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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  • Video
    The Little Bangladesh Neighborhood in Los Angeles

    Murals of prominent historic Bangladeshi leaders in Little Bangladesh, Los Angeles, California.

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  • Image
    Tanzila Ahmed Posing with Hand-Painted Alponas

    Tanzila Ahmed, a political activist born and raised in Los Angeles, California, poses with hand-painted alponas (traditional Bengali folk art) in the neighborhood of Little Bangladesh in Los Angeles.

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  • Image
    Tara Asgar in Performance

    Tara Asgar during a performance in the US: “Coming to the US was a loss, and I had to start from zero, reshape my work.”

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  • Image
    Portrait of Tara Asgar

    Tara Asgar, a Bangladeshi artist, is deeply influenced by her connections to African American and Latinx communities in New York.

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  • Image
    Chaumtoli Huq with Garment Workers and Organizers

    Huq (left) with women workers and organizers in the apparel industry in Bangladesh, filming for her documentary Sramik Awaaz: Workers Voices (2017).

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  • Image
    Shahana K. Hanif and Sharmin Hossain with Organizers

    Bangladeshi American organizers in New York, including Huq (far right), alongside NYC Council member Shahana K. Hanif (third from right), and Sharmin Hossain of 18 Million Rising (far left).

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  • Image
    Chaumtoli Huq and Family in New York City

    Chaumtoli Huq and her family moved in the early 1970s to the Bronx, New York, after the Bangladesh Liberation War.

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  • Image
    Nadeem Zaman Holding a Stack of His Book The Inheritors

    Author Nadeem Zaman with his book, The Inheritors (2023). An English professor at St. Mary’s College of Maryland, Zaman arrived in the US in 1991 at fifteen. The legacy of the 1971 Bangladesh Liberation War features heavily in his writing.

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  • Text
    Front Cover of Bring Now the Angels

    Author Dilruba Ahmed’s Bring Now The Angels (2020). This book of poetry moves away from exploring notions of identity and belonging and instead deals with themes of grief and forgiveness.

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  • Image
    Headshot of Dilruba Ahmed

    Bangladeshi American author and poet, Dilruba Ahmed, at a bookstore reading. Her writings defy stereotypical representations of the exoticized Bengali and non-Western woman, emphasizing identity as fluid and multi-dimensional.

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