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I come from a family of migrants. My grandparents are Chinese and came to settle their new lives in Bangkok, Thailand over 80 years ago. Throughout my entire life, I have been raised in a bicultural context. My family always celebrates Songkran Day (Thai New Year) and other national holidays. Meanwhile, we never forget to have our family reunion during Chinese New Year and to honor our ancestors at the burial site during Qingming (The Chinese Tomb-Sweeping Festival). I have been taught by all of them to cherish diversity, tolerance, coexistence, and respect to others whose cultures are completely different from ours. When I finished my high school in Bangkok, I got selected by my government to study as an undergraduate in Mexico City. Since then, I have experienced a new life as a migrant myself. In Mexico and many Latin American cities I used to live in, I never lost sight of being myself and preserving my own culture as well as my family background. However, I always was an open-minded person who listened to other people's life stories and shared my own with them. To be honest, I really had so many wonderful moments enjoying rich cultural conversations with them and helping one another expand our knowledge of the world. Now, once again, I'm a migrant myself, finishing my last semester of my master's degree in the Latin American Studies Program at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C. To me, migration is unquestionably important. It is not only because of its direct connection to my life, but also due to the lessons I have gained from my travel experiences and education abroad. To me, migration is unquestionably important. It is not only because of its direct connection to my life, but also due to the lessons I have gained from my travel experiences and education abroad. At the end of the day, migration is not a harmful subject at all, but intolerance, discrimination, and disrespect are. Therefore, why don't we just help one another tell beautiful stories of migrants—kids of migrants, even grandchildren and great-grandchildren of migrants—to our society? Submitted by Tipaporn AttasivanonOriginally from Thailand, Tipa is currently a Master's candidate at the Center for Latin American Studies at Georgetown University.
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