Not Really Strangers – Détails, épisodes et analyse

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Not Really Strangers

Not Really Strangers

USA for UNHCR

Business & Entrepreneuriat
Société & Culture
Actualités

Fréquence : 1 épisode/20j. Total Éps: 16

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Discover just how connected the refugee experience is to our everyday lives, and to the social issues that matter to us most. Join host Suzanne Ehlers, Executive Director and CEO of USA for UNHCR, the UN refugee agency, as she and her eclectic guests share personal stories and frontline insights. We’re more connected than we may think.

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Why the Refugee Crisis Isn’t Just a Government Problem with Colin Browne

Saison 1 · Épisode 4

jeudi 6 novembre 2025Durée 27:29

In this episode of Not Really Strangers, Suzanne sits down with Colin Browne—newly appointed board member at USA for UNHCR. His experience as a former global supply chain leader, and someone who’s lived in nine countries, offers a rare behind-the-scenes perspective on displacement. From a powerful refugee simulation in Hong Kong to the role businesses can play in humanitarian crises, Colin shares what connects us, why the private sector matters, and why he believes we’re not really strangers.


Topics Discussed:

  • How a 24-hour immersive simulation reshaped Colin’s understanding of the refugee experience
  • The surprising ways global supply chains intersect with displacement crises
  • Why most refugees are hosted in low- and middle-income countries, not wealthy nations—and what that means for humanitarian response
  • The critical role the private sector can play alongside governments in addressing global crises
  • Why the phrase Not Really Strangers reflects our shared humanity, no matter our backgrounds


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Health, Migration and the Power of Imagination with Thoại Ngô

Saison 1 · Épisode 3

jeudi 16 octobre 2025Durée 37:43

In this episode, host Suzanne Ehlers speaks with Dr. Thoại Ngô, an internationally recognized scientist and the Chair of the Heilbrunn Department of Population and Family Health at Columbia University. Thoại’s work lies at the intersection of global public health, gender equality and sustainable development, and he has dedicated his career to improving health and social outcomes for young people and marginalized communities around the world. From founding the GIRL Center at the Population Council to launching the Adolescent Data Hub, his leadership has shaped how the global community understands and responds to issues like adolescent well-being, climate justice and migration. In this conversation, Thoại shares both his professional expertise and his personal story as a former refugee from Vietnam, reminding us how resilience, imagination and community can dissolve distance and build a more just future.


Topics Discussed:

  • Thoại’s personal story of being displaced from Vietnam at age 12 and resettling in the U.S.
  • How home can be both a place and a web of relationships, stretching between New York City and Vietnam
  • The intersection of public health, forced displacement and climate migration
  • Why migration should be seen as a solution, not a threat, to global challenges like aging populations and labor shortages
  • Faith communities and the surprising role they’ve played in refugee resettlement and welcome
  • Thoại’s reflections on “stranger” as an opportunity for curiosity, connection, and discovery


Episode Resources:


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How Lien Ta Used Her Restaurants to Turn Strangers into Community

Saison 1 · Épisode 2

jeudi 2 octobre 2025Durée 55:41

I’m deeply honored to have restaurateur and writer Lien Ta on the show today. I found her Instagram during the pandemic and I’m grateful to say that she’s now a friend. In our conversation, Lien shares what it means to her to belong and how we build spaces that help others feel they belong too. We talk about her parents' harrowing journey as Vietnamese refugees and how this has impacted their family through generations. Lien shares how connection emerged as her most essential value, one that shaped her life in hospitality and continues to guide her next chapter. We also explore what it means to be a “stranger,” and how the simple act of asking a question or noticing a detail can bridge worlds. This conversation highlights grief and generosity, family legacy and found community, plus the courage it takes to see and be seen and the powerful trust that grows in between.

Topics:

  • Lien’s childhood dreams of cozy sitcom bedrooms and how this helped her create a sanctuary for herself in Silver Lake, believing that home can be something we construct for ourselves, often for the first time.
  • Lien’s family’s escape from Vietnam, fleeing by boat, then their time in Thai refugee camps, and their eventual resettlement in the U.S.
  • How, through therapy, Lien rediscovered her core values after burnout during the pandemic and why connection now anchors her relationships, career, and creativity.
  • From All Day Baby to Here’s Looking At You, Lien opens up about the intentional ways she designed her spaces to be spaces where strangers become community.
  • What the hospitality and restaurant industries have taught Lien about trust, grief, and generosity – especially after loss. 


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Kat Graham on Family, Resilience, and Advocating for Refugees

Saison 1 · Épisode 1

jeudi 18 septembre 2025Durée 53:58

In this episode, I talk with actor, musician, and UNHCR Goodwill Ambassador Kat Graham about her deep personal connection to refugees. Kat shares both sides of her family’s stories of displacement from Liberia to the Holocaust, the moments that have stayed with her from visiting camps around the world, and why she believes small acts of giving can create lasting change. We also discuss the power of education, art, and shared humanity and why refugees are never really strangers.

Topics discussed:

  • Kat’s personal connection to refugee issues through her own family’s history from a Liberian father and a Jewish mother whose family survived the Holocaust
  • The resilience and generosity that Kat has witnessed in refugee camps in Syria, Jordan, Sudan and more and how it puts the abundance in refugee camps on display 
  • Why education and creative expression are vital for displaced children and how this was really shown to Kat via a school visit in the middle east 
  • The story behind Kat performing Peace Talks at the Nansen Refugee Awards and the moments that stood out to Kat the most 


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Introducing: Not Really Strangers

jeudi 31 juillet 2025Durée 01:20

Discover just how connected the refugee experience is to our everyday lives, and to the social issues that matter to us most. Join host Suzanne Ehlers, Executive Director and CEO of USA for UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency, as she and her eclectic guests share personal stories and frontline insights. We’re more connected than we may think.

The podcast will be launching this fall, subscribe now to never miss an update!


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Dignity in Livelihoods: The Power of Economic Inclusion with Jina Krause-Vilmar

Saison 1 · Épisode 5

jeudi 13 novembre 2025Durée 37:15

What if the key to a thriving workforce and stronger communities lies in removing barriers that keep refugees from contributing to the full extent of their abilities and gifts? In this episode, Suzanne speaks with Jina Krause-Vilmar about what economic inclusion really means for immigrants and refugees. Jina shares her personal story as the daughter of Indian immigrants raised by a fiercely determined single mother, some of the lessons she learned throughout her childhood, and what happens when we deny people the right to work. They also talk about workforce barriers; policy changes that can make it easier for refugees to resume their careers in their new homes; and the power of livelihood to strengthen identity, dignity, and belonging. Jina’s insights are both practical and deeply human, and will encourage you to reflect on the universal human desire to feel useful. This episode is about resilience, but even more, it’s about recognizing the profound level of skill and talent that refugees bring to every community they join. 


Topics:

  • How Jina’s upbringing shaped her views on home, strength, and belonging
  • The vital link between livelihood, dignity, and identity for refugees
  • Why refugee women face unique challenges and lead bold transformations
  • Common myths about refugee skills and the systemic barriers they face
  • How workforce inclusion benefits not just individuals, but entire economies


Episode Resources:


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Home in Many Places: Thao Nguyen on Heritage, Art and Connection

Saison 1 · Épisode 6

jeudi 4 décembre 2025Durée 54:42

Musician Thao Nguyen joins Suzanne this week on Not Really Strangers for a heartfelt conversation about family, heritage and the power of art to process identity and loss. Thao shares her parents’ remarkable journey as Vietnamese refugees, the emotional experience of returning to Vietnam with her mother decades later, and how her albums A Man Alive and Temple became tools for self-discovery and liberation. They explore what it means to call multiple places “home,” the role of language as a personal and artistic currency, and the unique way live performance connects strangers in moments of shared humanity. This episode is a moving reflection on belonging, bearing witness and the stories that shape who we are.


Topics

  • Thao’s childhood in Falls Church, Virginia, growing up in a close-knit Vietnamese refugee community
  • Thao’s parents’ story of leaving Vietnam, meeting in a refugee camp, and building a new life in the U.S
  • How returning to Vietnam with her mother reshaped her understanding of home, loss, and heritage
  • The role of music, specifically her albums A Man Alive and Temple, in helping Thao process identity, grief, and self-love
  • Why words and language became Thao’s most valuable tools for expression
  • How performance creates space for authentic connection between strangers


Episode Resources


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Human Rights and Democracy in the Age of AI: A Conversation with Malika Saada Saar

Saison 1 · Épisode 7

jeudi 11 décembre 2025Durée 49:23

In the latest episode of Not Really Strangers, Suzanne sits down with Malika Saada Saar, a human rights lawyer and tech policy strategist whose career spans grassroots advocacy to leadership roles at Google and YouTube. Malika shares how she fought to end the shackling of incarcerated women in childbirth, founded Rights4Girls to combat child trafficking and worked to embed human rights into global tech platforms. Together, they explore the intersections of displacement, vulnerability and innovation and why designing from the margins creates stronger, more just systems. Malika also reflects on collapsing the concept of “stranger” and reimagining belonging in our communities and technologies.


Topics:

  • Malika’s path from community organizing to human rights law and why she chose that framework over civil rights
  • Her groundbreaking advocacy to end the shackling of incarcerated pregnant women
  • The intersection of displacement, trafficking and technology — and how refugees face heightened vulnerabilities
  • Lessons from embedding human rights into Google and YouTube’s policies, products and partnerships
  • Collapsing the concept of “stranger” and reimagining community, belonging and design from the margins


Episode Resources:




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Building Home, Far From Home: The Power of Education, Family and Refugee Voices with Nabin Dhimal

Saison 1 · Épisode 8

mardi 16 décembre 2025Durée 34:53

Today Nabin Dhimal joins Suzanne for the final episode of season one of Not Really Strangers Suzanne originally met Nabin in Geneva at the Global Refugee Forum, where he helped her feel at home and confident in her then-new position as the executive director and CEO of USA for UNHCR. Nabin was born in a refugee camp in Nepal after his family was displaced from Bhutan, and he later resettled in Portland, Oregon. Today, he’s a master’s student at Georgetown University, an advocate for refugees, and a community builder. In this conversation, he and Suzanne explore what it means to call a place “home,” how food and education shape identity and why being a “stranger” is so often just a matter of being misunderstood. Nabin’s story invites us to see how deeply intertwined our lives really are and how, by listening more closely, we start to realize we’re not really strangers after all.


Topics Discussed:

  • Nabin’s journey from Bhutan to a refugee camp in Nepal, and eventually to Portland, Oregon
  • The emotional toll and hope embedded in the refugee resettlement process
  • The meaning of home, belonging and identity as a Bhutanese-Nepali refugee
  • How education, vulnerability and storytelling helped Nabin build community in the U.S.
  • The role of food and tradition in maintaining cultural roots across continents


Episode Resources:


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What Actor Kristin Davis Witnessed as Families Flee Sudan’s Brutal War

Saison 2 · Épisode 1

jeudi 16 avril 2026Durée 31:20

In the inaugural episode of season two of Not Really Strangers, host Suzanne Ehlers speaks with Kristin Davis, internationally acclaimed actress and UNHCR Goodwill Ambassador, fresh off a visit to South Sudan to see the organization’s response to the deepening emergency caused by the war in Sudan. Kristin shares how an encounter at a Hollywood party first connected her to UNHCR, and what she witnessed at the Joda border crossing and Renk transit center: families arriving with nothing, safe spaces shuttered due to funding cuts and the gut-wrenching reality of women and children receiving only a high-calorie biscuit as their first meal after harrowing journeys through a war zone. But alongside the devastation, she also found extraordinary resilience in a group of teenage girls reclaiming their voices at a program called Girl Shine, and in a woman named Jacqueline who, after being displaced three times, opened a tea shop and hired her first employee. Kristin and Suzanne reflect on the difference between humanitarianism and politics, what it means to truly see another person and why — no matter where in the world Kristin has traveled — she has never once felt like a stranger.

Topics Discussed:

  • How a chance encounter at a Hollywood party connected Kristin to UNHCR and set the course of her advocacy work
  • What Kristin witnessed at the Joda border crossing and Renk Transit Center — and what was devastatingly missing
  • The human impact of funding cuts: safe spaces closed and hot meals gone for families arriving with almost nothing after violent and dangerous journeys
  • Girl Shine: the safe space near Juba where displaced teenage girls are learning to use their voices, understand their rights and imagine different futures
  • Jacqueline's tea shop: the story of a woman displaced three times who built a small business from scratch and hired her first employee
  • Why Kristin believes humanitarianism must be separated from politics and why it's everyone's responsibility
  • What "stranger" means to someone who has never felt like one and the shared humanity that makes that possible

Episode Resources: 


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