CelebrAsians 2026 will take place on Thursday – May 28, 2026, in Cambridge, MA!

Our annual gala celebrates the collective power, resilience, and brilliance of our AANHPI communities. It’s a gathering of advocates and change makers shaping a world where everyone can thrive. Together, we’ll honor stories of healing and hope, amplify voices driving health equity, and reflect on what it means to thrive in full splendor.

For over a decade, AWFH has advanced this vision. Training Community Health Workers. Building mental health programs. Creating intergenerational dialogue. Partnering with researchers so our communities co-create discovery, not just participate in it. This is what collective change looks like.

This year’s peacock motif celebrates the beauty and strength in our diversity. We’re not just honoring resilience – we’re shaping our shared future, together.

Our Emcee

Payal Kumar

Payal is a multidisciplinary cultural worker and abortion doula whose work is rooted in the in-betweens. Currently based on Massachusetts, Pawtucket, and Wampanoag territories, they invoke the power of intergenerational community building to construct tender new possibilities of being beyond borders, capital, and medical violence.

Their illustrations, zines, spoken word pieces, and workshops have found a home across Chinatown walls and grassroots protests, in gallery spaces like the Museum of Fine Arts and international TRANS* Future Archives, and through collaborative learning spaces like the Allied Media Conference and BIWOC Gathering Circle. They were a grant recipient of the 2024 Harvard Ed Portal Artist Pipeline program, culminating in a three month solo exhibition entitled “body of work” weaving together North Indian folk talismans and community conversations to explore care and medicalization. payal was also a recipient of the prestigious Boston LAB grant in 2021. They are an organizer with Subcontinental Drift Boston, a monthly multilingual open mic centering South Asian diasporic voices, and with transnational collectives fighting for labor, race, caste, and gender equity. Through creative strategies, they cultivate playful spaces that challenge the state’s monopoly on Imagination so that we may all fully unearth and activate our collective power.

Our Our Performers

Vivian Luo (Violin Viiv) is a classically trained violinist that performs top 100 hits and mashups on her electric violin. She started violin lessons at the age of 8 and has now played the instrument for over 27 years. A few months after she moved to Boston, she started street performing with a friend who would DJ while she played electric violin, and soon playing covers of her favorite songs in Harvard Square or the MBTA stations became her favorite weekend hobby. A few videos of her performing in various MBTA stations and in downtown Boston went viral and her coworkers in her finance job nicknamed her the firm’s first “professional panhandler.”

Three years after moving to Boston, Vivian transitioned to playing violin as her full time career, performing for corporate events, private parties and weddings throughout Boston in addition to regularly busking at Faneuil Hall and across downtown Boston.

New England Bhangra Club is the one of the only all- female identifying, competitive Bhangra teams that represent the greater Boston area. We have competed and placed at some of the most prestigious competitions in the country and enjoy working together to promote Bhangra and to uphold the Punjabi tradition. With Bhangra being a primarily male-dominated dance form, NEBC works hard to shatter stereotypes about women in Bhangra and to raise the standards for form, energy, and style.

Brianna Li is a junior studying at Longmeadow High School and has been a ballet dancer for 10 years at Hartford Universities Community Division, a Chinese Traditional Folk Dancer for 13 years at Huaxia Culture and Arts Center, and is a pianist of 13 years, studying under Galina Gertsenzon. A few achievements in her arts are:

– Two Next Star competitions both in 1st placement platinum

– Music-Fest’ 22-23 1st place Age (at Carnegie Hall)

– Young Artist 2022 4th place age division

– Young Artist 2023 3rd place age division

– Young Artist 2024 3rd place Length of Study

Ingrid Chiemi Schroffner is a local chanteuse originally from Hawaii, who has performed in various small venues and published 5 books of lyrics that benefit non-profits and are available at Newtonville Books & Sherman’s Maine Coast Book Shop.as well as Amazon.

Ingrid Chiemi Schroffner was born in Hawaii and lives with her family in Massachusetts. She has been writing songs for years, and you can access recordings of her current and new songs online. Her first publicly performed song was “Steps to Find” in 1988, when she conducted her high school class in a four-part harmony rendition of it at graduation. In college, she was graced with singing the part of the female angel in Haydn’s “The Heavens Are Telling” with the University Chorale at the Vatican. While in graduate school, she sang in an acapella group called “The Wandr’ng Mistrials. Ingrid also released a CD “Living on 2 Coasts” in 2005. The title track was the theme song for the Asian American Lawyers’ Legal Line Boston Neighborhood Network TV show, for which she was also a host. Ingrid Chiemi has performed professionally in many small venues, penned Chiemi’s Corner, a music/events column in The Somerville News, and hosted the Somerville News’ Music/Poetry Series. When the pandemic hit and she started working remotely for the first time, she integrated the music into her day with the commute time she was saving. She also started recording in her attic and posting songs with art and photos. which ultimately became books, “Karma Bank to Following By Listening,” “Odd Simple Beauty,” “World As Refuge” and “Something in That Space,” available on Amazon, Newtonville Books & Sherman’s Maine Coast Book Shop & benefit the Asian Community Development Corp., Asian Women For Health (AWFH), the Coalition for Anti-Racism and Equity (ethnic studies in K-12 education) and the Korematsu Institute. “What the Horizon Can Hold” about how imagination can take us beyond what we can see, and which benefits AWFH, is her most recent book. She has been profiled in The Boston Globe (https://www.bostonglobe.com/2022/04/06/metro/its-how-i-make-sense-world-newton-attorney-creates-book-her-song-writing/) as well as many local publications – see https://figcitynews.com/2023/09/world-as-refuge-celebrating-resilience-diversity/& https://figcitynews.com/2024/06/poetry-party-at-newtonville-books-aug-4/. She hopes that folks find beauty and joy in her work and believes that music should be a regular part of everyday life.

Thank You to Our CelebrAsians Sponsors!

Ruby Sponsor

Opal Sponsor

Jade Sponsor

Lapis Sponsor

2026 CelebrAsians Planning Committee

Co-Chairs

  • Adam Thomas
  • Ingrid Chiemi Schroffner

Planning Committee

  • Rakhi Ahuja
  • Mary Joan Castillo-Dreyfuss
  • Sohini Mazumdar
  • PhiYen Nguyen
  • Hana Yeh
  • Anita Yip

Host Committee

  • Nick Chau 
  • Elena Lau
  • Paul W. Lee
  • Michelle Li
  • Colette Phillips
  • Sabiha Shirol
  • Leverett Wing