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Grace Ji-Sun Kim

~ Loving Life

Grace Ji-Sun Kim

Tag Archives: racism

Anti-Asian Racism: Book Interview with Dr. Joe Cheah

26 Thursday Jan 2023

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racism, AAPI, Orbis Books, Anti-Asian Racism, StopAAPIHate, substack, loving life, Joe Cheah

Below is a repost from my substack. Please subscribe to my substack too. Thank you.

I asked my friend, co-author and co-editor of Book Series Asian Christianity in the Diaspora, Dr. Joseph Cheah why he wrote his new book, Anti-Asian Racism: Myths, Stereotypes, and Catholic Social Teaching.

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Dr. Cheah: An obvious answer has to do with an unprecedented level of anti-Asian hate incidents and crimes prompted me to use my platform to write this book. If truth be told, however, I would have written something about the Asian American experience even if COVID-19 never took place.

It is difficult to describe what it feels to be an Asian American to those who are not part of the experience because the pervasive and destructive stereotypes that are part and parcel of the Asian American experience often takes place at the level of subtleties. These toxic stereotypes are perpetual foreigner, yellow peril, and the model minority myth. Those who are not part of the Asian American experience may feel compelled to admit to hearing our stories and our experiences with a defective interior ear. Nevertheless, it is important to tell our stories even if few are listening because our stories are our gifts and contributions deemed essential to the fuller understanding of what it means to be “American” in our nation-state and what it means to be “American Catholic” in our Catholic Church in the U.S. Our stories and experiences are some of the missing pieces necessary for the attainment of authentic racial justice, which cannot be achieved until stories of all ethnic groups are included in the fabric of Americanness. This, in a nutshell, is the primary reason why I wrote this book.

Me: These toxic stereotypes are well-known and well-analyzed in Asian American Studies. So, what’s new in my book?

Dr. Cheah: There are a few, but I mention one that relates to this holy season: to demonstrate that Jesus himself was no stranger to these stereotypes. Luke tells us that Jesus was born in Bethlehem, which is located in Asia. Therefore, from a geographical standpoint, Jesus was Asian. While he lived in a culture, time, and place very different from the contemporary America, the Synoptic Gospels (Mt, Mk, Lk) depict Jesus as being quite familiar with the three destructive stereotypes experienced by Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders (AAPI) today. Jesus knew what it was like to be perpetual foreigner.

Growing up in a rural, backwater town of Nazareth, it’s reasonable to assume that Jesus spoke Aramaic with a Galilean accent. He knew what it was like to be treated as a foreigner. He had experienced the pains and hurts that come with being an object of laughter and ridicule. Perhaps it was not a coincidence that he made a foreigner the hero in his parable of the Good Samaritan or told his disciples not to prevent a man from casting out demons in his name simply because he was an outsider. From infancy to adulthood, Jesus’ life was the life of one who was in peril. The Yellow Peril experience was familiar to him because there was never a time when Jesus’ life was not threatened. And he was also the model minority in that he was an extraordinary preacher, teacher, and healer. Jesus served as a model for AAPIs because he knew what it was like to live in a liminal space of neither here nor there.

(Anti-Asian Racism is published by Orbis Books. Orbis Books has sponsored Madang podcast and is offering 30% off this book with discount code “MAD”. Please order your copy today.)

Editorial Reviews

“What a much-needed book in this time of yet another rise in anti-Asian sentiment! Cheah is the perfect theologian-author to write it, having been in the forefront of the struggle against anti-Asian racism for many years. His succinct yet profoundly insightful theological contextualizing is a tour de force.”–Julius-Kei Kato, King’s University College at Western University.

“Cheah challenges the politics of exclusion of AAPI in racial discourses in churches, academia, and elsewhere by examining how Black and Asian Americans are racially positioned in American society and how their histories of oppression and liberation are interconnected. Through his discussion of toxic stereotypes he offers ways of building bridges, forming communities, and cultivating an antiracist society. It is essential reading for students, teachers, and those engaging in pastoral ministries.” –Grace Ji-Sun Kim, Earlham School of Religion; author, Spirit Life

“This is clear analysis of Asian Americans’ complicated and subordinated racial position in the U.S., and more importantly, an invaluable theological application of how Catholic Social Teaching relates to the racism that Asians and Pacific Islanders face, and how readers can meet Jesus amidst our communities.”–Russell Jeung, San Francisco State University; cofounder, Stop AAPI Hate.

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  • So grateful to a former Earlham School of Religion student who is now a wonderful priest includes my book #Invisible in her top 12 books of 2022.Thank you Angela Nevitt Meyer!! What a thrill to be included.
  • Please join me at Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary for the MidWinter Lectures. I will be drawing from my book, Invisible.
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Invisible: Theology and the Experience of Asian American Women with Grace Ji-Sun Kim – AJ 89

09 Monday Jan 2023

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AAPI, Alabaster Jar, chicago, Consulate General, Invisible, korea, Korean Consulate General in Chicago, Lynn Cohick, Nationa Day Reception of the Republic of Korea, Northern Seminary, podcast, racism, rev. jesse jackson

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8th Printing of Healing Our Broken Humanity

24 Saturday Dec 2022

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8th printing, church, Graham Joseph Hill, healing, Healing Our Broken Humanity, InterVarsity Press, lament, racism

Many years ago, Dr. Graham Joseph Hill asked me if I wanted to co-write a book with him. I said sure. We wrote Healing Our Broken Humanity (IVP) in 2018. Four years later, it is in its 8th printing. We are so grateful to readers, leaders, professors, churches and faith communities who are reading and using our book. We are greatly touched and moved that our book is so helpful to so many people.

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Speaking at Austin Theological Seminary

18 Sunday Dec 2022

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Austin Theological Seminary, Invisible, MidWinter Lecturers, racism, Robert F. Jones Lecturer, sexism, theology, xenophobia

I am so honored to be invited to be the Robert F. Jones Lecturer at Austin Theological Seminary for their Mid-Winter Lectures. As an ordained PC (USA) minister, I am thrilled to be invited to speak at a Presbyterian Seminary. I will be speaking on my book, Invisible. Please do join me.

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Meeting Madang Podcast Guest: Dean Kelly Brown Douglas

08 Thursday Dec 2022

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AAR, black lives matter, Dean Kelly Brown Douglas, madang podcast, Orbis Books, podcast, racism, Resurrection Hope

I attended AAR to present a paper for the Feminist Studies in Religion panel which I organized with Dr. Tracy Tiemeier on “Invisibility and Anti-Asian Racism”.

Below is a repost from my SubStack. Please subscribe to my SubStack and follow me there.

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Invisibility and Anti-Asian Racism

05 Monday Dec 2022

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AAR, Feminist Studies in Religion, Fortress Press, grace ji-sun kim, invisibility, Invisible, Panel, racism

I was so happy to organize this Feminist Studies in Religion (FSR) panel with Dr. Tracy Tiemeier for the American Academy of Religion (AAR). Dr. Tiemeier and I both serve on the FSR board and we felt in light of the pandemic and the rise of AAPI hate crimes, it was crucial to hold a panel to discuss these issues at the AAR.

Below is a repost from my Substack: Loving Life.

Please subscribe to my Substack and win a chance to win 1-5 copies of “A Just Passion”. If you subscribe now till Dec 25th.

Invisibility and Anti-Asian Racism

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How Can We Heal Our Broken Humanity?

23 Wednesday Nov 2022

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AAPI, Embracing the Other, Fortress Press, Healing Our Broken Humanity, Invisible, racism

Please join me at this special event held by EAST: Episcopal Asian Supper Table. I will be speaking on my books, Invisible and Healing Our Broken Humanity.

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What we’re reading this month: November 2022

20 Sunday Nov 2022

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Asian American, Fortress Press, invisibility, Invisible, racism, Theology of Visibility, US Catholic Magazine, women

So thrilled to see this post by US Catholic Magazine. They are reading my book, Invisible. Very touched and humbled by this review of my book, Invisible.

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Celebrating 1 year Anniversary: Invisible

17 Thursday Nov 2022

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Fortress Press, Invisible, podcast, racism, substack

One year flew by since the publication of my book, Invisible which was released Nov 9, 2021. Below is a repost of my original Substack post. Please follow me on Substack.

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Seventh Printing of “Healing Our Broken Humanity”

12 Saturday Nov 2022

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Churches, Graham Joseph Hill, healing, Healing Our Broken Humanity, InterVarsity Press, lament, racism

Healing Our Broken Humanity co-written with Graham Joseph Hill is now in its 7th printing!!

It is so encouraging to know that seminaries, churches, groups and individuals read our book and find it helpful. Graham Joseph Hill & I offer Christian practices that can bring healing to a broken world….

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