Helen ZiaPowerful and influential activist, author, and journalist Helen Zia will be in residency at UHM during the first six weeks of the Spring 2022 semester as the Dan and Maggie Inouye Distinguished Chair in Democratic Ideals.

The daughter of immigrants from China, Zia was a member of the first class of women graduating from Princeton University. She worked as a construction worker, an autoworker, and a community organizer and became an outspoken advocate on issues ranging from human rights and peace to Asian Americans, women, and the LGBTQ community. Zia played an instrumental role in bringing federal civil rights charges against the perpetrators of the 1982 murder of Chinese American Vincent Chin. The case became a catalyst for the broad mobilization of the Asian American community and the movement against hate violence. Zia is featured in Who Killed Vincent Chin?, the now classic documentary film about the case and its implications.

Zia was the executive editor of Ms. Magazine from 1989 to 1992 and a founding board co-chair of the Women’s Media Center. Her first book, Asian American Dreams: The Emergence of an American People was published in 2000, and she also co-authored My Country Versus Me with Wen Ho Lee, the Los Alamos scientist falsely accused of being a spy for China. She has received numerous awards for her ground-breaking articles, essays, and reviews on a range of issues. In 2019, Zia published Last Boat out of Shanghai: The Epic Story of the Chinese Who Fled Mao’s Revolution, which traces the lives of migrants and refugees from Shanghai based on extensive archival research and interviews with more than a hundred survivors of the exodus.

During her residency at UHM from January 10 to February 20, Zia will co-teach AMST 442: Social Movements and will also interact with students and faculty in Ethnic Studies, Journalism, and Women, Gender & Sexuality Studies as well as American Studies and William S. Richardson School of Law. Zia will be delivering her keynote address, “Transforming the ‘Other’ to ‘Us’: The Power of Unity and Re-Envisioning America,” on February 3 at 5pm. The keynote address is free and open to the public on Webinar. Viewers must pre-register through this link.