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#StaceyTaughtUs: Record your story for the Disability Visibility Project

A photo of Stacey Park Milbern, a mixed race Korean and white queer person, holding a paper sign that reads “Cherished.” The photo is stylistically torn at the edges with cursive text appearing across the bottom, “Stacey Milbern.”
A photo of Stacey Park Milbern, a mixed race Korean and white queer person, holding a paper sign that reads “Cherished.” The photo is stylistically torn at the edges with cursive text appearing across the bottom, “Stacey Milbern.”

Stacey Park Milbern (1987-2020) recorded her oral history twice for the Disability Visibility Project, a community partnership with StoryCorps. As communities celebrate Stacey’s life and work, I invite you to share what Stacey meant to you. By adding your story about Stacey, it’ll become part of larger online archives for the DVP and StoryCorps.

You are welcome to do this anytime and free to record on your own or with a friend. There are two ways to participate:

StoryCorps Connect, a way for two people to remotely record together.

StoryCorps App, a way for people to record together from a mobile device.

A few things to keep in mind:

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