Search the Media Repository

Discover the curated images, videos, and primary sources featured throughout Foundations and Futures

History is more than just text on a page; it is the photographs, voices, and artifacts of the people who lived it. The images and recordings featured across Foundations and Futures are part of a meticulously curated media repository. Whether you are building a lesson plan or investigating an artifact, you can use this database to trace the provenance of our media: discover who created an asset, the historical context behind it, and how it can be used to bring Asian American and Pacific Islander experiences into your classroom.

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  • Image
    Photo of Roden Kadir

    Indonesian students continued to study in the United States through the rest of the twentieth century. In this World War II-era photograph, Roden Kadir is making a presentation in Washington, DC, to a gathering of international students.

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  • Image
    Maritime workers

    Here, two maritime workers pose for a photograph. Images like this challenge us to consider what kinds of lives they might have led upon the ship as laborers, as well

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  • Image
    Devi Dja, Indonesian dancer and actress

    Devi Dja was a dancer and actress trained in Indonesia who migrated to the United States during World War II. Dja became a US citizen in 1951 through marriage and eventually settled in California. She supported merchant seamen during Indonesia’s battle for independence from the Dutch.

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  • Image
    Busy trade at Jakarta

    The United States remained interested in Indonesia throughout the twentieth century. This image depicting the busy trade at Jakarta, the capital of Indonesia in Java then known during Dutch colonialism as Batavia, illustrates Indonesia’s importance in terms of global trade.

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  • Image
    Indonesian students, early alumni at the University of Illinois. (Right)

    Although many Indonesian students studied in the Netherlands during the early twentieth century due to Dutch colonialism, there were also some students who traveled to the United States, like these early alumni at the University of Illinois.

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  • Image
    Indonesian students, early alumni at the University of Illinois. (Left)

    Although many Indonesian students studied in the Netherlands during the early twentieth century due to Dutch colonialism, there were also some students who traveled to the United States, like these early alumni at the University of Illinois.

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  • Image
    Eighteenth century, American merchant ship Friendship of Salem

    Built at the end of the eighteenth century, the American merchant ship Friendship of Salem traded with countries like China, Indonesia, India, and Russia. This photograph depicts a present-day replica of the ship. Understanding early trade patterns helps us to see how Indonesian American community formation is part of a larger history.

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  • Image
    Map of Southeast Asia, with Indonesia highlighted.

    Map of Southeast Asia, with Indonesia highlighted.

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  • Image
    Population data for Southeast Asia

    Indonesia is the largest country in Southeast Asia and the fourth most populated country in the world. In terms of size within the region, Indonesia’s population comprises roughly 70 percent of Southeast Asia’s population. Source: IMF Data on Southeast Asia population by country in millions.

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  • Image
    Maya’s presentation for Ceeds of Peace

    Maya travels around the world to promote understanding and peace, devoting much time to organizing in her chosen home of Hawaiʻi. Here, Maya is pictured making a presentation for Ceeds of Peace, an organization that develops peacebuilding leaders.

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