INDIANAPOLIS — Though Asian Americans are one of the fastest-growing populations in Indiana, with roots dating back to the late 1800s, many of the community’s historic and cultural sites are overlooked. A Feb. 4th event presented by Indiana Landmarks in collaboration with national nonprofit Asian & Pacific Islander Americans in Historic Preservation (APIAHiP) will detail efforts to recognize those sites and engage Hoosiers in a conversation about the state’s history of Asian and Pacific Islander Americans.
Now home to over 200,000 Asian Americans, Indiana boasts a wealth of significant and active Asian American cultural sites, including the Tibetan Mongolian Buddhist Cultural Center in Bloomington and the An Lḁc Vietnamese Buddhist Temple in Indianapolis. Others, such as the historic Bamboo Inn Chinese restaurant, once located within Indy’s Circle Theatre Building, and Columbia City’s soy sauce manufacturer Oriental Show-You Company, founded by Japanese American Shinzo Ohki in 1924, no longer exist, but their stories offer insight into heritage that might otherwise be lost.
Join Indiana Landmarks at an interactive workshop on Feb. 4 at 6 p.m. in Indianapolis to learn about ongoing efforts to document, celebrate, and preserve Asian and Pacific Islander American historic sites in Indiana and nationwide.
This event will be led by Huy Pham, executive director of APIAHiP, a national nonprofit organization dedicated to protecting historic places and cultural resources significant to Asian and Pacific Islander Americans.
The presentation will be online and at Indiana Landmarks Center, 1201 Central Ave. in person. The cost is free with an RSVP by visiting MappingAPIAHistory.eventbrite.com or 317-639-4534
courtesy Indiana Landmarks
An Lḁc Vietnamese Buddhist Temple, 5249 E. 30th St., Indianapolis. It is the oldest surviving Buddhist institution in Indianapolis. The temple was established in two adjacent homes purchased in 1986 by a group of Vietnamese Americans, with the goal of having a space to practice their Pure Land form of Mahayana Buddhism. The temple functioned as both a temple and a cultural center and was led entirely by laypeople until 2002, when a community of nuns moved into one of the houses and established a nunnery.


