Miry’s List in the Press
Click on each photo for link to full article/video. For press inquiries contact us at press@miryslist.org or via the Contact Page.
Activities include family discussions on welcoming newcomers, writing welcome letters, family portrait sessions and art workshops
The Annenberg Community Beach House is set to host a “Families Welcome” event in partnership with regional nonprofit Miry’s List. This free event aims to foster connections and extend a warm welcome to refugee families newly settled in the LA County region or any newcomers to the community.
Locals looking to spread a little neighborly love need look no further than Santa Monica's Annenberg Community Beach House. Come April 14, the beachfront spot is playing host to "Families Welcome," a free public event organized to extend a warm embrace to refugee families and fresh faces in Los Angeles County. The shindig, chalk-full of all-ages activities, aims to educate participants on how to best welcome those new to our sprawling metropolis.
In late April, Albina Roman and her daughter landed at Los Angeles International Airport and saw the rest of their family for the first time in nearly three years.
Many of us are in the habit of making end-of-year donations as part of our holiday season of giving. It’s an opportunity to see what we’ve managed to squirrel away during the year and decide what we’re comfortable giving. That comfort level is different for everyone. What I hope isn’t so different is a desire to choose wisely, so that deserving organizations that make an impact get needed support. This year I’ve chosen a couple of repeats that I’ve been shouting out for several years because they have proven that they do the work of their respective missions really well.
How An Online Platform Helps Those In Need
On November 2nd, Center Theatre Group and The Music Center welcomed Little Amal, a 12-foot puppet of a Syrian refugee girl, on the Jerry Moss Plaza, on her journey that has spanned more than 35 cities with over one thousand artists and arts organizations.
In 2016, Miry Whitehill learned about a Syrian family in her Eagle Rock neighborhood who, since they had escaped the war and landed in the US three months prior, had been living in a sparsely furnished apartment with almost none of the basic necessities to set up a home—no towels, cleaning supplies or even diapers for their baby.
What began as a call out to Miry’s friend network to meet this family’s needs quickly ramped up to Miry’s List, which crowdsources support for refugee families resettling in the US.
Ambassador Thomas-Greenfield will also deliver keynote remarks welcoming 30 new U.S. citizens at a naturalization ceremony hosted by the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services. She will meet with staff and beneficiaries of Miry’s List, a nonprofit organization that helps welcome and resettle refugees arriving in the United States from countries including Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran, Syria, and Ukraine.
The youth mental health crisis has escalated into a nationwide epidemic, but a new research survey reveals its alarmingly disproportionate toll on queer youth. The study was published during Pride by Born This Way Foundation – a not-for-profit organization co-founded by Lady Gaga (Stefani Germanotta) and her mother Cynthia Germanotta – in collaboration with Benenson Strategy Group – a New York-based strategic research consultancy.
Organizations throughout the city and county of Los Angeles have plenty of experience aiding displaced or newly arrived refugees and immigrants. Often a family’s first point of contact and constant support system, these groups provide such services as legal aid, vocational training, financial aid and housing assistance.
These organizations are always looking for help from the public to continue providing services. Here is a list of Los Angeles and California-based organizations that need donations and volunteers.
This week, it’s a true honor to welcome the founder and executive director of Miry’s List, Miry Whitehill, to Mothering Heights. She’s Miry, from the List! Miry’s List is a nonprofit organization made up of neighbors and friends dedicated to welcoming new arrival refugee families into our community through inspired crowdsourcing solutions. And Miry is an unendingly inspiring leader and creator and friend.
Miry and Leonora discuss the origins of Miry’s List, how to find joy when your job requires engagement with tough stories, how food connects us, and how soon Miry expects to finally be mad at Leonora (pretty soon, actually).
Since 1980, the U.S. has welcomed over 3.1 Million refugees displaced by war and violence. Over the past six years, Miry’s List has been at the center of it all. LX News introduces us to the team helping refugees resettle across the country, including a father and son who sacrificed so much to make it to America.
Miry’s List has teamed up with renowned Chef Ori Menashe, chef at three of LA’s hottest restaurants, to create a special Holiday Spice Kit featuring a one-of-a-kind spice blend and three more signature spice varieties. All proceeds from the Spice Kit will support new arrival refugee families in 24 states across the U.S.
It all started with a Jumparoo.
Earlier this year, Miry Whitehill met a family of Afghan refugees who had just fled their homes following the US withdrawal from Afghanistan.
Sacramento is one of the largest hubs in the United States for refugees fleeing two of the world's largest conflict zones: Afghanistan and Ukraine. Sonseeahray spoke with Zabehullah Tajik, a Family Services Manager at the refugee resettlement charity Miry's List.
In a world where so much is happening, it can be challenging to figure out how we talk to our kids about it. To learn more about how parents, guardians, and educators can start conversations with children about what is going on in the world around them in a gentle, loving, and affirming way, Born This Way Foundation’s Executive Director Maya Enista-Smith talked to community leaders Miry Whitehill and Jennifer Jackson.
Miry’s List, a nonprofit based in Eagle Rock, aims to bring comfort and safety to newly arrived refugee families by providing them with community support and supplies while they settle into the U.S. Founder and executive director Miry Whitehill said she began working with refugees in 2016, after a friend introduced her to a Syrian family who came to the U.S. three weeks prior.
When it comes to talking to kids about difficult topics from the news, parents’ first instincts are often to protect their little ones from complicated concepts like refugee resettlement. But children are much more emotionally intelligent than we realize—and giving them age-appropriate information can lead to a chance for them to activate their empathy in new and important ways.
Children’s picture book Our World Is a Family: Our Community Can Change the World (Sourcebooks Explore), written by Miry Whitehill and Jennifer Jackson and illustrated by Nomar Perez, tackles a timely subject: refugees. The book, published March 8, explores why people become refugees and how children can help refugees newly arrived in their communities.
News of Russia’s war on Ukraine and Vladimir Putin’s murderous devastation reaches even the smallest ears around the globe. How should parents ― especially deployable parents in the military ― talk with children about war in Ukraine and Russia?
In light of the refugee crisis in Ukraine, one man’s plan to run 26.2 miles through LA just became all the more important.
At least a million children are among the refugees who have left Ukraine so far since Russia first attacked two weeks ago. Miry's List, a nonprofit in Los Angeles that helps refugees from around the world settle in the United States, is already preparing for the eventual arrival of Ukrainian families.
How do we talk with our children, nieces, nephews, grandkids and other young people about refugee resettlement and welcoming new arrivals?
Kiki Nagy, a volunteer with Miry's List, opened her home to an Afghan refugee family so they could experience their first Thanksgiving in the United States.
Earlier this year, Miry Whitehill met a family of Afghan refugees who had just fled their homes following the US withdrawal from Afghanistan.
Refugees start new life in America after fleeing Afghanistan
More than 55,000 Afghans have migrated to the U.S. since August, according to the Department of Homeland Security.
California to take in more than 5,200 Afghan evacuees, more than any other US state.
Thousands of refugees from Afghanistan are starting over in small towns and big cities throughout the U.S.
‘I’m glad they are feeling a little bit of peace’: Local couple opens home to Afghan refugees
One to two times a week, Afghan refugee Wahidullah Asghary and his wife take their four kids to a local park. “An enjoyable time with them, you know, riding bike, just playing around with them together,” he said.
“Even the most right-leaning isolationists” are coming forward to help those fleeing Afghanistan, a pastor said. A mass mobilization is underway.
The Super Bowl LVI will be held here in Los Angeles in February as a huge win to our city. What’s more, behind the scenes is an organization called Legacy 56 that is turning the big game into a support system for social good as they fund LA-based nonprofit organizations.
President Biden said on Tuesday that the U.S. and its partners have airlifted 100,000 Afghans out of their country, as American troops have left the 20-year war there. Some of those refugees are now in California, which Governor Gavin Newsom called a “state of refuge.”
As you witness the scenes of desperation as Afghans try to secure evacuation flights out of the Kabul international airport, you might be wondering how you can help.
How do you resettle in LA after leaving turmoil and chaos in Afghanistan behind? Some Afghans who managed to evacuate are building new lives in California with help from LA aid groups.
A few years ago I was introduced to Miry’s List – an LA-based non-profit that helps welcome refugees and their families by getting them set up with a home, basic needs, a job, and introducing them to a community
Since the Taliban take-over, thousands of Afghans have tried to escape, including Asghary’s elderly parents.
As Afghanistan descends into chaos with the pullout of U.S. troops and the resurgence of the Taliban, many people are rightly worried about the fate of LGBTQ+ Afghans. But we can also take action. Numerous organizations are helping LGBTQ+ folks who remain in the country and those seeking to flee, and they can use your monetary support. Here are some, with links to contact them.
When the White House announced earlier this month that it would increase the number of refugees granted admission into the United States this fiscal year by four times the previous target, to 62,500 people, reversing course from President Biden’s initial plan, immigrant advocates applauded the decision. Yet groups working to help resettle refugees are now facing another new challenge: finding housing for new migrants.
With the coronavirus wreaking havoc on Los Angeles, those who are most vulnerable even in the most typical of years — unhoused neighbors, food-insecure families, recent refugees — are in dire need of extra support.
Thinking about year-end donations at Good Food, the tendency is to veer toward hospitality workers and hunger. But there is one group that is especially important not to forget in 2020 — recent refugees who made it into the U.S. despite extraordinarily diminished immigration policy. Miry’s List is the brainchild of Miry Whitehill. Hers was a simple and effective idea to get resources directly to new arrivals.
Dropped into the mayhem of Los Angeles, many newly arrived refugees struggle to find their way. With a love- your-neighbor ethos, Miry Whitehill is changing that, one community meal at a time.
A holiday celebration beckons us to learn from the past and take action today.
This week, we're joined by Miry Whitehill, the founder of Miry’s List, who stops by to tell us how she has helped settle refugee families from Iran, Syria, Afghanistan and elsewhere. She also explains how doing a mitzvah will make you feel better, and that instead of living by the philosophy of “fake it 'til you make it," you need to “be it 'til you are it!"
Sharing culture through food is an act of love that requires no words. 💕 This refugee family says they have a lot to be thankful for this year.
Five months after the birth of her second child, Miry Whitehill heard about a Syrian refugee family who had just moved to Los Angeles and wanted a bouncy jumper.
The SLNC is the 14th Los Angeles neighborhood council to join the “Welcome Neighbor” program, coordinated by Miry’s List, which was founded in 2017 by Eagle Rock resident Miry Whitehill.
As the Founder and Executive Director of Miry's List, Miry Whitehill and her team have helped over 350 refugee families settle into their new lives in America and provided them with the resources, and support they need to thrive. Miry's journey of purpose and connection is about the bonds we all share as human beings, and the simple yet powerful difference we can make with a single act of kindness.
Hopefully, you can stand the HEAT of this season of Popaganda—because this week, host Carmen Rios is taking you into the kitchen, where refugee chefs and their neighbors are breaking bread and building community.
‘This is what the purpose of the internet is all about.’
Food has the power to connect people. The New Arrivals Supper Club is using the power of food to build bridges.
At this L.A. supper club, refugees share food and memories of the lives they left behind.
Beneath the dimmed lights of a downtown L.A. restaurant, Naseema Kashefi watched quietly as a hungry crowd fawned over the crunch of her golden samosas. Servers passed her Afghan specialty on ceramic trays while her newfound fans groaned with each bite.
Syrian refugees Maisa Kanjo and her husband Abdul prepared some of their family’s favorite recipes for about 60 guests at Spread Mediterranean Kitchen in downtown Los Angeles.
Laura McHolm, co-founder and marketing director at NorthStar Moving, helps a number of charities in a variety of ways
Hello Neighbor highlights and wishes to shine a bright light on those who are invested in refugee and immigrant communities through their work, activism and advocacy.
The harsh reality behind the refugee crisis in Syria with Phillip DeFranco, featuring one of our very own Miry’s List families.
Miry's List has a monthly event where one resettled family hosts a ticketed dinner and takes home the majority of the proceeds.
What do families resettling in America as refugees need most? Good neighbors. Learn one mom's journey into the refugee resettlement system in America and how she created a scalable platform that over 75,000 American people have used to welcome their resettling neighbors.
Saul Gonzalez reports: Even as refugee numbers are cut, some believe this creates opportunities for refugee agencies to think more creatively about how to help newcomers to the US. “We want to make it easy and enjoyable for people to get involved to directly help their resettling neighbors,” said Miry Whitehill, a former marketing and advertising executive who founded Miry’s List, a refugee aid group, in 2016.
What started as a simple Facebook post, evolved into a non-profit organization helping refugee families through their toughest times. Thank you Miry's List.
David Chang, founder of Momofuku, and Evan Kleiman, host of KCRW's Good Food, discuss growing up as a food lover in Los Angeles. Hear them talk about local LA organizations that inspire at 01:24:16.
For the season finale of That Moment, we’re talking about food—our relationship to it, how we find it, and what it provides for us beyond just sustenance. Host Doree Shafrir talks to Miry Whitehill, who started Miry's List, an organization that pairs new arrivals in the US with the resources they need. Miry started the organization after a chance meeting with a Syrian mother. She quickly discovered that food doesn't just bridge cultures—it can help families get back on their feet.
Refugees usually arrive in a new country with little to their names, isolated because their language and customs are different. But some refugees who arrive in Los Angeles benefit from Miry’s List, an organization founded by Miry Whitehill, an Eagle Rock mother of two who knew that her local community could provide direct help to people who are strangers in a new land.
Miry Whitehill did not plan for a visit to the Los Angeles apartment of an immigrant family to spark the birth of a non-profit organization helping new arrival families feel safe upon resettlement in LA.
A San Fernando Valley coalition of more than a dozen organizations came together as a way to support immigrant families.
As the border crisis continues with refugees hoping to apply for asylum, another group of refugees from very different background gathered in downtown LA to break bread together. John Cádiz Klemack reports for the NBC4 News.
Have you ever wondered how you could help the Refugee families that come to the United States? In this conversation with Miry Whitehill we discuss the three chronological pillars they practice to support each families’ first steps off the plane as they seek a safe haven from violence and persecution.
This is going to make The Office fans so happy. Jenna Fischer designed a Finer Things Club logo for charity, which you can have printed on specific items for really reasonable prices. The sales go to Miry's List, a non-profit organization providing refugee families seeking safe haven in the United States with anything they may need to survive, like diapers, toiletries, groceries, or meals.
“Why didn’t I think of that?” I wondered when I read the March 26 Metro article “American ‘mama bear’ helps refugees,” about a brilliant way to get supplies to refugees who arrive in this country with nothing. Then, as a former Peace Corps volunteer in Afghanistan, I thought, “Great, but where are our elected leaders?” Good-hearted Americans have always played a role in welcoming refugees in our communities, but they cannot replace the work of U.S. refugee resettlement agencies hit hard by recent Trump administration cutbacks.
A year and a half ago, Miry Whitehill got a call from a neighborhood friend who had met a family of recently arrived refugees from Syria. They had a 7-month old and were in search of a jumperoo, a doorway harness that a baby can bounce in.
Renee meets Maysaa and Abdul Kanjo, Syrian refugees who fled with their four children after escalating violence in their hometown.
We hear from Miry Whitehill, CEO and Founder of Miry's List, on how she used crowdsourcing and social media to provide supplies to 250 refugee families resettling in Southern California.
Renee attends a dinner in Los Angeles where Syrian refugees share their culture through food and music with strangers, who become fast friends.
Miry Whitehill never set out to start a nonprofit organization . Or a monthly supper club featuring Middle Eastern cuisine, hosted by immigrant families—which is how most people find out about the organization, Miry’s List. The Los Angeles-based former marketing exec and stay-at-home mom got pulled into this whole thing a year and a half ago, when a friend called.
An accurate indication of having a good neighbor is sharing; they share tools, holiday cards, and favors, but the single most appreciable thing one can share with another is food.
2018 has begun, and pundits and opinion makers are predicting that 2018 will be the “Year of the Woman”. That of course, is yet to be seen. And we have heard this prediction before. Yet it is hard to deny that women have made enormous progress in the past few years.
More than any other US holiday, Thanksgiving celebrates our history as a nation of immigrants. And for those who have recently arrived to the States, it’s an occasion to remember their journey from one land to another. Miry’s List is an LA-based organization that welcomes families making such journeys. Founder Miry Whitehill and Rabia Ahmadi share on the scope of the organization’s impact.
Mom of two helps 250 families in the past 15 months. Elsa Ramon reports.
What becomes of a refugee when they’re no longer a refugee? We spend so much time talking about migration caps and vetting that we seem to ignore all the Americans living amongst us, trying to acclimate to their new country after the harrowing journey from their former homeland. Would it surprise you to learn that they start their new life in substantial debt? Or that they don’t have many of the basic items they need to live, let alone feel like a human being? Wouldn’t you like to know how you can help?
“I have absolutely no background in this. I’ve never worked in politics or the nonprofit sector. I spent ten years in digital marketing before leaving to raise my two kids. But Miry’s Listdidn’t come from a place of wanting to change the system of refugee resettlement. It came from me, as a mom, seeing a baby without a crib mattress and wanting to help.”
How does a Syrian refugee start their life over in the U.S.? Try hosting a dinner for an entire neighborhood. That's exactly what the New Arrival Supper Club is all about. Every month, a new refugee family will cook food for an entire neighborhood. The club will sell tickets to the event, and 90% of the proceeds will go to the family that cooked.
When Babak Esmaeily and his 11-year-old son Behniya arrived in Turlock, CA in January 2017, they were seeking a fresh start. But this wasn’t just any move. As refugees from Iran, where Babak and his family were persecuted for promoting secular education, the father and son have had to create a whole new life—in a whole new language. Nothing about being a refugee is normal, but with their new routine slowly taking shape, Babak and Behniya are learning together how to be a family, and how to move forward.
"You don't need to share a language...you can share a meal." Syrian refugees are breaking bread––and breaking down barriers in California.
Started in 2016 by Miry Whitehill-Ben Atar, Miry's List is primarily a social media-based group that provides assistance to refugee families coming to Southern California with donations int he way of furniture, clothing and other vital necessities.
When Miry Whitehill-Ben Atar visited a Syrian family newly arrived to Los Angeles about a year ago, with a friend who knew them through church, the 31-year-old mother of two noticed that the refugee family shared much in common with hers: The Syrian woman was her age with a baby her son’s age. But she also noticed a striking difference in their home — the apartment was almost empty.
City of LA recently honored Miry's List founder, Miry Whitehill for her outstanding work! Miry's List is a non-profit that helps refugee families through fundraisers, crowdsourcing and social media.
Bashir Kashefi, his pregnant wife and their young daughter are celebrating their first Independence Day in the United States after arriving as refugees in March from Afghanistan. While they’re excited, they’re concerned that other refugees won’t be so lucky.
Basic supplies like shampoo, soap or diapers may be taken for granted by many families, but for refugees who arrive in the United States with nothing they are difficult to obtain.
“My friend asked me for a Jumperoo,” Miry Whitehill says. “That’s where it all started.” Whitehill, the founder of a nonprofit organization that crowdsources items for refugees, didn’t set out to start an organization like Miry’s List, but then again, she did have a Jumperoo on hand.
On a recent Thursday night, Eagle Rock resident Miry Whitehill-Ben Atar was sitting in a Riverside County apartment, streaming a conversation on Facebook Live.
Hey all, here’s a quick blog post to promote a very amazing fundraiser, called Ana Huna, for Miry’s list – a non-profit that helps refugee families in the states get set up with a community, furniture, and all their essentials. It’s this Sunday in Eagle Rock (all info here) and I’ve purchased two sets of tickets to giveaway (one set here on the blog, and one set on Instagram).
Miry's List is a first of its kind refugee crowdfunding platform connecting new arrivals with neighbors willing to help. Patrice Howard reports form Los Angeles for Channel News Asia.
Want to help refugee families who have just arrived in America? Check out Miry’s List, which provides new arrivals to southern California with basic needs.
Miry Whitehill-Ben Atar is a standout stay-at-home mom who is making a difference in the lives of recent refugees to the U.S., particularly in the lives of their young children. From the first moment we connected to assist her non-profit called Miry’s List, Miry Whitehill-Ben Atar has been moving us with her incredible effort
Over the past 15 years, California has taken in more than 100,000 refugees escaping violence and poverty in their home countries. Danielle Nottingham reports on how non-profits across the state are trying to meet refugees' needs as they begin their new lives in the U.S.
Maybe it was the fact that the baby was the same age as one of her own sons. Maybe it was the familiar look of exhaustion on the mother's face. Whatever it was, Miry Whitehill felt an immediate connection to this family she'd never met, even though she couldn't speak to them in their native language, Arabic.
While preparing the New Arrival Supper Club’s first meal, 36-year-old Najwa didn’t sleep for two nights. Instead she and her husband disappeared into their apartment kitchen after putting their three kids to bed, whipping hummus and hand forming enough football-shaped kibbe to feed 42 strangers. The effort was worth it. The money raised from the $75-per-person event was used to purchase necessities for the family, refugees who had arrived in L.A. from the Syrian city of Homs six months ago.
Inspired by the television images of areas like war-torn Syria, Eagle Rock mother Miry Whitehill-Ben Atar took action to collect donations for a Syrian refugee family in Los Angeles. John Cádiz Klemack reports for the NBC4 News at 5 p.m. on Monday, April 24, 2017.
If the events of this particularly bleak week have left you wondering how you can help, you’re not alone. This is why we find it incredibly important to bring attention to Miry’s List, an organization that’s doing life-changing work to help Syrian refugees. Read more >
This supper club gives Syrians refugees an opportunity to break bread with their new American neighbors and share their food and culture.
The Wakili family immigrated to the U.S. in January. They were refugees from their home country of Afghanistan. After spending their first night in America at a motel, the family of seven moved into a one-bedroom apartment … with no beds. That’s where Miry’s List came in.
When Miry Whitehill visited the home of refugees who had arrived from Syria only weeks before, she was shocked by what she saw. The family’s apartment was nearly empty and lacked some basic essentials, like a refrigerator and a crib. “This woman had a baby the same age as mine and was not able to put her baby down because she didn’t have anywhere to put him,” said Whitehill. That’s when Whitehill decided that something needed to be done. Read more >
Constance Wu is known for her portrayal of Jessica Huang on ABC's Fresh Off the Boat — but we are always keeping our eye on the IRL Constance, too. Read more >
Valentine's Day isn't typically the holiday that brings strangers together, but that's what happened for 40 people in Los Angeles this past Feb. 14.
Millions of Americans will be going out to dinner on February 14. At best, most will leave with a champagne buzz, a belly full of oysters, and an empty wallet. But a lucky 25 people will spend their night helping out a family of new refugees by grazing on a massive spread of homecooked Syrian dishes in an Atwater Village backyard. Read more >
For the past three years, my wife and I have been working with organizations involved with refugee resettlement efforts. We both have immigrant parents, so we’ve heard stories about resettling in a country to make a better life for your children, but being forced to leave a country is very different.