Tea Rozman, PhD is the founding Executive Director of Green Card
Voices. Previously, she has worked for Reconciliation and Culture
Cooperative Network, a New York City non-profit working with
immigrants from the Former Yugoslavia. She is an NYU graduate in
Near and Middle Eastern Studies and has a PhD in Cultural History,
specializing in oral history from the University of Nova Gorica.
She is a first-generation immigrant from Slovenia and 2015 Bush
Leadership Fellow. Julie Vang is a spiritual writer and co-editor
of Our Stories Carried Us Here. She graduated from the University
of Minnesota, Twin Cities with a Bachelors in Family Social Science
and a minor in Asian American Studies. She is Hmong-American with
over six years of policy and programming experience. Tom Kaczynski
learned to read English by looking at American capitalist comics in
communist Poland. He moved to the U.S. in 1987. His comics have
appeared in Best American Non-Required Reading, MOME, and many
other publications throughout the years, and were nominated for an
Ignatz Award in 2011. Kaczynski is the founder of the independent
publishing house, Uncivilized Books. Nate Powell (b. 1978, Little
Rock, Arkansas) is the first cartoonist ever to win the National
Book Award. He began self-publishing at age 14, and graduated from
School of Visual Arts in 2000.
His work includes forthcoming graphic memoir/essay Save It For
Later, Eisner-nominated Ozark horror tale Come Again, civil rights
icon John Lewis' legendary March trilogy, comics essay About Face,
Two Dead, You Don't Say, Any Empire, Swallow Me Whole, The Silence
Of Our Friends, The Year Of The Beasts, and Rick Riordan’s The Lost
Hero.
Powell’s work has also received a Robert F. Kennedy Book Award,
three Eisner Awards, two Ignatz Awards, CXC’s Transformative Work
Award, the Michael L. Printz Award, a Coretta Scott King Author
Award, four YALSA Great Graphic Novels For Teens selections, the
Walter Dean Myers Award, and is a two-time finalist for the Los
Angeles Times Book Prize.
Powell has discussed his work at the United Nations, as well as on
MSNBC’s The Rachel Maddow Show, CNN, and Free Speech TV. His books
have been placed on school curriculum in over 40 states, and his
animated artwork in the Southern Poverty Law Center's Selma: The
Bridge To The Ballot has reached over a million students in 50,000
schools across the nation.
From 1999 to 2009, Powell worked full-time providing support for
adults with developmental disabilities alongside his cartooning
efforts. He managed underground record label Harlan Records for 16
years, and performed in punk bands Soophie Nun Squad and Universe.
He lives in Bloomington, Indiana. Thi Bui was born in Vietnam and
came to the United States in 1978 as part of the "boat people" wave
of refugees fleeing Southeast Asia at the end of the Vietnam War.
Her debut graphic memoir, The Best We Could Do (Abrams ComicArts,
2017) has been selected for an American Book Award, a Common Book
for UCLA and other colleges and universities, an all-city read by
Seattle and San Francisco public libraries, a National Book Critics
Circle finalist in autobiography, and an Eisner Award finalist in
reality-based comics. It made over thirty best of 2017 book lists,
including Bill Gates' top five picks. She illustrated the picture
book, A Different Pond, written by the poet Bao Phi (Capstone,
2017), for which she won a Caldecott Honor. With her son, Hien, she
co-illustrated the children’s book, Chicken of the Sea
(McSweeney’s, 2019), written by Pulitzer winner Viet Thanh Nguyen
and his son, Ellison. Her short comics can be found online at The
Nib, PEN America, and BOOM California. She is currently researching
and drawing a work of graphic nonfiction about immigrant detention
and deportation, to be published by One World, Random House. Ana
Hinojosa is a Dominican comic artist and illustrator. Most of her
work focuses on marginalized voices within the Latinx community
such as people a part of the LGBT community and Afro-Latinos.
Creating a space within the comics world where people like her can
explore, flourish, and possibly fight monsters or the demons within
themselves. Ashraf El-Attar is an illustrator from Egypt. He
currently resides in Washington DC. He earned his MFA in
Illustration from Savannah College of Art and Design (SCAD).
El-Attar was awarded a full scholarship from the Ford Foundation
Fellowship to study illustration in the United States in 2008. As
an undergraduate, he studied oil painting at Helwan University. In
2002, El-Attar participated in a workshop with the French comic
artist Golo. Each artist created two pages of a comic as a
modernization of the Sayf ibn Dhī-Yazan character. This book was
translated into Arabic, English, and French, and sold in Europe. El
Attar’s work has been printed in several publications, like the
Al-Ahram newspaper in Egypt, where he has created social and
political cartoons weekly for five years, as well as Bay State
Parents magazine in Boston. He has also illustrated several
children's books in the U.S and the Middle East. Attar's passion is
to create characters with different facial expressions. People on
the street are his main source of inspiration, and ink and pencil
are his preferred tools. He believes that the best way to
communicate with children is to think like them and to produce
illustrations that enrich their imagination. Attar is interested in
showing Middle Eastern superheroes like Sindbad or Abu Zayd
al-Hilali in a modern way to make them more attractive and to
introduce Arabic heritage to the west in an appealing style. He
believes that by bringing these characters back to life again, a
bridge can be created between cultures. Camilo is a Colombian fine
artist and cartoonist. He uses drawing as a series of strategies to
make visible personal, social and political issues. In his comics,
he uses the elements of the documentary format to tell
non-fictional stories, implementing anecdotes and interviews. In
all of his illustrations, he likes to find relationships between
elements in order to make messages intimate and empathizing. Cor
Lin is a midwest-based Japanese//Taiwanese-American illustrator and
designer specializing in portraiture, watercolor, food
illustration, and culture-centered storytelling. By visualizing
narratives and illuminating concepts, I make art that fuels action.
My editorial work has been published in the LA Times, Eater
Chicago, WBEZ Curious City Chicago, and Twin Cities Daily Planet.
Gérard Nyunai Ngan is a Ph.D. candidate at the University of
Yaoundé I. His research focuses on artistic creation as a tool for
urban planning. Gérard is a Cameroonian curator, Founder and
promoter of Pousse-pions, the only international festival of board
games in sub-Saharan Africa. Gérard is also a photographer and
cartoonist. Hamid Ibrahim is a CG director and co-founder of
Kugali, an arts and animation company that showcases the best
African stories using comics, art and animation. He has worked on
several Hollywood blockbusters such as The Predator, or Disney’s:
Dumbo and The Lion King. His current project is the development of
an augmented reality app where the characters and the worlds come
to life, as well as, an AR events app that allows us to explore new
ways of entertaining people. Mike Centeno is a Venezuelan
cartoonist who has been living in the U.S. for almost 10 years. His
work has been featured in The Chicago Reader, DigBoston, The Nib,
Southside Weekly and he self-publishes his own comics series titled
Futile Comics. His stories focus on identity, immigration and the
rise of global populism and authoritarianism which he explores
through fiction. sunshine gao was born in China and raised in
Indiana and Kentucky. Once, they studied moral philosophy and
ecology; cooked noodles; and sold produce. Now, they draw stories
about home - in all its forms, with all its complications. In spite
of everything, they believe the world can be made a beautiful
place. Toufic El Rassi was born in Beirut in 1978 to an Egyptian
mother and Lebanese father. He immigrated to Chicago a year later
as his family escaped the civil war in Lebanon. He is a college
lecturer in history and political science, a writer, and a graphic
novelist and commentator on Middle Eastern affairs. He lives in
Chicago.
"Eleven storytellers chronicle their journeys from places all over
the world—including Guatemala, Chad, Vietnam, and
Kazakhstan—to the United States.
Each story compellingly details a variety of experiences the
individual immigrant or refugee had, highlighting differences
between stories that too often are lumped together or not given
an opportunity to be heard. Each storyteller was paired with
an illustrator from a similar linguistic and cultural
heritage. The thoughtfulness of the matches shines through, as
every panel authentically conveys the narrators’ poignant and
emotional memories, highlighting the beauty of their homelands
and the cultures they still identify with. The narratives show the
struggles and triumphs of acclimating to a new language,
culture, and worldview as well as dealing with obstacles like
racism and microaggressions. Readers meet remarkable people like
Zaynab Abdi from Yemen, whose story is illustrated by Egyptian
American artist Ashraf El-Attar in stark black and white. Her
harrowing journey was filled with sorrow and trauma yet, when she
finally settled in Minnesota, she found purpose and
opportunity through hard work and activism, speaking at the
United Nations about girls’ education in Yemen. Each profile opens
with brief biographies and photos or drawings of the
storytellers and artists along with website URLs for learning
more about them. Glossaries following many of the stories define
potentially unfamiliar terms. The vibrant diversity of
artistic styles offers pleasing variety within the unifying
thematic framework of the volume.
Will strongly evoke both thought-provoking insights and
empathy."—KIRKUS STARRED REVIEW
"Our Stories Carried Us Here is a powerful collaboration
between storytellers and illustrators from around the country,
speaking to the forces that uproot us and send us to each other.
The collection is a testament to the power of language as vessels
for carrying our memories, to the power of images in holding fast
the boundaries of who we were and who we will be."—Kao Kalia Yang,
Author of Somewhere in the Unknown World
"An important collection of beautiful work that effectively
communicates the genuine and diverse experiences of long overdue
voices."—Louis Leung, Novelist
"Our Stories Carried Us Here, is an incredible collaboration of
authors and illustrators that illuminates the experience of
otherness felt by immigrants and refugees. This graphic novel is a
powerful affirmation of the way stories foster empathy and
connection, and provides a greater sense of how to understand and
welcome our new neighbors."—Molly Hill, Editor of Blue Marble
Review: A Literary Journal for Young Writers
"Our Stories Carried Us Here is an infinitely powerful
collection of immigrant voices unlike anything we’ve seen. One
cannot comprehend the bravery, trauma, sadness, and triumph of
emigrating from one country to another as a young person, yet this
anthology captures both the unimaginable journey and the humanity
of young immigrants. From the storytellers to the artists, the
reader is immersed in a page-turning narrative that gives you
chills and arrests your notions of what it means to leave one
country behind in pursuit of a different one. Our Stories Carried
Us Here is remarkable and is destined to become a beloved classic
that belongs in every classroom, library, and bookshelf."—Dara
Beevas, Publisher, and Author of Amina of Zaria: The Warrior
Queen
"Our Stories Carried Us Here is a stunning example of the
power of comics to uplift the stories that most need telling. In a
precarious moment for refugees and immigrants across the world,
Green Card Voices has curated an incredible anthology, filled with
experiences both told and illustrated by people whose creative work
is rarely centered, and whose voices we will all be better for
listening to."—Oriana Leckert, Director of Publishing & Comics
Outreach at Kickstarter
"Our Stories Carried Us Here is a collection of compelling and
emotional journeys that reminds us of why the greatest destination
humanity can strive for is a world where each of us can safely make
our home, and belong. This book, and the storytellers it features,
offer a profound gift - the ability to step into the many
worlds they bring to life, and to step out with the insights needed
to better meet the challenges of the communities, schools,
workplaces, and democracy we shape together, not as strangers, but
as neighbors."—Rachel Perić, Executive Director, Welcoming
America
"Once again, Green Card Voices has produced a piece of historical
art through storytelling. I found myself empathizing, crying,
laughing while reading and graphically interpreting a glimpse into
the immigrant experience of so many. The experiences are so unique
yet reminding me that we need to constantly be sharing these
stories. The series is an archive of our lived experiences and part
of the racial justice movement."—Nausheena Hussain, Executive
Director of Reviving the Islamic Sisterhood for Empowerment
(RISE)
"This book is a beautiful, accessible, and heart-expanding
invitation for us to learn the stories of some of our neighbors. I
hope that many will accept this invitation, and channel the
understanding and care that is sure to follow into becoming better
listeners, community members and neighbors who welcome and support
one another."—Alyssa Tsagong, Director of Education, PBS
Wisconsin
"Our Stories Carried Us Here: A Graphic Novel Anthology is a
beautiful representation of how powerful the intersection of art
and storytelling can be. It offers a critically humanizing
perspective that the reader can't help but love, rally around and
stand up for the storytellers, and encourages the reader to take
action in real life. To me, that's what this book is all
about."—Christine Her, Executive Director of ArtForce Iowa
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