Ney-T: Healing Through Music
/Ney-T is a singer-songwriter from the West African nation of Senegal. He shares with us his passion for music and an original song in his native Wolof. Come for the conversation, stay for the music.
sharing the life stories of immigrants, expatriates, and refugees to the United States
Feel Like You Belong TV is your source for real stories about the real people we call migrants. They may be the seasonal workers who traverse the country picking our daily produce.* They may be the expatriates who come on temporary assignment for their multinational companies. Or they may be the intrepid** souls who have committed to calling these United States their new homeland.
People have been migrating since time immemorial.*** They have moved for safety from earthquakes and drought. From war and disease. From persecution and economic hardship. They have the same characteristics as our immigrant forebears who gave up the familiarity and comfort of home in order to take risks and build a better life.
Join us here every week with these heroic storytellers and learn about what it is that still makes America a destination for entrepreneurs and risk-takers. The people who moved themselves and their families across deserts and oceans. People who add to each new generation’s vibrancy**** and can-do spirit. Welcome to Feel Like You Belong.
Ney-T is a singer-songwriter from the West African nation of Senegal. He shares with us his passion for music and an original song in his native Wolof. Come for the conversation, stay for the music.
Growing up as a child of immigrants is not easy. Growing up in Grand Rapids, Michigan, Vince Mcintosh learned to navigate between his Jamaican parents' expectations and the African American kids at his school, eventually finding his way as a young businessman. He joins us in studio to talk about a passion for food, his Jamaican roots, and creating community.
A young accountant flees civil war in his native Yemen, is granted asylum, and moves to Detroit, Michigan to begin his life again. Aladeen Al-Ashmli joins us to share his story.
If teaching is in your blood, you often know it as a young child. Tausi Zaina did – and now does, thousands of miles from her native Kenya. Also second nature to this dynamic immigrant is making music, either chorally (as she does in metro Grand Rapids, Michigan) or solo (as she does in our studio). Come meet Tausi Zaina, the teacher with the beautiful voice!
Growing up the only child of migrant working parents, Juanita Bocanegra never dreamed of the opportunities that she could have in the USA. Graduating from law school, she worked her way up in the prosecutor’s office, and is now running for 58th District Judge in West Michigan. Juanita joins us to share her incredible story. [November update: Juanita won her election and will be seated Jan. 1, 2021 as Ottawa County's first Hispanic judge.]
Growing up in Venezuela, David Astudillo loved stories told through film. When the opportunity arose, he ventured to Grand Valley State University to follow his passion of filmmaking. With us, he discusses bringing Latin American voice to the world of film.
Raheef Alturkmani grew up in Syria before coming to the U.S. in 2011 to pursue his education. He currently works in human resources at the Dow Chemical Company in Midland, MI, and teaches part time at Northwood University there. He joins us to discuss his personal story and his advocacy with Dow's Middle East/North Africa Employee Resource Group (MENA-ERG).
RC Caylan is the creative director of RC Caylan Atelier in Grand Rapids, Michigan. He joins us to discuss growing up gay in the Philippines, his work in the fashion world, and the early inspirations that got him there.
Javier Cervantes is a young professional making a difference in his native Grand Rapids. The son of Mexican immigrants, this community advocate is working to promote the neighborhoods and schools around him. His leadership has been recognized by the Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, and he joins us to tell his story.
West Africa is not a safe place to live for lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender individuals. Nigerian-born Edafe Okporo talks about the legalized oppression of LGBTQ citizens in his homeland and why he sought asylum in the United States.
At age 13, Rosine Hounakey was trafficked to work in hair-braiding salons in the United States. Listen to one plucky young woman's story about a sad reality in too many American cities and the courage to rise above such abuse.
An estimated 11 million residents of the United States do not have formal authorization to live there. Some overstayed visas. Others crossed the border illegally in search of work, safety, or family members. Over the years, they have become contributing members of their respective communities: from Savannah to Spokane, from Albany to Albuquerque. They clean our hotel rooms, pick our produce, construct buildings, and even start businesses in their adopted cities. Born of the farmworker movement, Cosecha (Spanish for "harvest") is advocating for life with dignity for all immigrants. Sergio Cira Reyes explains how.
When Cindy Wilson enters a room, observers see an Asian American woman and make instant judgments about her character, her preferences, her roots. If they had waited to talk to her, they would discover an African American woman at her soul. Born in South Korea, Wilson was adopted by an African American couple stationed there on military assignment. Growing up back in the American South, she encountered puzzlement, bullying, and stereotyping, all of which she covers in her book, Too Much [Seoul] Soul.
Maha Freij is a community jewel and national inspiration. The first Arab woman to earn the CPA designation in Israel, she brings her immigrant pluck and Palestinian tenacity to any job she undertakes. Currently serving as Executive Director of ACCESS in southeast Michigan, Maha joins us to talk about Mobilizing, Organizing, Vocalizing, and Empowering the Arab American community and well beyond in her adopted homeland.
"My name is Carlos, not Carl," young Carlos Cortés told the teacher at his new school, just before being sent to the principal's office. Seven decades later, Professor Emeritus Cortés emphasizes the importance of embracing one's full background across ethnicity, birthplace, language, and religion. He shares with us the need to honor cultural identity and monitor the influence of media on our children.
Authentically born and raised in Italy, entrepreneur Maddalena Pistillo joins us in the studio to talk about the importance of global travel, trans-Atlantic business, and the thrill of finding your place in a new culture.
Speaker, writer, consultant, and podcast host Ekemini Uwan is a Nigerian American whose parents emigrated from southeastern Nigeria. In this episode, Ms. Uwan shares her thoughts on race in America, her podcast "Truth's Table," and how the biblical concept of reparations is relevant in today's world.
A 5-cent, hour-long phone call from a pay phone convinced a young Dominican immigrant that West Michigan was a place she could live. Fast-forward several decades, Ana Jose is boldly transforming the local business climate for Latino-owned enterprises one conversation, one seminar at a time. Join us to be inspired by this ever-humble, ever-aspiring young woman!
As lifelong educators and parents of biracial children, Melissa Giraud & Andrew Grant-Thomas are uniquely qualified to examine the country's most skittish conversation: race. Together they share personal observations as well as tips for parenting while Embracing Race.
On his return visit to our studio, orphaned refugee Phillip Nguyen expresses gratitude for the country that took him in. With pride, he talks about his company's new charity app, EZsamaritan. With an investment of 45,000 work hours, this app is a free resource to the 1.7 million non-profits across the United States. According to entrepreneur Nguyen, it's all about giving back.
Feel Like You Belong is a sometimes serious, sometimes funny, always “touch-your-heart” real conversation about fitting into the American culture. It introduces guests who have made the immigrant journey to the United States. The stories–of both struggle and success–will help newcomers feel more confident in sharing their opinions and expertise, more likely to want to stay in the U.S., be more productive in their jobs, and fully invest in their communities.