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Poster for VOICES, a BIPOC Adoptee Reading

VOICES, a BIPOC Adoptee Reading

Dates with showtimes for VOICES, a BIPOC Adoptee Reading
  • Sat, Apr 26

Event Runtime: 120 min.

FREE EVENT

Doors 6:30 p.m.; Event 7 p.m.
Select Showtime to Purchase Tickets

Click here to learn more about accessibility at the Tomorrow Theater. 


THE EXPERIENCE

This powerful event features five BIPOC adoptee authors sharing their works and engaging in conversation. More than just a reading, this is a transformative space for storytelling, connection, and empowerment—reclaiming narratives often overshadowed. Through spoken word and discussion, we aim to elevate adoptee voices, challenge dominant cultural narratives, and build community.

This event is open to the general public and made possible by our sponsors: Regional Arts & Culture Council (RACC), Literary Arts, Ecotrust, and the Arts Access Fund. This is an in-person event and there will be no live streaming available.

📖 Book Signing & Sales – Books will be available for purchase, with a signing immediately following the event.

Doors Open at 6:30 PM

Meet the Authors
– Joon Ae Haworth-Kaufka // Instagram: @joonae.hk // www.joonaehk.com
– Nastashia Minto // Instagram: @shaminto09
– Susan Devan Harness // Instagram: @sdharness // www.susanharness.com
– Kit W. Myers // Instagram: @abolish_and_build // https://bit.ly/kitmeyers
– Caroline J. Sumlin // Instagram: @carolinejsumlin // www.carolinejsumlin.com

Community Safety
We will have KN95 masks available and follow guidance from Multnomah County and the CDC. Please make informed choices regarding masking, travel, on-site behavior, and community engagement. To protect the health and wellness of our community, we kindly ask that you do not attend if you are feeling unwell, have tested positive for COVID, or are recovering from COVID—even if you are symptom-free.

Venue Details
📍 PAM Cut’s Tomorrow Theater is fully ADA compliant and wheelchair accessible.
🚗 Street parking is available.
🥤 Food, non-alcoholic, and alcoholic drinks will be available for purchase.

As a grassroots nonprofit, we are committed to making our events as inclusive as possible. However, we currently do not have the funding to provide ASL interpretation or captioning for this event. We appreciate your understanding and are actively seeking resources to improve accessibility for future events.


ABOUT THE AUTHORS

 

Joon Ae Haworth-Kaufka

Joon Ae Haworth-Kaufka (she/they) is a Korean adoptee who was born in Seoul and grew up outside of Detroit. Chapters of her novel-in-progress have been published in Hyphen Magazine, The Work & Response, The PlentitudesMochi Magazine, and the Bellevue Literary Review. Her other fiction has been in The Portland Review, Colorado Review, Kartika, WomenArts Quarterly Journal, and more. Her recent adoptee-centered essays have been in Oregon Humanities and Beyond the Margins. She is a co-founder and organizer for the Constellation reading seriesVOICES, a BIPOC Adoptee Community, and the now defunct Yeondae. She is a winner of the AWP Intro Journals Award, a 2x Tin House workshop alum, an Anaphora Arts alum, and a 2024 Oregon Humanities storytelling fellow. She lives in Portland, OR.

Connect with Joon Ae on Instagram @joonae.hk // Find Joon Ae on the web here

 

Nastashia Minto

Nastashia Minto is an award-winning author. Her newest book is A Body Tangled in Time: A Tapestry of Self-Love and Shadow Work. Her first collection, Naked: The Rhythm and Groove of It. The Depth and Length to It, has been featured in many magazines, books, and podcasts. Nastashia is an African American born in South Georgia and raised there by her grandparents. She is an eccentric dream tender who grew up in poverty around drugs, alcohol, and family violence. Her writing offers Minto a way to not only help herself but others as well.

Connect with Nastashia on Instagram @shaminto09 // Find Nastashia on the web here

 

Susan Devan Harness

Susan Devan Harness is a member of the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes, a cultural anthropologist, and author of the multiple award winning book Bitterroot: A Salish Memoir of Transracial Adoption. Her experience as an American Indian transracial adoptee has helped to inform the child placement community and beyond of the very real and problematic issues of transracial/interracial adoption. Her interviews have appeared on various media including public radio, podcasts, as well as the TEDxMileHigh Stage. Ms. Harness holds MAs in Anthropology and English, from Colorado State University, where she is an affiliate of the Department of Anthropology and Geography.

Connect with Susan on Instagram @sdharness // Find Susan on the web here

 

Kit W. Myers

Kit Myers is transracial and transnational adoptee from Hong Kong and grew up in Oregon. He is currently an assistant professor in the Department of History & Critical Race and Ethnic Studies at University of California, Merced. He received his Ph.D. and M.A. from the University of California, San Diego in ethnic studies and his B.S. in ethnic studies and journalism from the University of Oregon. His book, The Violence of Love: Race, Family, and Adoption in the United States, is published with University of California Press (2025) and is open access. Myers has published journal articles in Adoption Quarterly, Critical Discourse Studies, Adoption & Culture, and Amerasia. He has also written on issues of race and policing. He serves on the executive committee for the Alliance for the Study of Adoption and Culture and previously served on the leadership team of the Adoption Museum Project. When Myers is not working, he loves spending time with his partner and two kids, being in nature, watching sports, coaching his daughters’ soccer teams, and visiting family in Oregon.

 

Connect with Kit on Instagram @abolish_and_build // Find Kit on the web here

 

Caroline J. Sumlin

Caroline J. Sumlin is a writer, speaker, and thought leader bringing awareness, healing, and transformation to those desperate to live a life that honors their humanity rather than one that fights against it. Caroline is a Black woman adoptee who lived most of her life crumbling under the pressures of societal and cultural norms, often leading to periods of increased anxiety, depression, and suicidal ideation. After years of suffering from unescapable burnout, exhaustion, and feelings of worthlessness that led to perfectionism obsession and over-achievement, Caroline got curious as to why every attempt to stop feeling this way wasn’t working. It wasn’t until Caroline began researching white supremacy, out of her curiosity about its development that led to the racism we face today, that Caroline uncovered what was missing in her journey to wholeness all along: a society that was intentionally built to dehumanize and devalue us all. Caroline’s research led her to write her book, We’ll All Be Free: How a Culture of White Supremacy Devalues Us and How We Can Reclaim Our True Worth, where she unpacks how the construction of a racially hierarchical society plays a role in each of us believing the inherent lie that we are not enough, and exactly what to do about it. Caroline is passionate about how history, society, and culture inform our thought patterns, characteristics, and behaviors we have normalized. Through her research, she eagerly shares with her audience how living within a society that was built to dehumanize its constituents through oppression and marginalization has led to a normalized culture of dehumanization for all and how to choose a different way of living.

Connect with Caroline on Instagram @carolinejsumlin // Find Caroline on the web here

 

About BIPOC Adoptees VOICES

VOICES, a Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC) Adoptee Community (DBA BIPOC Adoptees), is a grassroots organization dedicated to creating safe, inclusive spaces for BIPOC adoptees, addressing their unique needs through community-building initiatives. Our organization’s structure is committed to horizontal leadership and trauma-informed practices. Coalition building is at the heart of our work, demonstrated through partnerships with BIPOC Adoptee professionals and organizations to bridge gaps and expand our collective movement. We center and empower BIPOC adoptee voices, aiming to change the narrative around adoption. We offer culturally affirming spaces that promote connection and well-being, filling the void left by traditional adoptee networks.

As a non-transactional organization, our events are always free to our community. Grounded in our lived experiences as BIPOC adoptees, we maintain a trauma-informed, multi-marginalized focus that bridges the gap for both domestic and international BIPOC adoptees, including adoptees through kinship, same race, and those adoptees who have been part of the child welfare system – creating spaces that honor the complexities of our shared identities.

Learn more about us on the web at www.bipocadoptees.org and connect with on Instagram. If you have any questions, email us at hello@bipocadoptees.org.

VOICES, a BIPOC Adoptee Community is a registered tax-exempt organization under section501(c)(3) of the IRS code. Donations to VOICES are tax deductible. EIN:93-2517170.

 


Note: We do not generally provide advisories about subject matter or potentially triggering content in films, and films exhibited don’t necessarily reflect the views of PAM CUT, the Tomorrow Theater, or the Portland Art Museum. In addition to the synopses, trailers and other links on our website, further information about content and age-appropriateness for specific films can be found on sites like Common Sense Media, IMDb and DoesTheDogDie.com.

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