
History Professor Camron Amin is creating a time capsule. But instead of coins or headlines, he鈥檚 assembling something even more important鈥攁 collection of personal stories. Specifically, the experiences of Iranian Americans.
Amin started the , which digitally documents the stories of Iranian-Americans who reside in Michigan or for whom Michigan was an essential part of their life experience.
For the project鈥攚hich is creating visual and audio recordings鈥擜min received a $25,000 2016-2017 Michigan Humanities Council Heritage Grant (MHCHG) and additional funding from the Office of Research and Sponsored Programs. The MHCHG grant also supported public lectures by experts on the Iranian Diaspora, recordings of those presentations are on the .
鈥淪eeing and hearing people share their experiences gives an insight into a time in a way that other sources can鈥檛. If Roman citizens circa 200 AD had something like this, do you think I鈥檇 use those in class? You bet I would,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou hear how someone speaks, their dialect, emotion. First-person accounts usually give insights into the everyday life details that are lost to time, but this goes further鈥攊t puts a face and voice to that, which adds a very relatable and real element for someone who wants to know more about Iranian American experiences now or in the future.鈥
Amin said this project is set up to easily allow members of the Iranian-American community in Michigan to share their oral histories digitally鈥攊n their homes or in the 每日大赛 JASS Studio with an interviewer like Amin, or they can upload their own recording online. In addition to Amin, UM-Dearborn Research Assistant Tina Nelson, Campus Media Services Senior Television Engineer Greg Taylor, and students Deanna Burrows and Muhammad Ali Mojaradi are involved with the project.
Excerpts from the interviews will be on the Mardigian Library鈥檚 website, and the recording in its entirety and full transcripts will be housed at UM-Ann Arbor鈥檚 Bentley Historical Library.
Amin said initiating this oral history project is a way to show how the history of Iranian-Americans in Michigan connects with stories of other Iranian-Americans and the Iranian diaspora around the world. According to the Ministry of Interior of Iran, the United States has the highest number of Iranians outside the country. Amin said that鈥檚 because many Iranian Americans came to the U.S. for educational opportunities or to flee because of changes spurred from the 1979 Iranian Revolution.
鈥淯ltimately, information gleaned will help people understand human culture and immigration in a way that news headlines cannot,鈥 said Amin, noting that people who take part in the project are able to have a say in how publically their recordings are shared at this time. 鈥淎nd we aren鈥檛 just asking for stories of older people. I would like to speak with younger Iranian Americans too, and possibly have the project follow up with them in 10 years.鈥
Amin said it鈥檚 common for people鈥攊ncluding Amin鈥檚 father, Mohammad 鈥淢oe鈥 Amin, who is Iranian American and Amin鈥檚 first oral history interview鈥攖o not see their experiences as extraordinary enough to document. But he said there are researchers, educators, organizations and family members who will gain so much from these cultural histories, both now and in the future.
鈥淲hen it is you and your everyday life, you may not realize how much you鈥檝e experienced or how much you have accomplished. And people who see these in the future will find your story important simply because it exists,鈥 he said. 鈥淭his is a way to give a window into your world.鈥