Project Team

Natasha Raheja, Founder and Director
Natasha is finally moving forward with an idea that has been ruminating in her head for years now! What began as informal conversations with Sindhi elders during a year-long stay in Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh has grown into the Sindhi Voices Project. She’s very excited to realize this project through the collaboration and support of an expanding network of awesome people and ideas. Intrigued by questions of belonging, she hopes this initiative, by means of the oral history interview, will broaden her own sight as well as complicate static notions of identity and community at large. Having recently completed her M.A. in Asian Cultures and Languages from the University of Texas at Austin, Natasha is now working on the project full-time from Delhi, India. She will be starting her PhD in Anthropology at New York University in September 2011.
Neena Makhija, Director
Neena’s passion for this project can be traced to her grandmother’s home, the place she began hearing many of her family’s stories of migration and displacement. Listening to the details of these stories contributed to the past several years of her work with immigrant communities in areas of youth mentorship, culturally centered curriculum development, inter-personal violence prevention, and workers’ rights. She has recently completed an M.A. in both Social Work and Public Administration from the University of Washington with concentrations in critical development studies, historical trauma & cultural resilience, and evaluation of participatory programs. In between classes, witnessing & experiencing healing via creative expression and performing arts inspired her to re-visit the potential of sharing and listening to stories.
Advisory Committee
(Photo Coming Soon)
Robin Li, Research Specialist at The Bancroft Library’s Regional Oral History Office, UC Berkeley
Robin Li is a Research Specialist at The Bancroft Library’s Regional Oral History Office at the University of California, Berkeley. Li received her PhD from the University of Michigan in American Culture in 2006, where she studied U.S. cultural history and identity formation, with a focus on race, ethnicity and memory. Within oral history, her interest is in the integrated processes of self-narration, identity and history. Li’s research interests include transnational identity formation, narrations of science, the US in the world, and cultural history. She is currently at work on a book manuscript exploring the intertwined narrations of US and Chinese nationalisms through the oral histories of mid-twentieth century Chinese student immigrants.


