Podcasts about hmoob

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Best podcasts about hmoob

Latest podcast episodes about hmoob

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Koom txoos 50 xyoo Hmoob tuaj nyob teb chaws Australia

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 11, 2025 27:51


Dr Pov Xaivkaub Thoj tawm tswv yim tias vim li cas thiaj ua lub koom txoos txwm 50 xyoo (Hmong Australia Festival 50 - HAF50), ua rau leej twg, ua coj los qhia txog dab tsi, thiab vim li cas thiaj xav kom ib tsoom Hmoob sawv daws mus koom.

australia koom nyob hmoob
SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Toom II: Keeb kwm Hmoob Suav thiab ceev txuag tej qub puav pheej

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2025 17:59


Zhang Taichiming thiab Dr Lee Pao Xiong tej lus tawm tswv yim txog lo lus "Hmong" thiab "Mong", thiab cov kev siv ntau cov lo lus Hmoob li: HMong, Mhong, H'moung. Zhang Taichiming tawm tswv yim txog nws phau ntawv sau txog Hmoob keeb kwm ntawm teb chaws Suav toom ob (Part II).

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Weekly news: Yuav nplua tej social media platforms $50 million yog tsis txwv Australia tej me nyuam siv

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2025 12:56


Tej tuam txhab social media ntau lub yuav raug nplua ntau caum million dollars yog tsis txwv Australia tej me nyuam, Israel cov kev koom 2026 Eurovision Song Contest, Tus neeg Israel txhawb nqa kom tawm tsam nrog Hamas tas sim neej, High Court txiav txim kom tsoom fwv Northern Territory them tej nqe ntiav tsev kim tsis raug cai rov qab rau neeg txum tim, EU npaj tsim cai siv kom siv tau Russia lub Central Bank tej nyiaj pab tiv thaiv Ukraine thiab tsim kev thaj yeeb, UN tej neeg tuaj txheeb seb puas yog Australia muab tej neeg txhom kaw yam tsis ua tib zoo coj mus hais plaub raws li qhov tsim nyog kaw, Smartraveller cov kev ceeb toom rau tej neeg Australia ntoj ncig txawv teb chaws txog cov kev nyab xeeb ntawm Asia txog tej huab cua phem, neeg txum tim Australia yog cov mob dementia ntau txog li ntawm 5.5 npaug piv rau lawm cov neeg Australia, Tasmania cov kev pom zoo tsim lub tshav sib tw AFL, Hmoob thawj tug poj niam tsav dav hlau, Meskas cheem neeg Nplog ntawm Meskas cov kev thov nyob ruaj thiab ua pej xeem ib ntus, daim duab Thaib tej coj nrog tus neeg raug liam tias dag neeg nyiaj,..

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Toom I: Keeb kwm Hmoob Suav thiab ceev txuag tej qub puav pheej teej tug

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2025 11:24


Zhang Taichiming tawm tswv yim txog nws phau ntawv keeb kwm sau txog keeb kwm Hmoob nyob teb chaws Suav uas nws tau kho dua tshiab, thiab tau piv txog ntau cov kev xav tias Hmoob xub pib tshwm sim qhov twg los, thiab qhia txog qhov tseeb ntawm Hmoob keeb kwm kom ceev txuag tau Hmoob tej qub puav pheej teej tug.

teej toom suav keeb hmoob
SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Hmoob tej txuj ua txhab ntxiv ntawm Living Museum of Logan

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2025 8:16


Maiv Yaj (Mai Yang) uas yog tus neeg nrhiav nyiaj pab lub koom haum Hmoob Cutlure Brisbane Inc hais tias xav tau Hmoob mus ua txij ci ntau yam pab ntxiv rau lub koom txoos qhia txog Hmoob tej keeb kwm ntawm Living Museum of Logan 3 zaug rau lub 3 hlis ntuj xyoo 2026 no. Nom tswv tuaj yeem them nyiaj rau ib tug twg uas ua ib yam koom txoos dab tsi pab ntxiv rau cov kev qhia txog Hmoob keeb kwm.

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Hmoob lub tsiab peb caug ntawm Brisbane thiab tej yuav ua rau yav pem suab

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2025 7:04


Tsiab peb caug ntawm Brisbane xyoo 2025-26 no yuav muaj ntau yam koom txoos thiab kev sib tw rau ib tsoom niam txiv kwv tij neeg tsa sawv daws tau koom raws li Maiv Yaj (Mai Yang uas yog Hmong Culture Brisbane Inc) tus neeg nrhiav nyiaj txiaj pab lub koom haum no hais.

brisbane hmoob yuav
KPFA - APEX Express
APEX Express – November 27, 2025 – We Belong Here: Bhutanese & HMoob Americans in the Struggle Against Statelessness

KPFA - APEX Express

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 27, 2025 59:58


A weekly magazine-style radio show featuring the voices and stories of Asians and Pacific Islanders from all corners of our community. The show is produced by a collective of media makers, deejays, and activists. Important Links We Belong Here campaign page We Belong Here Partner organizations: Asian Law Caucus |Asian Refugees United | Hmong Innovating Politics | Hmong Family Association of Lansing | Rising Voices Transcript Nina Phillips: Hello and welcome. You are tuning into APEX Express, a weekly radio show uplifting the voices and stories of Asian Americans. I'm your host Nina Phillips, and tonight we are doing something a little different. Earlier this month on Monday, November 3rd, communities of Hmong and Nepali speaking, Bhutanese Americans, fellow immigrants and allies, gathered together at a virtual [00:01:00] community event called We Belong Here. The goal: to shed light on the continued detainment and deportation of immigrant communities in the United States and the specific challenges faced by Bhutanese, Hmong, and Southeast Asian folks.  Tika Basnet: When, uh, my husband got detained on April 8, I took one week after to reach out Aisa and she told me, Hey Tika, come forward, you know, your story is powerful. People need to know your story.  Nina Phillips: That was the voice of Tika Basnet. Her husband, Mohan Karki is a Nepali speaking Bhutanese refugee from Ohio who has spent months in ICE detention, trapped in legal limbo. Tika has been working tirelessly to bring her husband home and shared her story with us at We Belong Here. Tonight, we are bringing you a recording of this virtual community gathering. You'll hear more from Tika about the Free Mohan Karki campaign and from Ann Vue, [00:02:00] the spouse of Lue Yang, a Hmong community leader from Michigan, who is also currently detained and facing deportation. Ann is leading the movement to Bring Lue Home, and we'll be sharing more later about how you can get involved as well and support both of these campaigns. You will also hear from state representatives of Michigan and Ohio, the music and spoken word performance of Asian Refugees United, and community tools and resources that a vital in helping to keep our immigrant loved ones safe. The host of this community event was Miko Lee, APEX producer, and a voice that you might be familiar with. Alrighty, without further ado, here's Miko. Miko Lee: We belong here. What we recognize right now is there's almost. 60,000 people being held in detention right now, immigrants that are being held in detention. It is a pandemic that is happening in our country that's impacting all of our people, and we need [00:03:00] to be able to take action. Tonight we're talking very specifically, not with this 60,000 people that are in detention now, but just two of those stories, so that you can get a sense of what is happening in the Bhutanese and Hmong communities and what's happening right now, and to talk about those particular stories and some actions you can take. First I wanna recognize that right now we are on native lands, so all of us except our original indigenous people, are from other places and I'd invite you to go into the chat and find your native land. I am speaking with you from the unceded Ohlone land, and I wanna honor these ancestors, these elders that have provided for us and provided this beautiful land for us to be on. So I invite you to share into the chat your name, your pronoun, and also what indigenous land you are living on right now in this Native American Heritage Month. Thank you so much to all of you that have joined [00:04:00] us. We are really seeing the impact of this administration on all of our peoples, and particularly tonight in terms of the Hmong and Nepali speaking, Bhutanese communities. These are communities that have been impacted, specifically refugee communities that have been impacted in incredible detrimental ways by this administration. And tonight what we really wanna do is talk to you about what is going on in our communities. We wanted to make sure we translated so that we have as much access into our communities as possible because we wanna be as inclusive of our world as we can. We Belong Here is focusing on the fact that all of us belong here. We belong in this land, and we are telling these stories tonight in the context of these sets of people particularly that have so many similarities in terms of Hmong folks who worked with our US government and worked with our US military during the Vietnam War and then came [00:05:00] here as refugees and stayed in this country to the Nepali speaking Bhutanese folks, who left their country from ethnic cleansing and then went into refugee camps and now took refuge in the United States. So these are all stories that are impactful and powerful, and it's really what it means to be American. we have come from different places. We see these attacks on our people. right now I would like to bring to the fore two empowering women, refugees themselves. Hailing from places as different as Somalia and Southeast Asia, and they're gonna talk about some of the detention and deportations that are happening right now. First I'd like to focus on Rep Mai Xiong, who's from Michigan's 13th District. I hand it over to the representative.  Rep. Mai Xiong: Good evening everyone. I'm state representative,  Mai Xiong, and it is a pleasure to meet all of you virtually. I'm coming to you from Warren, Macomb County, Michigan, and I represent the 13th [00:06:00] house of district, uh, the communities of Warren Roseville and St. Claire Shores. I've lived here in Michigan for over 20 years now. I came to the United States at a very young age, was born in a refugee camp and came here when I was three years old. So I grew up in Ohio. And then I moved to Michigan to attend college. Never thought that I would ever be serving in the State House. I previously served as a county commissioner here in Macomb. And, uh, last year when President Trump got elected, I had very quiet fears that as a naturalized citizen, that even I did not feel safe given the, um. The failure in our immigration system. So we have seen that play out, uh, with this administration, with the, attempts to get rid of birthright citizenship de-naturalization. And, you hear the rhetoric from officials about, deporting the worst of the worst criminal, illegal aliens. And we [00:07:00] know, as Miko mentioned in, in her introduction, that, refugees came here through a legal pathway. The Hmong in particular served alongside America during the Vietnam War and were persecuted from Laos. So my parents fled Laos. And so growing up I didn't have, uh, citizenship. Um, and so we have seen, uh, in this administration that refugees are now caught up in this, immigration effort to get rid of people who came here through legal pathways Lue is a father. He is a community leader. Uh, he is a well-respected member of our community as all of these individuals are. And at some point our system failed them and we are working extremely hard, to get their stories out. But what I have found with many of these families is that they are, uh, afraid to come forward. They are ashamed. There is a stigma involved and, uh, culturally, as many of you may [00:08:00] know, if you are of Asian American descent, and a fear of, uh, retaliation. And as the only Hmong American elected here in Michigan, I'm grateful that I have, uh, the ability to.  have those connections and to be such a visible, uh, member of my community that many of these individuals. Felt comfortable enough to reach out to me. But the reality is back in July we didn't know anything other than, the number of people who were detained. And that was through a firsthand account from loved ones who you know, were accompanying their loved one and got detained. And so it was literally like trying to find missing people and then getting the word out to let them know that, hey, there's actually, there's help out there. The volunteer attorneys, the nonprofits, the Immigration Rights Center, uh, here in Michigan, I mean, everybody has been doing a phenomenal job because I think the majority, the vast majority of Americans understand that, um, these [00:09:00] individuals that are being taken out of our communities are not a, a threat to society. They are members of our community. They've lived here for decades. They have jobs, they have children. And when you when you take an individual out of our community, it actually does more harm then it does to make any one of us safe. So that's the message that I have been sharing with others, uh, not only in having a connection and being a refugee just like these individuals, but advocating for them and making it clear that these are our neighbors, these are our children's classmates, parents, and it doesn't make any one of us feel safer. One of the things I am. Upset about that I continue to talk about is that we're not actually in a immigration crisis. We share here in Michigan, we share an international border with Canada, and we have never had an issue with border security. The [00:10:00] problem is the policies that have been put in place, that these individuals have been caught up in our immigration system for decades, and it is extremely hard for them to obtain citizenship or to even know what their rights are. And so we really need, in addition to advocating for these families, we need immigration reform. Throwing money at a problem is not going to solve the problem. If anything, we have are, we are in an economic crisis. Miko Lee: Thank you so much for joining. Um, I'd love to turn the baton over to another one of our powerful women representatives, Rep. Munira Abdullah from Ohio's Ninth District. Rep Abdullah. We pass it over to you. Thank you so much.  Rep. Munira Abdullahi: Uh, thank you for having me and also Rep Mai Xiong, it is really great to see you. I'm grateful to have been able to see you go from Commissioner to State Rep, doing amazing things on social media as well. I'm very, a big fan. Uh, my name is Munira Abdullahi. I represent District Nine in Ohio, which is in the Columbus area. Northland, [00:11:00] uh, Manette Park. Uh, a little bit of New Albany in Westerville city schools. Um, I'm also a refugee. My family fled Somalia and Civil War, and I was born in refugee camp in Kenya. And then we came to the United States when I was about two, three years old, uh, and ended up moving to Ohio when I was like four. First moved to Utah, salt Lake City, Utah, and then to Ohio when I was about five years old. And so I certainly understand the fear of being an immigrant in a new country and, um, struggling to belong and figure out where are your place is. And, and also just adjusting to a whole new society, um, with the language barriers and, and all of the the barriers are in the way. And then that fear of, your immigration status. You know, before my parents were, you know, passed their, their, uh, citizenship test, right. It was very scary. Um, and I know many families who feel the same way right now, especially with this new administration. Um, with the OCE raids that are happening that are really disrupting our communities and our [00:12:00] families. Um, we have a, a, a cons, a constituent of mine, um, who is now, uh, in prison. We have, uh, have a couple actually. One is Leonardo Faso, and then I know one we're gonna talk about soon is Mohan Karki, who is his family, I believe, is on this call. Uh, and he was taken by ICE. And he's, uh, you know, the, the breadwinner and the, the caregiver of his family. And so it's really important not to forget that a lot of these people who are being taken by ICE are like the breadwinners and, and, and the caretakers of these families. And now the family's left with a hole, uh, in their, in their home. And so, we really need to remember to take care of these families. I know there's gonna be a GoFundMe that that will be shared. Um, but finding these families and supporting them. Um, in any way that we can monetary, you know, checking on them, giving, you know, helping them with food. Now we have SNAP benefits are being cut for many, many, many Americans. We are struggling as is, but immigrants in particular are struggling a lot, lot more, um, with these raids and, and with the uncertainties. But one thing I wanna remind everyone is that, you know, through community we [00:13:00] find strength. And so that, um, understanding, you know, where our communities are, where people are suffering and finding our place and helping with that, right? Whether that might, might be, uh, maybe we have the financial capabilities to, to support, maybe we can cook for someone. Um, maybe we can advocate where, where we have the ability to advocate. Whatever we can do, we have a responsibility to do it. Um, and there are successes. I know in Ohio it's a little different where we can't really advocate anything on the state level because it's like they, we just make things worse. We're in a very rough, super minority, the Democrats and super minority, and we have bills in the State House we're trying to fight against that are trying to make it worse, where we're trying to get rid of Republicans in the State House are trying to get rid of like a sanctuary cities, um, and penalize cities that don't engage, uh, or don't cooperate with ICE. Um, we have currently a bill, which actually this is, this might be more of a, on a positive note, is we had a bill house bill one. That sought to ban immigrants, certain immigrants from owning land in certain areas. [00:14:00] But because of community engagement, because of advocacy, because of collaboration with community advocacy groups, that Bill was effectively paused. Like, as of now, it's paused because people came and advocated. They spoke to their representatives, they testified, they called, they protested, um, they had press conferences. They brought so much attention to the bill, and it just became so. Obvious that people don't want this bill. And that pressure really got to the majority in the State House. And that bill has been paused, right? It was created to keep Chinese Americans from buying land specifically. Um, and that list can change, by the way. It's an, it's a, a rotating list. The Secretary of State can add whatever countries that they want to, that list, so it's very harmful. But the Asian American community came together alongside with us representatives in the State House and, and effectively like paused that bill. So there's there are positive things we could, we could achieve as a community when we fight together and communicate and stand with one another regardless of our nationality. We're all struggling here. We're [00:15:00] all in the same place. We're all, uh, in need of one another. And that's why I was reminding people was like, when we are in need of one another. And when one person is struggling, we should all be feeling that.  Miko Lee: Thank you  Rep Munira. Thank you so much for joining us. And yes, we are all part of a collective community that needs to be working together. And Rep Munira talked about Mohan Karki and next we're gonna see a short video performance that was created by Asian refugees United, uh, Maxine Hong Kingston said, “in a time of destruction, create something”. So we're gonna watch this video that was created. Uh, it's a shortcut of a performance by Asian Refugees United. Nina Phillips: Hello, it's APEX Express host Nina Phillips here chiming in with a couple words on this performance. It's a very music and spoken word forward piece, so you should get a good sense of the production through just the audio. The youth performers from Asian Refugees United do a wonderful job of embodying the story of Mohan Karki and his family through music and [00:16:00] movement and dance as well. Very evocative. If you'd like to see this short video clip in full, with the visuals, please visit the website of Asian Americans for Civil Rights and Equality. That's accre.org/our-voices/webelonghere.  Enjoy the show. ARU Performer: Mohan Karki, I was detained by an ICE officer to be deported to a country that I never been to. A country. That I don't belong to [00:17:00] a country I wasn't born to, that I don't speak the language of. When they moved me to a detention center in Michigan, I called my wife Tika. They're taking me, I told her my voice was calm, but inside I was breaking into a million pieces. It felt like a goodbye, not just to her, but to the life we built together to the dreams that we planted seeds for. I was just 17 years old when I decided who I was before I could even speak up for myself. I stand here as a victim of an unjust system that never gave me a chance.[00:18:00]  I am a man with purpose. I worked hard. I drove trucks. I supported my family, and I loved my wife Tika, and waited for the day that I would finally meet our baby. [Speaks in Nepali] How do I tell my daughter that leaving her was never my choice? Now I wait for the news. Now would completely change everything. Will they send me back to Bhutan? Will I be deported like the ones before me? No one talks about what happens to us [00:19:00] once we're gone. We vanish. Into silence. Where do I belong?  You belong here. They belong here. We belong here. [Singing in Nepali] [Speaks in Nepali] What type of future do we wanna build? A future where we can all belong? A future where we can coexist, [00:20:00] coexist in nature. And coexist with each other. A future where another Mohan Karki does not have to fear of being displaced all over again. A future where Mohan Karki does not have to be separated from his new born baby girl. A place where people like Mohan Carkey can have home, a future and community, a future with family, a future and harmony. A future to heal. A future to grow. Above all, a future to belong. I hope the future is more generous to all of us. [Singing in [00:21:00] Nepali] Miko Lee: Can you all give it up in the chat for those performers. Nawal was our interpreter at the very beginning of this, and to show the power of how art can transform things at that performance, the ACLU was there. And actually because of that, we were able to find a pro bono lawyer to be able to help with one of, uh, Mohans Habeas Corpuses cases and just that's an example of Asian refugees United, that was their work before all of these detentions were going on. It was youth empowerment and storytelling, but they had to pivot, given the shape of our world. I wanna transition us to our panel of speakers of powerful. Again, powerful women. [00:22:00] Um, Ann Vue who is the spouse of Lue Yang, Tika Bassett, who is the spouse of Mohan Karki and Aisa Villarosa, who has been our brilliant, dedicated lawyer from Asian Law Caucus working on this. So we're not gonna go over and tell the entire stories of each of these people and what happened to them. And if you want that, you can listen to the radio show that we did on APEX Express. Tika, I wanted to start with you and just hear from you, what is your response after watching that video about your husband? Tika Basnet: Yeah, it is really beautiful story. Um, thank you ARU for, um, representing my husband story. Um, it just make, make me cry and I was crying while watching the video and it remind me what happened. Since seven month ago. And, um, yeah. Hi, my name is Tika Basnet. I'm from Ohio and I've been fighting for my husband deportation and detention since seven month ago. Without the community and without all the [00:23:00] support that I got from organization, I don't think it is possible that my husband will still be here. And the reason that this is possible is because I reach out to them without getting fear, without getting afraid of what will happen if I speak outside. So, um, yeah, um, it is really difficult. What is going on right now. Sometime I don't wanna speak because of the current policy. Uh, it make me feel, even though I'm US citizen, um, sometime I feel like if I speak something against the policy, I, they will might, they might gonna take my citizenship away. And then, um, I realized that, if I speak then it'll help me. Right now, um, ICE is not letting my husband come home, even though it is been seven month and our attorney try everything in a possible way. Uh, the ICE is not letting my husband come out. I dunno how long it'll take. I don't know. don't wanna, yeah. Thank you.  Miko Lee: No, you can speak more. Tika. Do you wanna add?  Tika Basnet: Yeah, um, especially I wanna thank you [00:24:00] ARU and Aisa and Miko. Everything is happening right now is because of them, because I reached out to them. If I did not, I feel like my husband is story will be one of those Bhutanese people that disappear. I don't know what happened to them. I hope, uh, the reason that I'm fighting for my husband case is because he deserve fear. Uh, he has a family member here. He has a community that loves him. He was supporting his parent, he was supporting us. We don't have a country. Um, this is our country and we belong here. Thank you.  Miko Lee: You. Thank you, Tika. I wanna bring Ann Vue up to speak about your husband, Lue Yang and his case and what's going on with his case. Very complicated case. What is going on with his case right now?  Ann Vue: So first of all,  Thank you guys so much for. Giving Tika and I this space just to share our stories of families who are fighting every day, um, just to stay together. So [00:25:00] currently with Lue's case right now we are, we just got his, um, stay of removal approved the emergency stay of removal approved. I might, um, have the right lingo for that, but, uh, so as of October 22nd our Michigan governor's, pardon was issued for Lue. So we were so grateful for that. I know our, our Michigan lawmakers are working around the clock uh, Michigan DHS team to bring him back to Michigan, uh, where we have a petition currently filed for his release while his case, uh, is ongoing. Miko Lee: Thanks Ann. And I just wanna point out that there's in, even though these communities are distinct and these two men are distinct, beautiful individuals, there are so many commonalities between the two. Um, both born in refugee camps, both in one case, the Bhutanese, the Nepali speaking Bhutanese, folks having escaped ethnic cleansing to then go to a. Uh, [00:26:00] refugee camp to then come to the US and in another families who worked with the American government in the Secret War in Vietnam, who then again became refugees and came to the US. Two young men who when they were young, like very young, um, with their peers, were involved in incidents that had, uh, really bad legal advice. That did not help them in the process. And that is why even though they're amazing contributing members in our current society, they have this past old, almost like childhood record that is impacting them. And both of them are impacted by statelessness because. Even though they're being deported, they're being deported to a place of which it is not their home. They might not speak that language. They might not have connections with that. Their home is here in America. Um, that is why we say use the terminology we belong here. Um, before we go a little bit more into personal stories [00:27:00] I saw from Asian Law Caucus, I wonder if you can give a little bit of an overview about the broader, legal actions that are taking place around these kidnappings.  Aisa Villarosa: Yeah, thanks Miko. And just huge love to Ann and Tika. Reiterating that these are two refugee communities bonded through not just this frustrating, heartbreaking experience, um, but also this, this solidarity that's building. To share Miko, about the broader legal ramifications, and there was a question in the chat about what's the big deal about a stay of removal? So just for starters, the system that Mohan and Lue got pulled into can be lightning quick with removing folks. Part of this is because Mohan, Lue, so many folks in refugee communities all across the country years and years ago, perhaps when they were teenagers, just like Mohan and Lue, uh, there might have been some sort of, run in with law enforcement. Oftentimes racial profiling [00:28:00] can be involved, especially with the over-policing, right in our country, decades later, after living peacefully in their communities. Oftentimes decades after an immigration judge said to Mohan, said to Lue, you are not a safety risk. You are not a threat to the community. You've done your time. You can come home. Uh, maybe some folks had some ICE check-ins that they would come to every year. Um, and then with this administration, this unprecedented attack on immigrant and refugee rights, that is when we started to see for the very first time as folks have mentioned, these broad deportations, uh, to countries that previously were not accepting refugees primarily because that is the same country of their ancestral persecution. Um, in some cases they have zero connection to the country. Um, and in cases like the Bhutanese refugees, they're actually [00:29:00] expelled from Bhutan when they're removed. Again, all this is happening for the very first time. There are some serious legal questions with due process. Even if immigration court does run on a similar track as a lot of our other court systems, there's still a duty of fairness and often that duty is completely neglected.  Nina Phillips: You are tuned into Apex Express on 94.1 KPFA, 89.3 KPFB in Berkeley, 88.1 KFCF in Fresno and online@kpfa.org. Coming up is Klezmer Dances II by The Daniel Pelton Collective.  [00:30:00] [00:31:00] [00:32:00] That was  Klezmer Dances II by The Daniel Pelton Collective. You are tuned into APEX Express [00:33:00] on 94.1 KPFA. Now back to Miko and her conversation with Tika Basnet and Ann Vue. Two incredibly strong women who are leading campaigns to bring home their respective spouses from ICE detention, and Aisa Villarosa with the Asian Law Caucus. Miko Lee: I would love to speak to a little bit more of the uplifting power of these women that are being highlighted right now. And I'm wondering both for Ann and Tika, if you could talk a little bit about your sense of resilience. because both of your spouses were, even though when they were youth, there were systems impacted in our Asian American communities. There's some shame that's associated with that. And so some people have been really hesitant to speak out. Can you talk a little bit about what encouraged you to speak out on behalf of your husband and how that has made a difference for you in the community? And I'm gonna start with Ann first.  Ann Vue: So I would say, um. In the [00:34:00] beginning when Lue was first detained on July 15th. I was scared. I am the first generation born American, uh, um, right here in Michigan. And even myself, I was so scared to say anything to anyone. I remember getting that call from Lue and it just felt so unreal. Quickly playing back to 2008, uh, which would be the third time that the embassy, Laos and Thailand both rejected Lue's entry and how his immigration officer was like, don't wait, start your life. And then fast forwarding it to what had happened, I was scared and, um. Lue and I are both, uh, Hmong community leaders as well. And Lue, of course, um, being president of the Hmong Family Association, him and I decided we're gonna keep a little quiet at first, and I started getting [00:35:00] calls from our Hmong community members. Uh, in concern to them receiving a letter, which is all dated for the same time at the same place that is not usual, where people would normally go see their immigration officer. And immediately that weekend I went to go visit him and I, it was explaining to him that I have received nine calls and I don't know what to do in immediately he. I think that the urgency around his people created that fear and immediately he was like, Hey, we've gotta start talking. You've gotta call you. You have to start making calls. Because he was detained on the 15th. On the 15th, which was Tuesday, and these letters were mailed to the community on that Friday. And immediately him and I started talking more and more and he said, “we have a 50-50 chance. If you don't fight for me and the others, then. We get sent back, you're gonna regret that for the rest of your life or [00:36:00] you fight for us. And as long as you fought all the way till the end, whatever happens, we can live with that”. And immediately, I remember speaking to, uh, attorney Nancy, and I've been mentioning to her that I wanna call, I wanna call Rep Mai. And I wanted to call Commissioner Carolyn Wright and she was like, well make the call and I'm glad that she didn't wait. And she just said, Hey, you know what? She just started talking and immediately Rep Mai called and that's how it kind of started this whole journey. So I am so thankful that I did. I did voice it out because I myself, even as a community leader, I felt hopeless. I felt like as loud as I am, everyone that I, for the first time had no voice. It became, became lonely. I became scared. Because they've got a, you know, we have a family, right, that we're raising together with small children. So I'm glad that we did, uh, [00:37:00] share our story and I'm glad that it is out. And, and that it, it opened the key to many other Southeast Asian families to do the same as well too.  Miko Lee: Thank you so much, Anna. And I remember you saying that even Lue was speaking with folks in Spanish to get their stories and share them out as well. Ann Vue: He had to learn it! And you know, I will say that with this whole detention thing, it doesn't just detain our person. It detains our whole family. We're all a part of this, you know? And so, you know, Lue had to learn how to count so he can give the numbers 'cause he was doing it with his hand motions. Because it's a hard system, it's a very complex system to navigate, which is how people go disappearing. And so for him to be able to reach out. Give me phone numbers to these families, regardless. Love beyond borders, right? And I was able to reach out to these families so that that way they know where their person was and [00:38:00] help them get set up so they can, so their families can call them. Miko Lee: Thank you so much for doing that. And you and your husband, both as organizers and continuing to be organizers even when locked up. Tika, I wanna turn it to you and ask about the courage it took to speak up and what keeps you going.  Tika Basnet: Yes. So when, uh, my husband got detained on April 8, I took one week after to reach out Aisa and she told me, Hey Tika, come forward. You know, your story is powerful. People need to know your story. And I told first thing to Aisa is our community is very just mental. They doesn't understand. And I've been looking at the video where our Bhutanese people get detained and deported and on common section, the first thing that I noticed was people are commenting, oh, these people are criminal. They are, maybe they, um, kill someone or they rape someone, you know, without. Understanding the people's story. And I, I [00:39:00] was thinking the same, whatever, if I come forward, will they gonna understand my story? Will they gonna talk to me? Will they gonna ask me personally, what is going on? And I actually same as Ann, I, um, I. Was scared to come out. I did not come out in two within two, two months, you know, when, uh, I tried to deport my husband on my due date that I was about to give birth, um, BIA, uh, grant, day of removal, you know, in two month I was crying alone. I was messaging Aisa and I was telling all my pain. And then when they stop my husband deport his son and that day, um. Aisa and ARU, everybody encouraged me. Like, you know, you need to come forward. People need to know your story. And then that day I decide, and I also remember that, um, within one minute after I gave birth, I was messaging, uh, ARU team I think his name [00:40:00] is Pravin or something. I was messaging him, Hey, I'm ready to give, uh, interview. I'm ready to give uh, a story. And that day I decide like I wanna come forward. I don't care what society is thinking, I'm the one that going through and people need to know my story. And, uh, I think, uh, and also I look at my daughter, you know, I don't want, um, her to think that I did not fight for her dad. You know, I want her to think like her mom is, is strong enough to fight and looking at her. That gave me so much power and yeah. And now like give, getting a lot of support, a lot of love is give me like, you know, I, I feel like, um, I wouldn't, uh, get all the support if I was scared and did not, uh, talk about my story. So now like receiving a lot of love from everywhere and that give me couraged to continue and talk about my husband's deportation.  Miko Lee: Thank you, Tika. And I wanna recognize that we're running late, but we're gonna get through it if those of you could stay with us a little bit [00:41:00] longer. My one more question to both Ann and Tika is what message do you have for people that are experiencing this right now? Because this, as we said, 60,000 people are detained right now. Your spouses, we, as we have said, it's not just you with your, the children, the grandparents, all the other people. What advice do you have for other folks that are going through this and do you have a message for those folks? Ann Vue: I would say, um, for anyone who is going through what Tika and I and the many are going through that, um, make sure you document everything, get your loved ones Alien Number because you want to track it as you go. Build your circle. Know that you are not alone. Uh, reach out. I'm still learning as I go too. And it's unfortunate that we as family, like have to become attorneys overnight and learn to as well. But make sure that you guys, that you know that you're not alone you know that [00:42:00] we're not fighting the system. We're fighting a system that. Hopes, uh, that we get tired of fighting it. And the moment that you speak up, they can't disappear your loved one quietly. And I am a very big, um, firm believer. There's this scripture that has always carried Lue and I and, uh, I, I can't stress on it enough. And especially to all of those, to all of our, everybody that's on tonight. And beyond that, uh, there's a scripture. It's a Proverbs, right? 3:27-28 that says, “Do not withhold good from those to whom it is due, when it is your power to act”. And so thank you to those who continues to act when action is really within your reach and. We belong here, our families belong here. And compassion delayed is really compassion denied. And so don't fight alone 'cause that's what they are hoping that we will fight alone, [00:43:00] but we're together in this.  Miko Lee: Beautiful, thanks. And Tika, what about you? What advice do you have for other people that are experiencing this with family members?  Tika Basnet: So, yeah, um, I'm encouraging everyone like we experiencing this deportation for the first time or. Come forward. You never know. You know how many support you will get. Looking at Ann and my story that if we did not reach out to the community, I don't think our husband will be here at the moment. So you are the one who going through the pain and, uh, sharing your pain will make you at least a relief and you never know. Your husband Deportes and will stop. You will get like support from, from community. So ICE is not deporting only your husband or your like wife or someone, they are deporting your dream, your hope. So when they try to deport my husband, they were deporting my husband, uh, my [00:44:00] daughter future, the future that we talk about. So I am telling everyone that come forward. Story, your story, and you'll get lot of love. You'll get lot of support. And if I did not talk before, I don't think my husband will be here. He'll be one of the person that disappear long time ago. So yeah, please come forward and see your story. And the last thing is, I wanna say we belong here. This is our home and our future is here.  Miko Lee: Thank you so much, Tika. Um, Aisa, I wanna turn it over to you. Ann was saying suddenly we have to become lawyers and, and so can you talk about, and even like with Lue's case, it was suddenly he got pardoned at the last minute when he was on a deportation plane, and then it was like, oh, that should fix everything, but it doesn't, so can you talk a little bit about some of the legal ramifications that people should know about? Aisa Villarosa: Sure. And just to say, Mohan, Lue, Tika, Ann, I mean, y'all have lived [00:45:00] several movies in, in just the span of months the amount of stress, both you yourselves as the lead advocate, your families. Uh, so, so for folks watching this is literally Mohan and Lue getting like pulled off planes because of the shared advocacy here, uh, which starts with the decision to speak out. Um, and for folks in the room who aren't sure whether they want to share their story, you know, we're not saying, oh, go to the press so much of it. Involves just opening your heart to a trusted person. Um, many of those people are here in this room uh, my organization, Asian Law Caucus. Uh, in a minute we'll share some links for some of our resources. Uh, the wonderful folks at ARU, there's such a full crew, and if you're part of a community, especially the many, many, too many refugee communities being targeted. You are not alone. So in terms of what the legal battle [00:46:00] looks like, another thing to remember is that for any case, there's usually a, a wave of folks that's needed, uh, for Lue, for Mohan. That's multiple states sometimes because in the immigration world, for example, you could have a very, very old final order of removal. So this is essentially the order that is put forward by an immigration judge. That technically allows a lot of these awful deportations and disappearances to take place. The battle to fight that can be multi-state, uh, multi-issue. So you're talking to a criminal defense attorney, you're talking to an immigrant rights attorney. Uh, but going back to that trust, just talk to someone who both you can trust and someone who has a good lay of the land because these cases are incredibly complex. Folks I work with, sometimes they're physically driving to a law office. Someone named Emily is on the call. You know, we drove to a law office. Turns [00:47:00] out the record we were looking for was, was too old. The, that previous attorney didn't have the record on file. There are so many practical challenges you don't anticipate. So the sooner you do that math and just open your story up, um, to, to a loved one, to a trusted one. And in a little bit we're, we'll share more links for what that process looks like.  Miko Lee: So we're gonna move into that call to action. We're running a bit over time, so if you could hang with us for a couple more minutes. Um, we want to one, thank all of our amazing guests so far and then move to our call to action. What can you do? A bunch of people are throwing things into the chat. We're gonna start with Rising Voices. Oh, I guess we're gonna start with OPAWL and Sonya is gonna share about OPAWL's work and the call to action there. Sonya (OPAWL): Hi everyone. My name is Sonya Kapur. I live in Columbus, Ohio, and I'm a member of OPAWL Building AAPI Feminist leadership. I'd like to share a little bit about our efforts to support Mohans Campaign for Freedom and encourage you to donate to [00:48:00] Mohans GoFundMe to cover his legal fees, and the link to the GoFundMe will be in the chat. With the funds raised so far, Tika and Mohan were able to hire a seasoned attorney to review Mohans court documents and work on his case. So your donations will allow Mohan to continue working with his legal team as we fight to bring him home. So even five or $10 will help us get closer to reuniting Mohan with his family and community here in Ohio. A really fun piece of this is that a local, Columbus based illustrator and OPA member Erin Siao, has also created a beautiful art fundraiser to help raise more funds from Mohans release campaign. So when you donate to Mohans GoFundMe between now and November 15th, you receive a complimentary five by seven art print of your choice. Families belong together on the right or on the left. To receive a print, you just email Erin and her. Email address will also be in the [00:49:00] chat, a screenshot of your donation confirmation along with your name and address. You can also send a direct message of the screenshot to her Instagram account, so please consider uplifting our art fundraiser on social media. Encourage others to donate to the GoFundMe and share Mohans story with your family and friends.  Miko Lee: Thanks, Sonya and Opal, and we'll turn it over to Emily at Rising Voices. Emily (Rising Voices): Hi, thank you. Um, rising Voices is one of the, uh, many members helping bring Lue Yang home. Just wanna share that. We do have a online petition going that directs you to email the ice field office in Detroit, pressuring them to bring him home. Um, there's also a number to call with a script provided. So nothing has to be reinvented. We please, please encourage you to share this out, and you do not have to be from Michigan to make a call or email every single email. And, all counts. And we also do have a GoFundMe for [00:50:00] him and his family. As we all know legal file, legal fees pile up, so anything counts. Thank you so much everyone.  Miko Lee:  Thanks Emily. Now we're gonna pass it over to Nawal talking about this event which is connected to disappeared in America.  Nawal Rai: Hi everyone. I'm Nawal here again and yeah, so We Belong Here. Uh, today's event was part of the Disappeared in America Weekend of Action, which is a national mobilization action to protect immigrants, uh, expose corporate complicity and honor the lives lost in detention and across America more than 150 towns and cities held.  Um. Weekend of Collective action this weekend on November 1st and second, standing in solidarity with immigrants families, uh, from holding freedom vigils outside of ICE facilities to via de Los Mortis gathering, honoring life's lost in detentions to ice out of Home Depot actions. Calling out corporate complicity this weekend was a resounding nation nationwide call for compassion, dignity, and [00:51:00] democracy, and demanding justice and due process for all. The National Action was organized by the Coalition of Partners, including National Day Labor Organizing Network, Detention Watch Network, the Worker Circle, public ci, uh, citizen, and many allied organization across the country. Thank you all. Thank you for joining us today.  Miko Lee: Thank you to everyone for showing up today. We thank all of our speakers, all of our many partner organizations. As we were saying, it takes many of us working together collectively. Even though we said there's 60,000 people detained. There are so many more than that. We know that immigrants contribute and refugees contribute immensely to the American experience, and we want everyone to know that we belong here. All of us belong here. This is our home.  Thank you so much for joining us all. We appreciate all of you, the interpreters, the translators, the folks behind the scene who helped to make this event happen. Um, shout out to Cheryl Truong [00:52:00] and Nina Phillips for really doing all the tech behind this. And to all of you for showing up tonight, we need each and every one of you to participate to show that you are part of the beloved community, that you are part of believing that America can be a place filled with beloved love instead of hatred. Um, so I would love you all to just all together. Shout out. We belong here. 1, 2, 3.  Event Attendees: We belong here. We belong here.  We belong here.  Miko Lee: Have a great night, and thank you all for joining us. Nina Phillips: This was a recording of a virtual community gathering that took place earlier this month on Monday, November 3rd. It was made [00:53:00] possible by We Belong Here, a coalition of immigrant rights organizations, Asian Americans for Civil Rights and Equality, Asian Refugees United, Asian Law Caucus, Hmong Family Association Lansing, Hmong Innovative Politics, OPAWL and Rising Voices.  As I mentioned earlier, you can watch the phenomenal video performance from Asian Refugees United on the website of Asian Americans for Civil Rights and Equality.  That's aacre.org/our-voices/webelonghere  There's also up-to-date information on how best you can support both the Free Mohan Karki and Bring Lu Home campaigns. We thank all of you listeners out there. Keep resisting, keep organizing. Your voices are important. Let's keep immigrant families together.  To close out. Here's a little more from the video performance. [00:54:00] [00:55:00] [00:56:00] [00:57:00]  Nina Phillips: For show notes, please check out our website, kpfa.org/program/APEX-express.  APEX Express is a collective of activists that include Ama Keane-Lee, Anuj Vaidya, Cheryl Truong, Jalena Keane-Lee, Miko Lee, Nina Phillips, Preeti Mangala Shekar, and Swati Rayasam. Tonight's show was produced by me, Nina Phillips. Get some rest, y'all. Good night. The post APEX Express – November 27, 2025 – We Belong Here: Bhutanese & HMoob Americans in the Struggle Against Statelessness appeared first on KPFA.

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Hmoob lub tsiab peb caug 2025-26 ntawm xeev Victoria

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2025 12:58


Ntsuab Zeb Vwj uas yog tus tuam thawj tswj lub koom haum Hmoob Victoria Society hais tias yuav ua Hmoob lub tsiab peb caug ntawm xeev Victoria ib nyuag txawv zog xyoo no.

hmoob
SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Podcast series - My story - Ep II kev sib tu ncua ntawm cov phaum neeg - Sarah Thao, Niam Chai Vang Yang

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2025 20:27


Muaj kev sib tu ncua dab tsi rau thawj phaum niam txiv Hmoob tsiv teb tsaws chaw tuaj nyob teb chaws Australia no thiab thawj phaum me nyuam Hmoob tuaj yug thiab loj hlob ua lub neej ntawm teb chaws Australia no? Sarah Thoj thiab niam (Chong Vang) Nchaiv Vaj Yaj qhia txog nkawv ob zaj dab neeg.

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Qhia Hmoob keeb kwm ntawm Living Museum ntawm Logan

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 16, 2025 22:09


"Kom totaub tias tej neeg no (volunteers) yog cov pab kaws yus tej keeb kwm dhau los, pab yog cov pab tsim lub neej pem suab, thiaj xav kom hwm, qhia thiab muaj feem koom. Vim cov kev ras los ua ib tug pej xeem Australia txhais tsis tau tias yuav ua rau tsis paub tias yus yog leej twg los sis yuav ua rau yus plam yus tej cim thawj. Tsuas yog cov kev pab kom coj tau ntau cov kab lis kev cai thiab ntau tsev neeg los koom peb lub neej uas peb ris txiaj xwb," raws li Teresa Lane uas yog tus haus zos Logan City Council Division 2 hais.

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Cov kev npaj qhia Hmoob keeb kwm ntawm Living Museum of Logan

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2025 11:39


Sarah Thoj qhia txog nws cov kev npaj lub koom txoos qhia txog Hmoob keeb kwm thiab teej tug ntawm Living Museum of Logan.

museum keeb hmoob
SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Podcast series - My story Ep I - Dr Gary Lee Yia

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2025 43:53


Dr Gary Lis Yia zaj dab neeg uas qhia txog tias vim li cas nws thiaj tuaj kawm ntawv ntawm teb chaws Australia, qhov tseem ceeb ntawm cov kev kawm ntawv, vim li cas thiaj tseem ceeb uas yus yuav tau tsis txhob thuam yus Hmoob tej kab lis kev cai, hloov nom tswv Nplog tshiab, txoj kev ua lub neej ntawm teb chaws Australia thiab tej tswv yim pab kom yus muaj nyiaj.

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Qhov tseem ceeb ntawm Hmoob tej lus thiab kab lis kev cai

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2025 20:47


Cov Hmong language thiab culture program no ''pab kom me nyuam Hmoob paub ntawv Hmoob, sau tau ntawv Hmoob, hais tau lus Hmoob, paub Hmoob keeb kwm, paub txog Hmoob tej puav pheej tias yus haiv neeg yog haiv neeg twg, pab kom yus muaj self-esteem thiab muaj self-pride ua ib tug Hmoob, ua rau yus tsis ntshai, yog ib qho chaw rau Hmoob tej me nyuam sib cog kawm ua ke, ua rau yus ntseeg yus tus kheej, yog ib lub hauv paus cag ua chaw tiag taw ruaj pab kom yus ntxeem dhau teeb meem nyuaj, ua rau yus muaj phlus, yus lub ntsej muag tshiab, ua kev txhawb siab rau yus, ua dab tsi los ua tau zoo raws li yus npaj, thiab pab kom yus muaj kev zoo siab rau yus lub neej, thiab ua tau lub neej vam meej.''

hmoob
SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Ceev txuag Hmoob tej paj nruag

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2025 27:14


Vim li cas Neeb Thoj (Neng Thao) thiaj xav kos khaws thiab ceev txuag Hmoob tej paj nruag thiab tej twj paj nruag thiab phom Hmoob khaws tseg cia?

vim hmoob
SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Dab tsi ua rau Hmoob tau tuaj nyob teb chaws Australia

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2025 23:13


Lub limtiam Refugee Week (15-25 June) no Dr Gary Lis Yia qhia rau SBS Radio Hmong program tias tej xub ke twg pab kom Hmoob tau tuaj nyob teb chaws Australia.

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Vaj Pov ras los muaj fwj chim li cas

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2025 6:40


Nchaiv Khwb Xyooj uas yog Hmoob ib tug laus neeg tham txog tias ua li cas Vaj Pov thiaj ras los ua ib tug neeg muaj fwj chim.

chim hmoob
SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Koom txoos Hmoob tuaj nyob Australia tau 50 xyoo

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2025 7:22


Vim li cas thiaj ua lub koom txoos Hmoob tuaj nyob tau 50 xyoo ntawm teb chaws Australia thiab ho yuav muaj tej program dab tsi ntawm lub koom txoos uas ua ntawm Brisbane lub caij Easter 2025. Pa Yaj uas yog ib tug ntawm coob tus uas organised lub koom txoos no tawm tswv yim txog nqe no.

australia brisbane vim koom nyob hmoob
SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Hmoob thiab Nplog cov qub tug rog pab Meskas cov CIA secret war raug tsev tsoom fwv Minnesota lees paub

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2025 14:20


Hmoob thiab Nplog tej qub tub rog uas tau ua rog rau Meskas cov CIA tej tsov rog secret war raug tsev tsoom fwv xeev Minnesota lees paub, pab nom koom tswj cov kev qhia txog nws cov kev txo se...,

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Hmoob tej lus tawm tswv yim txog cov kev xaiv nom xyoo 2025

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2025 4:15


Koj puas tau npaj siab tias yuav xaiv pab nom twg rau cov kev xaiv tsa tsoom fwv teb chaws Australia xyoo 2025 no? Ntxiv no yog 2 tug tub koom siab Hmoob ntawm Brisbane tawm tswv yim tias vim li cas nkawv thiaj yuav xaiv ib pab nom twg?

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Yuav xaiv pab nom twg?

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2025 4:15


Hmoob tej tub koom siab ntawm Brisbane xav li cas rau cov kev xaiv tsa tsoom fwv teb chaws xyoo 2025 no thiab lawv xav tias yuav xaiv pab nom twg?

brisbane hmoob yuav
SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Cov kev sib tw ncaws pob xyoo 2025 Easter Cup ntawm Brisbane

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2025 9:35


''Cov kev ncaws pob tsis yog tias pab kom tau sib ntsib sib cuag nrog lwm tus, pab kom yus muaj kev zoo siab, muaj kev lom zem thiab siv lub sij hawm rau yus tus kheej, ua ke no kuj pab kom tej zejzog tau sib ntsib sib cuag, thiab qhov tseem ceeb yog ib co kev txhawb nqa kom Hmoob tej zejzog kub siab txog cov kev sib tw (sport) thiab yog cov kev npaj tej me nyuam tseem yau kom paub ncaws pob thaum lawv loj tuaj.''

brisbane easter cup hmoob
SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Vim li cas thiaj muab ntxhais pauv ncuav pias? Nchaiv Khwb Xiong tawm tswv yim txog tias vim li cas thiaj muab ntxhais pauv ncuav pias lub caij Hmoob tsiv teb chaws Suav tuam tshoj los rau xov tshoj (Southeast Asia).

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Tsiv teb tsaws chaw tuaj rau Australia thiab Hmoob tej kab lis kev cai

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2025 9:55


Vim li cas Nchaiv Khwb Xyooj thiab coob leej ntau tus Hmoob thiaj tau tuaj pib neej tshiab ntawm teb chaws Australia, thiab Hmoob tej kab lis kev cai puas tseem tseem ceeb rau yav tom ntej ntxiv lawm?

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Npaj tos khaub zeeg cua Alfred

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2025 11:09


Zejzog Hmoob ntawm Brisbane npaj li cas tos lub khaub zeeg cua chaw sov Alfred uas yuav los hla sab qab teb hnub tuaj ntawm Brisbane thiab qaum teb hnub tuaj ntawm xeev New South Wales? Tshua Pov Lauj uas yog ib tug txiv neej Hmoob ntawm Brisbane tawm tswv yim txog tej no.

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Hmoob ua dab tsi rau lub caij noj tsiab peb caug

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 30, 2025 17:10


Thaum noj tsiab peb caug xyoo tshiab Hmoob tej zej zog ua dab tsi? Nchaiv Khwb Xyooj uas yog Hmoob Australia ib tug laus neeg tham txog nqe no.

hmoob
SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Hmoob Melbourne lub tsiab peb caug 2024-25

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 11, 2024 5:50


Tus coj lub koom haum Hmong Australia Society ceg xeev Victoria tawm tswv yim tias xyoo 2024-25 no yuav muaj koom txoos lom zem dab tsi rau Hmoob Melbourne lub tsiab peb caug.

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Qhia qeej rau me nyuam Hmoob

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2024 6:09


Chav qhia qeej rau me nyuam Hmoob.

chav hmoob
SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Research into Hmong herbal medicine - Tshawb fawb txog Hmoob tej tshuaj rau qaib

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2024 18:27


What are the reasons behind researching into the most common Hmong herbal medicine? - Vim li cas thiaj tshawb fawb txog Hmoob tej tshuaj rau qaib?

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Tej tswv yim pab me nyuam Hmoob kom kawm tau ntawv Hmoob

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2024 14:46


Vim li cas thiaj yuav tau qhia ntawv Hmoob rau Hmoob tej me nyuam thiab tej hluas?

vim hmoob
SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Hmoob pawg ntseeg ntawm Melbourne

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2024 9:49


Xibfwb Tswv Kub Hawj tawm tswv yim txog tias vim li cas thiaj xav npaj kom tau ib qho chaw ua kev teev hawm rau nws pawg ntseeg Hmong Melbourne Alliance Church (HMAC) thiab nws xav li cas rau Meskas lub xeev Louisiana 10 nqe cai ntawm tej phiaj yuav coj mus tsa ntawm txhua lub teej kawm.

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Lub neej thoj nam

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2024 14:48


Txos Yaj uas yog ib tug poj niam Hmoob tuaj ntawm teb chaws Cob Tsib tuaj pib neej tshiab ntawm teb chaws Australia qhia tias nws lub neej thoj nam zoo li cas thiab cov kev pib neej tshiab ntawm teb chaws Australia zoo li cas rau lub limtiam Thoj Nam (Refugee Week) rau hnub Ntiaj teb hnub Thoj Nam (World Refugee Day tim 20.6.2024).

East Anchorage Book Club with Andrew Gray
ALASKA WORKERS' RIGHTS (HMONG): Koj txoj cai ua haujlwm

East Anchorage Book Club with Andrew Gray

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2024 17:28


Zoo siab txais tos txhua tus los rau Tsab Ntawv East Anchorage; Hnub no lub xov tooj cua luv luv no yuav piav qhia txog Alaska cov neeg ua haujlwm txoj cai hauv lus Hmoob. Kuv lub npe yog Emery Yaj , kuv yog tus txhais lus Hmoob rau tus tuav thiab coj  xov tooj cua  Andrew Gray. Andrew Gray yog tus sawv cev rau East Anchorage hauv Alaska State House. Cov ntaub ntawv thiab lus  tham hauv ntu no yog raws li kev xam phaj xyoo 2024 los ntawm tus thawj coj Jeremy Applegate hauv lub chaw Haujlwm Saib Xyuas nyiaj thiab Sijhawm rau xeev Alaska cov neeg ua haujlwm txoj cai. Txhua tus neeg ua haujlwm hauv Alaska muaj cai tau txais kev them nyiaj ncaj ncees thiab vaj huam sib luag raws li txoj cai. Ntau tus neeg ua haujlwm tsis paub txog txoj cai no, ua rau cov tswv ntawv lawv lub chaw ua hauj lwm coj tsis ncaj rau lawv. Lub hom phiaj ntawm lub xov tooj cua  no yog los qhia rau cov neeg ua haujlwm hauv Alaska kom paub txog txoj cai ntawm kev them nyiaj thiab vaj huam sib luag. 

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Kawm ntawv Hmoob

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 29, 2024 10:44


Cov chav kawm ntawv Hmoob ntawm Brisbane uas yuav pib qhia rau lub 4 hlis ntuj xyoo 2024 no mus.

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Lub chiv keeb uas Hmoob muag zaub ntawm khw Salamanca.

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2024 18:20


Hmoob cov kev cog zaub muab ntawm Tasmania lub khw Salamanca.

tasmania salamanca chiv keeb hmoob
SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Hmoob lub tsiab peb caug txawv Suav lub xyoo tshiab Lunar New Year li cas

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2024 8:35


Hmoob lub xyoo tshiab ho txawv los yog zoo sib xws li cas nrog Suav lub xyoo tshiab Lunar New Year? Kub Tsab uas yog ib tug hluas Hmoob Nplog uas kawm ntawv Suav thiab Suav tej kab lis kev cai qhia txog nws tej experience uas tau pom tej neeg Suav ua lawv lub koom txoos xyoo tshiab tias ho muaj kev ua kev zoo siab zoo li cas.

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Tswv yim qhia kom Hmoob tej me nyuam kawm tau ntawv zoo thaum ntxov

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2024 20:12


Vim li cas Hmoob tej me nyuam thiaj tseem poob qab rau txoj kev kawm thiab ho teeb tsa lub koom haum Hmong Early Childhood Coalition (HECC) los ua dab tsi?

vim hmoob
SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Hmoob lub tsiab peb caug xyoo 2023-24

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 2, 2023 9:40


Tony Lis uas yog tus thawj coj lub koom haum Hmong Society Victoria tawm tswv yim tias Hmoob Victoria lub tsiab peb caug xyoo 2023-24 no yuav muaj tej koom txoos dab tsi, thiab lub caij nws ua tus tswj no nws ho ua tau dab tsi coj los pab rau tej tub koom siab.

hmoob
SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Significant colours in Hmong culture - Tej kob (xim) tseem ceeb rau Hmoob

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2023 5:43


Here are three of the crucial colours for Hmong communities. - Ntxiv no yog peb yam kob (xim) tseem ceeb ntawm tsev neeg Hmoob.

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Thawj tswj koom haum Hmong Society Victoria tham txog tsev neeg Hmoob Cob tsib tuaj rau Australia

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 20, 2023 6:00


Tony Lis uas yog tus thawj tswj Hmong Society Victoria cov lus tham txog tias nws ho muaj feem pab tsev neeg Hmoob Cob tsib nyuaj qhuav tuaj txog Australia tsis ntev los no (Sept 2023), thiab nws xav hais dab tsi rau tej kwv tij Hmoob nyob ntawm teb chaws Australia.

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Hmong family who recently arrived in Australia - Yim Hmoob tshiab tuaj rau Australia

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 13, 2023 13:09


There was a new Hmong Vietnamese family from Bangkok recently arrived in Australia (Sept 2023), but who helps this family and how did they resettled in Australia. - Ze li ob limtiam no tau muaj ib yim Hmoob Cob tsib uas tau tsiv tuaj ua neeg thoj nam ntawm Bangkok teb chaws Thaib kuj tau tuaj rau teb chaws Australia no lawm. Tab sis vim tsoom fwv Thaib yeej tis tau kos xyeem mem tes rau UN tsab cai 1951 Refugee Converntion los yog UN tsab cai 1967 Protocal ces thiaj tseem pom tias yogi b tug twg mus rau teb chaws Thaib ces raug xam tias yog cov neeg nkag teb chaws txhaum cai thiab tsis tau txais kev pov puag tam li yog neeg thoj nam. Tab sis yog vim li cas lawv thiaj tau tuaj thiab ho muaj leej twg pab lawv.

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Lus tawm tswv yim txog Voice Referendum

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 24, 2023 13:12


Nod yog tej tub koom siab ntawm Hmoob tej zejzog ntawm teb chaws Australia tej lus tawm tswv yim txog Voice Referendum seb puas pom zoo kho txhooj cai tswj haiv kom lees paub thiab teev zwm Australia tej neeg txum tim Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander rau hauv tej txhooj cai tswj haiv thiab teeb tsa pawg neeg ua suab sawv cev rau neeg txum tim Australia hauv tsev tsoom fwv ua ntej yuav txog hnub tawm suab hnub tim 14 lub 10 hli ntuj xyoo 2023.

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
First Hmong Australian theathre performance 'How do I let you die' - Hmoob Australia thawj cov kev ua yeeb yam

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2023 11:50


The first Hmong Australian theatre performance title 'How do I let you die' will be showed in Melbourne on the 22nd of November 2023. - Peb tug hluas Hmoob Australia tau los sab laj tawm tswv yim thiab npaj yuav ua Hmoob Australia thawj cov kev ua yeeb yam uas qhia txog tej laus lub neej ntawm Nplog teb tsiv tuaj rau Australia tis lub npe ua ‘How do I let you die'. Thiab npaj yuav ua yeeb yam rau hnub tim 22 lub 11 hlis ntuj xyoo 2023 ntawm nroog Melbourne teb chaws Australia.

MYX In The Dark: True Scary Stories
Lady In Hmoob Clothes

MYX In The Dark: True Scary Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2023 21:12


MYX in the Dark Credits— CONTACT ME / SEND ME A STORY — If you have a TRUE scary story to share, please send it to myxinthedark@gmail.com— WHERE TO LISTEN TO MYX IN THE DARK — YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/MYXinTheDark Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MYXInTheDark BuzzSprout: https://myxinthedark.buzzsprout.com/You can also find me on various podcasting stations such as Spotify, Apple Podcast, iHeart Radio, Pandora, etc.— MUSIC CREDITS — Music Provided By MX Audio Library♪ Tears (Prod. by MX Audio Library)Link :  • Tears - No Copyright Music Sad Emotio...  Music Provided By Vivek Abhishek - Horror Ambience— ART WORK CREDITS — MYX in The Dark Logo Design: MVThaoMYX in The Dark Artwork: Mktoonzy, Sheng Xiong, & MaiYang— TIP ME — If there's a story that you think deserves a tip because you enjoyed it, please send it through Venmo under the business profiles. Thank you so much!Venmo: @myxinthedark (business profile)— MYX IN THE DARK MESSAGE — The use of this narration audio for any projects (including animation) without expressed permission is not allowed.Reuploading any of these videos or translating without expressed permission is not allowed.Support the show

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Hloov kev ntseeg

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2023 15:05


Ms Neeb Yaj yog ib tug tub koom siab tshiab thiab nws piav tias vim li cas nws thiaj hloov ntawm Hmoob tej kab lis kev cai thiab kev ntseeg qub tig mus ntseeg cov kev ntseeg Christianity uas ntseeg tswv Yesxus. Nws qhia tias ib tug tub koom siab tshiab ho muaj lub luag hauj lwm dab tsi yuav tau ua thaum mus ntseeg txoj kev ntseeg tshiab no.

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
FNQ cov yeeb yam lom zem

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2023 13:31


Jannah Dryden qhia rau SBS Radio Hmong program tias vim li cas nws thiaj xav tau ib tug txiv neej Hmoob los ua tus tuam neeg ua yeeb yam rau nws cov yeeb yam lom zem 8 toom uas tseem yuav npaj ua txuas ntxiv tom ntej no.

hmoob
SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Muaj neeg Australia coob tuaj ntxiv ras los ua neeg tsis muaj vaj tse nyob

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 6, 2023 48:39


Program xov xwm hnub zwj Hnub (Sunday program news 2023.08.06): xov xwm tshaj tawm hnub zwj Hnub (Sunday news), zaj lus nrog Jannah Dryden tham txog zaj dab neeg lom zem uas muaj Hmoob koom, Australia tej cai teev, tswj thiab raug txim rau cov kev yeem sib deev thiab yuam deev lwm tus.

australia tsis nyob hmoob
SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Tsoom fwv teb chaws Australia hais tias nws ua txhua yam los tswj kab theem paj lawm.

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 5, 2023 4:17


Mloog tau xov xwm ua lus Hmoob ntawm SBSHmong, rau hnub zwj Teeb (Thursday) thaum 6 pm AEDT thiab hnub zwj Hnub (Sunday) thaum 11 am AEDT los yog koom tau ntxiv ntawm Facebook, Googlepodcasts, Spotify, thiab Apple podcasts los yog download SBS Radio App thiab SBS Hmongpodfollow kom koj mloog tau SBS Hmong.

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong
Koom teeb txheeb txog Hmoob tej lus

SBS Hmong - SBS Hmong

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2022 15:29


Txus Tsaab tham txog nws cov kev tau mus koom nrog Dr Nathan White uas teeb txheeb txog Hmoob tej kev cai siv ntawv ntawm James Cook Universty tias nws ho tau ua dab tsi xwb thiab nws ho xav ua dab tsi ntxiv rau yav tom ntej.

Spoiler Force Podcast
EPISODE 130: Spy x Family Season One Cour 1 Review

Spoiler Force Podcast

Play Episode Play 60 sec Highlight Listen Later Jul 22, 2022 73:34


On this Episode, I have Miisopunny, Lynn, Bobby and Michael on the podcast to review and discuss Season One's first cour of the hit anime series, "Spy x Family"!!FOLLOW Miisopunny at:Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/miisopunny/FOLLOW Lynnsauce at:Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/lynnsauce/FOLLOW Bobby at:Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/runningchicken/FOLLOW Michael at:Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/mikeoutta/Michael's Art Page - https://www.instagram.com/artbykouki/JOIN THE SPOILER FORCE PATREON!! Patrons will have their names mentioned on episodes depending on which tier is selected!!https://patreon.com/spoilerforcepodcastLIKE, SHARE, RATE, SUBSCRIBE, COMMENT and FOLLOW Spoiler Force Podcast!! You can find more content at:https://linktr.ee/SpoilerForcePodcastYouTube - https://www.youtube.com/spoilerforcepodcastApple Podcasts - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/spoiler-force-podcast/id1465655015Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/3edg2bpJPr85Qwry6kzvOrSoundCloud - https://www.soundcloud.com/spoilerforcepodcastAny kind of guest recommendations, comments, questions, concerns or criticisms can be sent to rickyvang92@gmail.com. I might even respond to your message in a future podcast episode!!Don't Forget to Join the Spoiler Force Discord Community!!Support Spoiler Force Podcast! ALL Tips and Donations will be used for podcasting needs such as Booking Guests, Equipment and Software!https://streamlabs.com/spoilerforcepodcast1/tipIf you want to start your very own Podcast, go tohttps://www.buzzsprout.com/?referrer_id=1059248 and sign up for free!If you want a simpler way to record your Audio or Video Podcast, go to https://streamyard.com?pal=6037820492218368 and sign up to earn a $10 credit!Music from Uppbeat (free for Creators!):https://uppbeat.io/t/sensho/glow#SpoilerForcePodcast #SpyxFamily #Review #Anime #Manga #ComicBooks #Cosplay #Convention #Miisopunny #Anya #Loid #Yor #Forger #Spy #Family #Asian #Hmong #Hmoob #Community #VoiceActor #VoiceOver #Discussion #WITStudio #CloverworksStudio #Animation #Comedy #Action #Shonen #Sub #DubSupport the show

Misfits
Ep. 12 | Coming out as Queer & Trans to Her Asian Family, Sharing Her HMoob (Hmong) Identity Through Music, and Looking Past Labels with Chuefeng Yang

Misfits

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2022 51:20


Chuefeng Yang (she/her) is a queer, transgender HMoob (Hmong) singer-songwriter living in Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minnesota. In today's episode, Chuefeng talks with Annie about her experiences coming out as trans in a family with traditional Asian gender norms, sharing her Hmong identity through her music, and how she strives to see people beyond their labels. *Please note that “HMoob” is a newer spelling of “Hmong” that is used to be inclusive of people who speak both HMoob dialects spoken in the US. Sources/Information on HMoob history: https://www.britannica.com/topic/Hmong https://www.mprnews.org/story/2015/03/01/10-things-hmong https://www.npr.org/sections/parallels/2017/01/30/512449534/how-the-u-s-war-in-laos-was-key-to-the-birth-of-a-military-cia HMoob people in the USA: https://www.pewresearch.org/social-trends/fact-sheet/asian-americans-hmong-in-the-u-s/ Links to Chuefeng's Music: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCJhKp9nx2d7zv9kbdbI1quA https://open.spotify.com/artist/04pXnhIrzbcXMYYtt43e5L https://music.apple.com/us/artist/chuefeng/1510888352 Also be sure to follow Chuefeng on Instagram @chuefengy: https://www.instagram.com/chuefengy/?hl=en “Sort Of” on HBO: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ul3sh7DUK4w&t=7s --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/annie-prafcke/support