined with the collaborative conference, “Recovering Afghanistan’s Past: Cultural Heritage in Context,” at the University of California campus in Berkeley, and the panel discussion, “The Future of Afghanistan’s Past: Valuing Cultural Heritage,” also at the Asian Art Museum.

The year-long focus on Afghanistan and Iran will conclude in October 2009 with the conference – “Dar Jahan, dar Hazar (In the World, At Home): Afghan and Iranian Diaspora Cultures and Communities in the Bay Area,” on the Cal State East Bay Hayward Campus. Additional information on the conference will be available on the CSU East Bay Web site.

Afghan Coalition Helps Over 450 East Bay Afghans See ‘Hidden Treasures’

Friday, January 23rd, 2009

Inside the Asian Art Museum

Inside the Asian Art Museum

The unique opportunity to view the amazing “Hidden Treasures of Afghanistan” exhibit has almost ended. This world-class display on loan from the National Museum of Kabul will finish its three-month visit to the Asian Art Museum in San Francisco on January 25. The Afghan Coalition, whose clients are among the least advantaged in the large Bay Area Afghan community, wanted every Afghan to be able to visit this treasure, no matter their economic level or transportation resources. We contacted museum officials with our plan to bring several busses, and the museum responded with free passes and a wonderful welcome to our community members.


Afghan Coalition board member Rev. Bruce Green, who facilitates Bridge Building between Christians and Muslims, obtained donated busses from Bridges Community Church for museum field trips on December 7, 2008 and January 17, 2009. On each of these Saturdays two busses transported over 150 Afghans, starting with morning pickups in Fremont followed by afternoon shuttles from Concord and Tracy. Thanks to all the donated resources and volunteer help from Bridges and the Museum, the cost was only $10 for a family of 4 (normal museum tickets for 4 adults would be $48 and BART for 4 is $42 round trip from Fremont). In addition to the 300 who came on these field trips, the Afghan Coalition distributed 150 free passes to Afghans who provided their own transportation.


It was encouraging to see whole families experiencing this treasure together. Many older Afghans remembered seeing parts of the exhibit in the old museum in Kabul before the building was destroyed during the civil war. Children enjoyed playing in the “archeological dig” sandboxes. Perhaps some of them will be inspired to become the future scientists and protectors of their culture and history. Many adults commented how proud they were to see Afghanistan honored and celebrated in this way.


Special mention should be made to Pauline Fong-Martinez, the Director of Visitor Relations for the Asian Art Museum, and Bridges bus drivers Bob Mayer, Dwight Hunnicutt, and Tony Hernandez (all of whom donated their time and were too busy driving to see the exhibit). Also special thanks to Habib Zargi and Qais Habibi of Lemar TV for covering this event and helping with publicity. Soon, we will post a link to a two-minute YouTube video from a Lemar TV interview with Bruce Green featuring pictures from the field trips soon.


Visiting the Afghanistan special exhibit at the Asian Art Musuem

Visiting the Afghanistan special exhibit at the Asian Art Musuem

Bridge Builder Rev. Bruce Green and Field Trip Participants

Bridge Builder Rev. Bruce Green and Field Trip Participants

Barack Obama Inauguration Celebration on 1/15/09 at Diamond Palace in Fremont

Sunday, January 4th, 2009

jan15flyer

Please join the Afghan Muslim Community for a celebration called “Unity for the Sake of Change” at the Diamond Palace (formerly Flamingo Palace) on January 15, 2009 from 6pm to 9pm. Admission is $5 and includes tea, cookies and cake.

As the United States prepares for the historic inauguration of President-elect Barack Obama, many community members are looking forward to celebrating and working together to build positive change and make our nation and neighborhoods stronger and more unified.

The event is one in a series of events during the 10 days before the Jan. 20 inauguration co-organized by Alameda County’s Board of Supervisors to motivate everyone to renew their commitment to provide service in our communities. To affect change, all community members will need to reach out to each other in new ways.

Emerging youth leaders and other community members will make inspirational speeches about becoming more engaged in volunteering to improve the quality of life in our communities. The event will begin with a welcoming speech by Alameda County Supervisor Scott Haggerty, followed by a recitation of the Qur’an and a “Call to Purpose.” Entertainment will also include an Afghan singer, a rubab player and the traditional Afghan dance called ‘Attan.’ Everyone in the community is welcome. Please contact Rahil Daud at (925) 435-7764 for more information. The program will be presented in English.

The week will conclude Jan. 20 with a live viewing of the Obama inauguration and acceptance speech at the Oakland/Alameda County Arena on large screens. Doors open at 7:00am. Group ticket information contact (510) 272-6695.

For more information on the series of community events, contact the Alameda County Board of Supervisors, District 5, Keith Carson’s office, at (510) 272-6695.

Fremont Main Library to host immigration information event on September 27, 2008

Tuesday, August 12th, 2008

Fremont Main Library

In September the Fremont Main Library will host an educational program on citizenship, and the Afghan Coalition will participate by staffing an information table on the day of the program.  The program is scheduled for Saturday, Sept. 27, 2008, 1:00-4:30 p.m. The main speaker will focus on the citizenship process, with an emphasis on changes to the citizenship test.  The speaker is Lucee Rosemarie Fan, Community Relations Officer of the San Francisco District of the U.S. Citizenship & Immigration Services.  She will speak and answer questions.   She has presented other successful programs at the San Francisco Public Library as well.

The program will be held in the library’s  Fukaya Room.  In addition to the Afghan Coalition, other representatives of East Bay community groups working in the area of immigration and citizenship will be available to provide information about their services to attendees.

The program is a joint venture between the Fremont Main Library and the Alameda County Library Write to Read Program.

The program:

Citizenship: An Introduction

  • Introduction to the naturalization process
  • Update on the new citizenship test
  • Representatives from local community organizations involved with naturalization

1:00 – 2:30 p.m. Speaker: Lucee Rosemarie Fan, Community Relations Officer, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services

2:30-4:30 p.m. Speak with local community organization representatives involved with naturalization.

In partnership with:
Alameda County Bar Assocation
Afghan Coalition
Catholic Charities
Centro de Servicios
Filipinos for Affirmative Action
Tri-City Elder Coalition

For more information on the program contact: Fremont Main Library Information Desk (510) 745-1401
Directions are available on the Fremont Main Library’s Web site.