Projects
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The Power of Storytelling and New South Narratives
A special collaboration with New Orleans-based nonprofit E Pluribus Unum to create a series of videos showcasing the power of storytelling. During the Festival, we interviewed some of the South’s storytellers about their craft and ability to change hearts and minds, to build empathy, to break down walls, and call us all to action. The project honors storytelling’s past, celebrates the 50th National Storytelling Festival and uses the power of honest, frank stories around hard topics to impact people’s hearts and minds so we can forge ahead to a better tomorrow. The project the premise was geared towards confronting the issue of race head-on if we are to move forward, cultivating and empowering courageous leaders who are advancing racial equity, changing the divisive narratives that perpetuate systemic and interpersonal racism, and championing transformative policy change. Through this work, the goal was create a more just, equitable, and inclusive South, setting an example for the rest of the nation.
A special collaboration with New Orleans-based nonprofit E Pluribus Unum to create a series of videos showcasing the power of storytelling. During the Festival, we interviewed some of the South’s storytellers about their craft and ability to change hearts and minds, to build empathy, to break down walls, and call us all to action. The project honors storytelling’s past, celebrates the 50th National Storytelling Festival and uses the power of honest, frank stories around hard topics to impact people’s hearts and minds so we can forge ahead to a better tomorrow. The project the premise was geared towards confronting the issue of race head-on if we are to move forward, cultivating and empowering courageous leaders who are advancing racial equity, changing the divisive narratives that perpetuate systemic and interpersonal racism, and championing transformative policy change. Through this work, the goal was create a more just, equitable, and inclusive South, setting an example for the rest of the nation.
Dreaming Big with Dolly Parton Kiran led several initiatives to help tell Dolly Parton’s story. Including helping to establish her dream resort as a storytelling site of excellence, training her team of Imagination Library affiliates and supporting Dolly’s legacy story. Kiran also got a special thank you from her majesty Dolly herself, in the form of a personal letter and a bouquet of flowers! Read more about Dreaming Big with Dolly Parton Read more about How to Dream More |
![]() Celebrating Appalachian Traditions with Yo-Yo Ma
In 2022, Kiran collaborated with UN peace ambassador and international cellist Yo-Yo Ma on a project that celebrated Appalachian traditions.Kiran was tapped as a thinking partner and workshop leader for a special storytelling and music convening that took place May 13-15 in Western North Carolina. Other partners included Great Smoky Mountains National Park Service, community members and elders of Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians and Cherokee Nation, Cherokee museum, Great Smoky Mountains Institute at Tremont, Black in Appalachia, National Park Service, Radio Lab and others. The project convened around 45 cultural and eco-activists and practitioners from across Appalachia and beyond, to help explore the emerging story of how culture connects people to the natural world and how biodiversity and human diversity strengthens our relationship to nature and to each other, brings us empathetic connections as we imagine and build our collective futur Read more in Keeping Things Whole Images courtesy of Austin Mann
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Namaste Y'all: Fostering Peace Through Stories
In August 2017, a small group of white supremacists planned to stage a Confederate rally in Knoxville, Tennessee, USA. It had been two weeks since violence erupted at the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, and people’s anger had not cooled. This article describes Kiran’s work to promote and advance nonviolence action. “Namaste, Y’all”
Read Namaste, Y'all. An interview by Jeff Ruby in The Rotarian magazine.
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Spoken Word at the UN.
Kiran presenting his "Chip on my Shoulder" spoken word poem, at the United Nation's Geneva Peace Week Pathways to Peace. Geneva, Switzerland. |
Kiran established the funding from the National Endowment for the Humanities and oversaw the launch of Freedom Stories, a groundbreaking initiative that centered on African-American heritage in Appalachia. Kiran recruited historian Dr Alicetyne Turley, that directed the project and worked closely to shape the initiative that reached around 1.5 million people around the world. Presented online and as part of the National Storytelling Festival. The initial conversation “Do Black Lives matter in Appalachia?” invited scholars, artists, and community members, and numerous partners to dialogue as part of a year of racial reckoning following the Murder of George Floyd in 2021.
Learn more about Freedom Stories
Watch the Congressional briefing in partnership with NHA.
Advocacy: Leading story circles in honor of Nobel Peace Prize winner and Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel.
PRESS
American Folklife Center at the Library of Congress- Botkins Lecture.
Kiran Singh Sirah discusses the power and artistry of storytelling as an ancient art form and as the world's oldest form of communication. He also discusses what he describes as one of the greatest community-building tools that we can use to foster, cultivate and strengthen peace and collaboration in our communities, and will also explore how we might collectively use new storytelling forms in the arenas of peace and community development to help establish a conflict-free world |
National Endowment for the Arts “ArtWorks” Podcast
Kiran talks about creating community through stories, the ability of story to transcend petty politics and connect us to what is essential. His own story is pretty interesting: born in England to parents who had been expelled from their home in Uganda and grandparents who were part of the liberation movement in India. He understands first-hand the ability of stories to translate cultures to each other. We also hear a story from NEA National Heritage Fellow Sheila Kay Adams who can spin a tale with the best of them. Rotary Voices: Why I am a peacebuilder and how you can be one too. Rotary Peace Fellow reflects on Afghanistan, helping others in crisis Smithsonian Festival Blog: Lessons in Storytelling, Bridging Cultures and Communities by Angelica Aboulhosn A! Magazine for the Arts A decade of Love at ISC |
HARNESSING THE POWER OF STORYTELLING IN APPALACHIA
A piece from "NEH for All" highlighting ISC's and Kiran's work in the Young Appalachian Story Summit.
A piece from "NEH for All" highlighting ISC's and Kiran's work in the Young Appalachian Story Summit.
STORYTELLING & COMMUNITY IN JONESBOROUGH, TENNESSEE
An op-ed for Main Street America. |
INTERNATIONAL SPEAKER OFFERS IDEAS TO HELP RESIDENTS
A public workshop invite from the Charleston County Public Library in South Carolina following the tragedy at Mother Emanuel AME Church. |
STORYTELLING PROGRAMS FOR AT-RISK YOUTH RESONATE WITH SIRAH
An interview by Lynn Richardson for the Johnson City News & Neighbor. |
Publications
Kiran is an excellent communicator and people-person which makes him highly suited to tasks involving facilitation and mediation. He is able to relate to people on many different levels and is genuinely passionate about his work which contributes to his success in dealing with sensitive and often contentious topics.” -Dr. R. Mason, Director of the International Centre for Cultural and Heritage Studies; Newcastle University