![]() |
||
|
ABOUT US Mission | Vision | Goals | History | People | Contact Us Many Threads is a 501(c)3 non-profit organization based in San Francisco Bay Area. Our mission is to help people from diverse communities bring their perspectives powerfully to bear on public dialogues about a broad range of social issues that affect their lives. We use film, arts and other media as tools to educate and engage people, as well as to amplify the voices of those whose perspectives are not usually heard.Vision
Goals
In 1998, Many Threads (formerly known as Institute for Equity, Ecology, Humor and Art, or IEEHA) was established by journalist Pratap Chatterjee, filmmaker Lina Hoshino, and software engineer Derek Chung. Initially, our mission was to produce educational tools for social justice using the latest technology. We developed a series of educational games, websites and videos to engage young audiences in a range of social justice issues linked to the global economy and policies, including Global Arcade and the Whirled Bank. Our work evolved over the years as the organization matured. In 1999, IEEHA helped create Gold, Greed, and Genocide, a documentary and a website about the environmental and social holocaust of the native peoples of the state of California during the 1849 gold rush. After the September 11 attacks, IEEHA produced and distributed Caught in Between: What to Call Home in Times of War, a documentary that portrays Japanese, Muslim, South Asian and Arab Americans who came together in solidarity to fight against racist scapegoating. In 2005, IEEHA organized women's first-person narrative movie workshop, in which participants produced a short 3 minute video about issues that they face. In addition, IEEHA supported the production of "In God's House: Asian AmericanLesbian and Gay Families in the Church" a PANA Institute film that tells honest and thought-provoking story of Asian American Christian lesbian and gay people, their pastors, and their parents. Our work reflects our belief that personal stories are a powerful way to capture what's happening in our communities, bring people together, and inspire them to participate in public dialogue and the democratic process. Beginning in 2007, we changed our organization’s name to Many Threads to reflect our sharpened focus on making people’s stories heard.
| ||
| contact: info@manythreads.org | ||