Tamejavi
2002
In July 2001, approximately 20 people
gathered together for the first time in the offices of the Pan
Valley Institute, in Fresno, California,
to begin a dialogue and planning.
The process lasted nine months in which we hosted monthly meetings
that provided participants space for us to exercise collective
imagination.. This group, called the Planning Committee,
consisted of artists, communicators,
organizers, and educators.
In the course of these gatherings what began as a simple idea
for a festival took another shape as new forms of artistic expression,
forums, exhibits, and workshops
were incorporated in the proposed program.
The idea to re-create a TA Laj Tshav Puam (Hmong),
or Mercado (Spanish), or NunJAVI (Mixteco)—a
marketplace—led to a cultural rapprochement without precedent,
for we discovered that all of us shared the same longing for such
a public space in which we could exchange goods, songs, food,
ideas and news. This was a space in which we could gather together
and dialogue about community issues and a space in which popular
artistic creations could be displayed and enjoyed. With this vision
in April 2002 the First Tamejavi
took place took place in the historic Tower District in
Fresno California Today, Tamejavi is
not only a three day multi-media arts and cultural festival, but
is also a year-round learning community comprised of youth and
elders, artists and organizers, chiefs and healers, educators
and students. Through workshops, forums, exhibits, and cultural
tours, we come together to explore complex and changing perspectives
as well as identities and the future of our democracy. We hope
that our work can inspire others by being an example of how Valley
communities can come together
to exercise cultural and political rights through ongoing intercultural
learning and collective action.
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