Nebraska communities celebrate largest Welcoming Week ever

Nebraskans showed their commitment to strong, inclusive communities with events across the state that brought together new and long-time neighbors during Welcoming Week 2017, the largest ever in Nebraska.

From South Sioux City to Lexington, from Crete to Omaha – Nebraskans hosted potluck meals, film screenings and community festivals.

This year there were more than 700 events across the country where community members came together to recognize that being a welcoming community for all makes us stronger economically, socially, and culturally. Nebraskans volunteered with citizenship clinics, learned struggles of young people learning English and preparing to graduate from public schools, and gathered in support of young Nebraska DREAMers.

We recognized that being a Nebraskan is what unites all of us while coming together over music, food and fun!

Neighbors came together to share potluck meals in Hastings and Sioux City (where the event crossed state borders with neighbors from Nebraska, South Dakota, and Iowa). In Lincoln, people gathered to share an Ethiopian meal and learn about the food, the hospitality, and the story of the chef. They finished with dessert at a Turkish bakery owned by a young Yazidi refugee who learned to make the delicious treats after fleeing Iraq and living in Turkey. Neighbors shared dance, culture and great food at United by Culture in Lexington.

Refugees exchanged stories with their neighbors at the Omaha South Library. More neighbors learned about the challenges and triumphs of students learning a new language and the education system in a new culture.

Across the state community members showed that inclusion starts where you live and shared their own welcoming messages that included “Bienvenidos,” “A Welcoming Nebraska is the best Nebraska,” “From one immigrant to another: You are welcome and loved here,” and “You make our community complete.”

See more Welcoming Week photos on our Facebook page

Nebraska communities to celebrate National Welcoming Week

welcome_week_logoNebraska communities are holding events celebrating how our towns are made stronger by welcoming new neighbors from all different cultures and backgrounds during the 5th annual National Welcoming Week September 16-25.

National Welcoming Week is a nationwide series of events where communities bring together new and long-time residents in a spirit of unity to raise awareness of the benefits to everyone of a welcoming community. In 2015, there were 245 events in more than 80 communities across the country during Welcoming Week, with more than 22,000 people participating.

 

Lincoln Welcoming Week events

Harvest Moon Festival – Asian Community and Cultural Center

Saturday, September 17

Antelope Park, Lincoln

Contact: Shelia Dorsey Vinton, Executive Director

Lincoln Arts Festival – Lincoln Arts Council

September 24-25

Southpointe Pavillions, Lincoln

Contact: Lori McAlister, Program Director

This year’s Lincoln Arts Festival will feature the “World Stage,” with music and dancing from cultures around the world.

 

Crete Welcoming Week events

Crete has enthusiastically embraced the welcoming movement and will hold several events bringing together long-time and new neighbors during Welcoming Week.

“When We Stop Counting” film screening and panel discussion

Thursday, September 15

Heckman Auditorium, Doane College, 7:00 p.m.

Contact: Dulce Castaneda, Crete Community Assistance Director

“When We Stop Counting” is a 2010 documentary that follows six Hispanic high school students in Crete, living their personal struggles and triumphs while bearing the pressure of their parents’ backbreaking sacrifice in hopes of achieving the American Dream.

After the screening, there will be a panel discussion with several of the now-grown students who will share their lives and experiences after high school.

World Dish Potluck

Wednesday, September 21, 6:00-8:00 p.m.

Crete High School

Contact: Dulce Castaneda, Crete Community Assistance Director

Community members will contribute their best dishes from all over the world for a community-wide potluck dinner. Afterward, Justice For Our Neighbors will host an “Immigration 101” training to educate local community members about the current U.S. immigration system.

 

Omaha Welcoming Week events

“New American Dish”

September 8-14

Block 16, 1611 Farnham St., Omaha

Kitchen Table, 1415 Farnham St., Omaha

New American Dish is an exciting exchange of food and culture with food inspired by Omaha’s newest neighbors from across the globe. Local restaurants will feature signature dishes created in collaboration with a New American (refugee or immigrant) woman that highlights the restaurant’s unique concept and the flavors of the woman’s home country.  Five percent of the week’s sales from these restaurants will go to the New American Women’s Alliance, a program of Omaha’s Refugee Empowerment Center.