This study engages with a participatory oral history project that
explores 3 themes. First, Cambodian participants included in the
study will narrate from their perspectives how the evolution of
social engagement and identity among African American and
Cambodian refugee communities residing in historically Black
neighborhoods of Oakland, California, informed their English
language development. Second, it is the author’s intent through
data collected for the study to explore participants’ acquisition of
English language as a mode of resistance and empowerment for
Cambodian refugees in the US. Finally, in detailing the power of
oral history to bridge generational, linguistic, and global divides,
the participants in this study express the importance of learning
English as an additional language for the promotion and preservation of Cambodian history and tradition. The themes of this
study will be framed by the theories of microagression and critical race theory in relation to English language construction.