Community Corner
Woodbury Artist, Advocate Named Bush Foundation Fellows
Bush Foundation Fellowships, given to people who think bigger and differently about problem solving," come with grants of up to $100,000.
WOODBURY, MN β Two Woodbury residents are among two dozen people to earn 2022 Bush Fellowships.
Artist Ifrah Mansour and Rania Johnson, an advocate for the deaf, earned the coveted fellowships from the Bush Foundation, which provide a grant up to $100,000. Both of their fellowship terms are due to last two years.
Mansour, a Somali-American performance artist, βsees art as the way we can heal the world,β according to her profile on the Bush Foundation website.
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Mansour experienced civil war, famine and refugee camps as a child and says her βgrandmotherβs storytelling saved her,β her profile states.
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She creates original performances that βbuild understanding, empathy and connection within Muslim and greater American communities,β the Bush Foundation said.
Mansour βwants to reach more people by creating social impact films that amplify and transform her stage work,β according to the foundation. βShe believes film can shed light on stories of injustice and resistance, as well as capture the disappearing memories and wisdom of Somali elders.β
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She will use her fellowship to design, seek and complete filmmaking courses and a hands-on apprenticeship, as well as traveling to film festivals to βbuild her influence and leadershipβ and her network of filmmakers, the foundation said.
Mansourβs artwork was featured in the βI am Somaliβ exhibition, the first major museum exhibition of work by contemporary Somali artists in the Midwest, and she has also been on PBSβ βMinnesota Originalβ series, according to the Minneapolis Institute of Art.
Rania Johnson is set to pursue a doctoral program thatβs dedicated to training deaf researchers in linguistic, community and leadership work, while expanding her national network of BIPOC deaf leaders, according her profile on the Bush Foundation website.
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Johnson βgrew up with multiple identities,β as she is adopted, Korean and deaf and was raised by white, deaf parents, according to the organization.
βInformed by this background, she is keenly aware of the disparities in language rights, education and services for Deaf people of color,β the organization said.
Johnson is working to explore βthe multiple ways that diverse Deaf people use their experiences to create, shift or shape their use of American Sign Language,β while advocating for policies that train more people in criminal justice, social service and education systems about the βculturally rich and nuancedβ American Sign Language, the Bush Foundation said.
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Bush Foundation Fellowship grants provide recipients with up to $100,000 to help them βstrengthen and developβ their leadership following self-defined plans, according to the organization.
The Bush Foundation, based in St. Paul, was established in 1953 by Archibald and Edyth Bush. It offers grants and opportunities βto people who think bigger and differently about problem solvingβ in Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota and within the 23 Native nations in that region.
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