FILM + PANEL: There is My Home

Bailey Hall, USM Gorham Campus 16 University Way, Gorham, ME, United States

There Is My Home features Hawa Ibrahim and Batula Ismail, two women trying to support their families as farmers in Maine. Born and raised in the Jubba River Valley of Somalia, both learned to farm at a young age from their parents. When civil war broke out in 1991, their villages were repeatedly raided for food. […]

CONFERENCE: Meeting the Mental & Physical Needs of Immigrants, Refugees & Asylum Seekers

DoubleTree by Hilton 363 Maine Mall Rd, South Portland, ME, United States

For Immigrants, refugees, or asylum seekers, leaving their country is only the beginning of their struggles.  For mental health and medical providers to be effective, we need to understand the mental and physical stressors that arose from their displacement and beyond. This program will give participants a greater understanding of the challenges these groups face, […]

Closing Reception | Tim Bavington: Rock & Roll Abstraction

Closing Reception: Tim Bavington: Rock & Roll Abstraction Oct. 19, 5–7pm Abstract painter translates Rolling Stones, Beatles, Cream, and Jimi Hendrix songs into visual experiences Dedicated to using music and art as a gateway to learning, the Bob Crewe Gallery at Maine College of Art & Design (MECA&D) is exhibiting Tim Bavington: Rock & Roll Abstraction July […]

2018 Dorothy Schwartz Forum: who is we?

Congregation Bet Ha'am 81 Westbrook St., South Portland, ME, United States

(Above) Schwartz Forum installation sketch by Lisa Pixley.  The Schwartz Forum brings people together with expert guides to grapple with a big question. This year’s question – who is we? – arises any time we say or hear or read a thing like we live here … or we are thrilled to announce … or […]

PANEL: Printers Without Margins: A Fellowship for Change

SPEEDWELL 630 Forest Avenue, Portland, ME, United States

Pickwick Independent Press is a community print shop in Portland, Maine that had the opportunity to give six activists a fellowship this year. Each Fellow was guided through the process of printing and distributing their own supporting materials. This panel will host and highlight these fellows as they talk about their activism, the printed matter […]

PANEL: History of Immigration in Maine

Rhines Auditorium, Portland Public Library 5 Monument Way, Portland, ME, United States

Held in conjunction with the exhibition Home: Reflections on Place, hosted by the Portland Public Library. Join us for a panel discussion about the History of Immigration in Maine hosted by Portland Press Herald reporter, Megan Doyle.  Panelists will talk about advocacy and programs to support Maine immigrants. Panelists include: Julia Trujillo, Director of the Office of […]

FILM: Family and Community

YWCA Central Maine 130 East Ave., Lewiston, ME, United States

Screening of My American Girls by Aaron Matthews. Described by the Los Angeles Times as “packed with uncommon honesty and humor,” this intimate cinema-verite documentary captures the contradictions of contemporary immigrant life in America, showcasing the rewards and the costs of assimilation. Filmed over the course of a year, the film follows the family of Sandra and […]

Gallery Talk: Seeing Otherwise | Caroline Webb

Colby College Museum of Art 5600 Mayflower Hill Drive, Waterville, ME, United States

Co-curator Caroline Webb will introduce visitors to the Seeing Otherwise exhibition at the Colby College Museum of Art. Featured work by Romare Bearden, Phong Bui, Lalla Essaydi, Whitfield Lovell, Meleko Mokgosi, Richard Mosse, Leo Rubinfien, Alfred Stieglitz, and Fred Wilson invites an novel view of displacement and reinvention, presence and absence, memory and identity.        […]

FILM+PANEL: There Is My Home

Payson Smith Hall, USM Portland Campus 96 Falmouth St., Portland, ME, United States

There Is My Home features Hawa Ibrahim and Batula Ismail, two women trying to support their families as farmers in Maine. Born and raised in the Jubba River Valley of Somalia, both learned to farm at a young age from their parents. When civil war broke out in 1991, their villages were repeatedly raided for food. […]