One Million Neighbors w/ Dr. Melissa Borja
Episode two of One Million Neighbors brings us to the chaotic final days of Saigon in April 1975, as ten-year-old Simon Hoa-Phan watches his world unravel. From the terror of nighttime bombings to the desperate crush of families fleeing toward evacuation helicopters, Simon’s story captures the fear, uncertainty, and life-altering decisions faced by thousands as South Vietnam fell. His family’s escape—narrow, chaotic, and uncertain—becomes a window into a much larger phenomenon: the mass displacement of millions across Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia, where war, political upheaval, and U.S. intervention forced entire populations to flee under harrowing conditions. At the same time, across the world in St. Paul, Minnesota, Kathleen Vellenga witnesses these events from a hospital bed and feels a call to act. Her personal turning point reflects a broader movement among American faith communities, who would go on to play a central role in resettling more than a million Southeast Asian refugees. This episode traces the historical roots of that movement—from Cold War politics and moral responsibility to deeply held religious convictions—and introduces the ordinary people who made extraordinary choices to welcome strangers as neighbors. Dr. Melissa Borja is Associate Professor [https://lsa.umich.edu/ac/people/faculty/mborja.html] of American Culture and Director of the Asian/Pacific Islander American Studies at the University of Michigan. Trained at Harvard, the University of Chicago, and Columbia, she is a historian of migration, religion, race, and politics and author of Follow the New Way: American Refugee Resettlement Policy and Hmong Religious Change [https://www.hup.harvard.edu/books/9780674989788] (Harvard University Press), which won the Thomas Wilson Memorial Prize, the Frank S. and Elizabeth D. Brewer Prize from the American Society of Church History, and the Outstanding Achievement Award in History from the Association for Asian American Studies. Dr. Borja has advised Princeton's Religion and Forced Migration Initiative [https://www.rfmi.princeton.edu/] and Bridging Divides Initiative [https://bridgingdivides.princeton.edu/]. An expert on anti-Asian racism during the Covid-19 pandemic, she leads the Virulent Hate Project [https://virulenthate.org/] and has contributed research to Stop AAPI Hate. She is a co-founder of Hoosier Asian American Power [https://hoosieraap.org/] and has been active in faith-based refugee resettlement efforts in Indianapolis, where she lives with her family. In honor of her research and advocacy about Asian Americans, USA Today honored her as one of its 2022 Women of the Year. One Million Neighbors is brought to you by APARRI, the Asian Pacific American Religions Research Initiative. It's part of the Under Gods Project funded by the Henry Luce Foundation and the AAPI Stories of Faith and Life Project funded by the Lilly Endowment Incorporated. www.aparri.org [http://www.aparri.org/] www.axismundi.us [http://www.axismundi.us] Executive Producer: Dr. Bradley Onishi Producer: Andrew Gill Original Music, Composition, and Mixing: Scott Okamoto Production Assistance: Kari Onishi
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