Enter the New Year of the Fire Horse: Honoring Chinese American Legacies

Saturday • Feb 21 • 3 pm – 5 pm PM • Doors open 2:30 PM • Free 
Resource Center for Nonviolence & ONLINE • 612 Ocean Street • Santa Cruz

Explore Chinese-American legacy with Stanford Professor Gordon H. Chang, Flex Kids Culture founder Rui Li, and developer George Ow, Jr.
Join the Resource Center for Nonviolence (RCNV) for an afternoon dedicated to reclaiming a fuller history of Chinese people in the United States and the Monterey Bay region. This special event honors the Lunar New Year by celebrating stories of resilience, labor, and the ongoing work to build a “Beloved Community”.

Professor Gordon H. Chang is interested in historical connections between race and ethnicity in the United States and trans-Pacific relations in their diplomatic as well as their cultural and social dimensions. He is a highly awarded scholar, co-founder of Stanford’s Asian American Research Center, and a member of the Committee of 100. His most recent book was published in 2025, a collection of essays titled War, Race, and Culture: Journeys in TransPacific and Asian American Histories (Stanford University Press).
Rui Li, executive director of Flex Kids Culture, is a community leader and educator dedicated to fostering international academic exchange and cross-cultural understanding. Rui, through Flex Kids Culture, was instrumental in the printing and distribution of 5000 copies of the Chinese version of Sandy Lydon’s seminal local history Chinese Gold. She is currently producing a documentary based on the book.
George Ow, Jr. is a developer, philanthropist, and community pillar born in Santa Cruz’s last Chinatown. George was key to the publication of Sandy Lydon’s Chinese Gold in its full glory. He continues on his enduring quest to ensure Chinese Americans receive the credit and recognition they deserve for building this nation and to honor and give peace to the spirits of an unacknowledged history.
This conversation will delve into the recovery of lost histories, the meaning of nonviolent community building, and the personal journeys of ensuring that early immigrant generations are no longer forgotten.

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