About this campaign
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18 Million Rising has launched "My Elders Taught Me How To Cook" in collaboration with movement artist Ashley Lukashevsky! This shirt is inspired by the strength and visionary leadership of our elders and ancestors.
Many of our elders had to take risks to survive and radically change their conditions. They adapted, innovated, and dreamed of new possibilities. From immigrant aunties to beloved activist elders - our organizing work wouldn?t be possible without them!
We take in their fiery spirit and honor it with our own fight for social change.
My Elders Taught Me How To Cook
Inspired by Asian culinary traditions, this spicy shirt depicts a barbecued police pig and its baton going up in smoke and flames.
Garlic, chilies, and handcuffs are spread out across a banana leaf. We?re here to roast police violence of all kinds -- from ICE raids to militarized weapons to high-tech surveillance.
This is a bold and unapologetic message for Asian America: Cages and cops don?t keep us safe! We keep us safe!
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Proceeds from shirt sales will support 18 Million Rising's grassroots campaigns, projects, and community trainings for racial justice and immigrant rights.
In 2020, 18MR formally ?came out? as an abolitionist organization. 18MR has made the conscious choice to be loud and unapologetic about our belief that liberation does not include false solutions like policing, hate crimes laws, prisons, or ICE. Help us bring this energy into Asian American communities by supporting our work!
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Ashley Lukashevsky is an illustrator and visual artist born and raised in Honolulu, Hawaii, and currently working between Los Angeles and Honolulu.
They use illustration and visual art as a tool to strengthen social movements for racial justice, immigrant justice, climate justice, mental health and LGBTQIA+ liberation. "I think that in order to tear down harmful systems, we need to be able to envision a world without them. I?m trying to draw what that world looks like," says Ashley.
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