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Actor Maulik Pancholy

 

NRI Maulik Pancholy join the White House's “Act To Change,”

 a public awareness campaign to address bullying

Washington, Oct. 14, 2015
NRIpress-Club/R.Gupta/Gary Singh

Maulik Navin Pancholy, a film, television, and stage actor and a member of the President's Advisory Commission on Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) community joined to launch a public awareness campaign to address bullying in six languages including Hindi, Punjabi, Urdu, Chinese, Korean, and Vietnamese.

NRI Maulik Pancholy said, "Growing up, sometimes people made me feel like an outsider; I was the perfect storm of nerdy, gay, and Indian American. But now, I’ve come to find that those very things that were sometimes used as fodder against me are the things I love the most about myself. I have the privilege to be connected to amazing communities of incredible people: people who know that it’s actually cool to nerd out about stuff, who celebrate the strength and joy of what it means to identify as LGBT, and who appreciate the rich cultural heritage of being Indian American."

It’s okay to be weird, but it’s NOT okay to be bullied.

Every day, kids of all ages suffer from being bullied in schools across the country. In the Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) community, this problem is often complicated by cultural, religious, and linguistic barriers that can keep AAPI youth from getting the help they need. And we’ve seen that certain AAPI groups – including South Asian, Muslim, Sikh, Micronesian, and limited English proficient youth – are more likely to be the targets of bullying.

That’s why today, during National Bullying Prevention Month, I’m proud to join the White House Initiative on AAPIs, in partnership with the Sikh Coalition and the Coalition of Asian Pacifics in Entertainment, in launching “Act To Change,” a public awareness campaign to address bullying, including in the AAPI community. “Act To Change” aims to empower students, families, and educators with the knowledge and tools to help prevent and end bullying in their communities. In addition to raising awareness, the campaign encourages AAPI youth and adults to share their stories, engage in community dialogues, and take action against bullying.

The “Act To Change” campaign builds a broad, diverse coalition of supporters and forges public-private partnerships across media platforms, and through nonprofit organizations, celebrities, and other stakeholders. “Act To Change” supporters will champion the campaign by:

  • Promoting “Act To Change” content, using the brand and logo on their platforms. This includes using media space online, on television, and on other platforms to spread the word about “Act To Change.”
  • Sharing resources with “Act To Change.” This includes cross-promoting bullying prevention resources.
  • Making influencer and personality commitments. This includes integrating “Act To Change” content in different influencers’ and personalities’ platforms to spread the word.
  • Creating original content for their audience promoting it through their own platforms and talent. This includes creating content that resonates with their particular audiences and doing what they do best: communicating with, engaging, and mobilizing communities to act.
  • Developing new or expanding upon existing programs. This includes building upon existing programming and youth outreach efforts to include bullying prevention themes and messaging. 

As we all know, bullying doesn’t build character, it breaks confidence. Join me in the #ActToChange movement against bullying today. Visit ActToChange.org today and learn more.

Take the “Act To Change” pledge:

  • Help stop bullying by not bullying others.
  • Report bullying that you see or experience to your school and trusted adults.
  • Help someone you see who is being bullied.
  • Spread the word about bullying awareness.
  • Share information and resources about bullying prevention and response.
  • Be proud of who you are and celebrate our differences.

Maulik Pancholy is a member of the President’s Advisory Commission on Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders.

Growing Up "Weird" - Maulik Pancholy: campaign to address bullying

......CLICK HERE

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White House launches anti-bullying campaign in Hindi, Punjabi, Urdu

By Arun Kumar 

Washington, Oct 16, 2015: The White House has teamed up with a Sikh and an Asia Pacific community group to launch a public awareness campaign to address bullying in six languages including Hindi, Punjabi and Urdu.

The resources for the "Act To Change" campaign are also available in Chinese, Korean, and Vietnamese as one out of three in the Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) community does not speak English fluently.

The initiative launched, in partnership with the Sikh Coalition and the Coalition of Asian Pacifics in Entertainment, will also feature video testimonials of AAPI celebrity athletes, artists, and entertainers.

"Growing up, sometimes people made me feel like an outsider; I was the perfect storm of nerdy, gay, and Indian American," wrote Maulik Pancholy, a member of the President's Advisory Commission on AAPI discussing the campaign.

"But now, I've come to find that those very things that were sometimes used as fodder against me are the things I love the most about myself," he wrote in a White House blog post.

"I have the privilege to be connected to amazing communities of incredible people: people who know that it's actually cool to nerd out about stuff, who celebrate the strength and joy of what it means to identify as LGBT, and who appreciate the rich cultural heritage of being Indian American."

"It's okay to be weird, but it's NOT okay to be bullied," said Pancholy, noting: "Every day, kids of all ages suffer from being bullied in schools across the country."

In the AAPI community, this problem is often complicated by cultural, religious, and linguistic barriers that can keep AAPI youth from getting the help they need, he said.

"And we've seen that certain AAPI groups - including South Asian, Muslim, Sikh, Micronesian, and limited English proficient youth - are more likely to be the targets of bullying," Pancholy wrote.

In addition to raising awareness, the campaign encourages AAPI youth and adults to share their stories, engage in community dialogues, and take action against bullying.

The campaign website, ActToChange.org, includes video and music empowerment playlists, and encourages one to "Take a Pledge" to join the #ActToChange movement and stand up against bullying.

The Sikh Coalition has also launched a new anti-bullying awareness video. The short five-minute film was developed for community members to share on social media to raise awareness to the challenges that Sikh children face when confronting this problem.

Sikh children are acutely vulnerable to abuse in our nation's schools, said the Sikh Coalition's law and policy director, Arjun Singh.

"The bullying of Sikh children is an epidemic," he said noting that the Coalition's 2014 national bullying report found that 67 percent of turbaned Sikh children have been bullied....Ians

It’s okay to be weird, but it’s NOT okay to be bullied.