Turn Isolation into Radical means of Communication (dedicated to the WMass Asylum Support Network)

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Turn Isolation into Radical means of Communication (dedicated to the WMass Asylum Support Network)

8 x 10 inches (20 x 25 centimeters)
Risograph Print by Risolve Studios (Lancaster, PA)
Printed on Domtar Cougan Smooth White 80 Ib
Hunter Green 342U, Peach 932U, Aqua 637U, Federal Blue Ink Colors
Illustrations by Emma Kohlmann
Design and prose by Charlotte Kohlmann

THE WMASS ASYLUM SUPPORT NETWORK WEBSITE: www.westernmassasylumsupport.com

This print is dedicated to The Western Massachusetts Asylum Support Network
Please visit their website www.westernmassasylumsupport.com for more information on this project, ways to get involved, and ways to support.

*Information below is taken from the western mass asylum support network website*

"By offering a welcoming place to land and a network of broad-based accompaniment support, we help asylum-seekers operate from a place of increased safety and well-being while navigating their asylum processes.
Our project began in January 2019 with the advent of the so-called "migrant caravan" at the US-Mexico border, in which the executive branch manufactured a constitutional and human rights crisis targeting Central and South American asylum-seekers. Recognizing that part of resisting the agendas of xenophobia and white nationalism is welcoming and supporting our new neighbors, we began our work to build a network of support in Western Massachusetts for asylum-seeking individuals who choose to settle here.
We’re a group of folks - including asylum seekers themselves - who have come together to support asylum seekers as a network in the best way that we know-how. We work with a wide array of groups in Western Massachusetts.
Our communities are proud to currently support 30 people negotiating active asylum cases. Asylum seekers are currently living with local friends and sponsors who have agreed to house and support them. Before arriving here, many asylum seekers have spent months in immigration detention - despite having committed no crime - before making it out to resettle in Massachusetts.
While their cases advance, there’s a lot involved in settling into a new place. There are classes and appointments and errands and check-ins. There’s loneliness and isolation. There’s a new language to learn. And though it’s ugly structures which have set this all in motion, there’s still many great relationships to build and much beauty to discover.
We’re looking to build a broad network of coordinated support, to meet the needs of our newest neighbors and the families who are taking them in. We’d love your support in making our community a truly welcoming place.
We have a central coordinating committee that oversees all aspects of our work, and coordinates with other committees to take care of needs as they arise.
If you’d like to get involved as a volunteer or sponsor, we discuss our structure and modes of operation at length in our orientation meetings. Everyone in our organization is a volunteer.
It's fundamentally important to us that our goals and decision-making are led and centered by asylum seekers themselves. As such, asylum seekers who have moved to the area are represented on all of our committees, including our central coordinating committee.
Our network is a fiscally sponsored project of the Peace Development Fund, through whom donations to us can be made.