Skip to main content

Aisian-Southeast Asian Cultural Resources

Amherst H. Wilder Foundation

451 Lexington Pkwy N.

St. Paul, MN. 55104

Ph: 651-280-2000

Service: Adult mental health, children’s mental health, clinical services, crisis intervention, family services, and human services. Provides both adults and youth with mental health assessments, individual, group and family counseling, case management, and school-based youth services.

Payment: Private or public insurance, sliding fee.

Intake Procedure: Call. Self or agency referrals: Potential clients can speak with bi-cultural workers from their language group.

 

Association for the Advancement of Hmong women in Minnesota, Inc.

4403 E. Lake St.

Minneaoplis, MN. 55406 C

Executive Director: Ly Vang,

Email: aahwminfo@aahwm.org

Ph: 612-724-3066

The mission of the Association for the Advancement of Hmong Women in Minnesota is to strengthen Hmong families through education and leadership development for women, girls, and families.

Services: Job training, early childhood development, health and wellness, leadership development, and family support and referral.

 

Association of Cambodian Refugees in Minnesota and Friends

1304 Burr St.

St. Paul, MN. 55101

Contact: Punna Vin Koy

Ph: 651-774-1676

The Association of Cambodian Refugees in Minnesota and friends serves the Cambodian community. The association’s goals are to help Khmer people preserve their cultural values, customs, and traditions; to protect the interests of its members; to provide material support; to improve ties of mutual respect, love, understanding, and solidarity; and to provide humanitarian assistance to Khmer nongovernmental organizations inside Cambodia.

 

Face-to-Face Health and Counseling

1165 Arcade St.

St. Paul, MN. 55106

Ph: 651-772-5555

Services: Family planning, general medical care, mental health counseling, and mental health groups (staff includes therapists and licensed social workers). Intensive home therapy, individual counseling, and support groups.

Payment: Ages 11-23, most insurance accepted and sliding fee.

Intake Procedure: Call. Self or agency referrals.

 

Fellowship of Lien-Truong

3103 Farnum Drive

Eagan, MN. 55121

Chair: Thai Kinh

Email: kmhthai@hotmail.com

Ph: 651-452-1244

Fellowship of Lien-Truong is a human service organization that provides support to Vietnamese refugees living in the Twin Cities metropolitan area.

 

Lao Advancement Organization of America

Lao Cultural Center Bldg.

2648 W. Broadway Ave.

Minneapolis, MN. 55411

Executive Director: Khao Insixiengmay

Email: laoptamn@laopta.org

Ph: 612-302-9048

Website: www.laopta.org

Lao Advancement Organization of America (L.A.O America) builds on the strengths and traditions of Lao culture, while giving Lao families in north and south Minneapolis and in Twin Cities suburbs the tools they need to succeed in their new community. The mission of LAO America is to help children and youth succeed in school and stay out of the criminal justice system by assisting parents to become fully engaged in their children’s education, and by organizing productive activities for children and youth. Programs and services for youth include academic tutoring; chemical dependency and crime prevention; support groups; leadership training; sports activities; and classes in the Lao language, history, and culture. Senior programs and services include parental skill development; support groups; legal assistance and referral; outreach activities; translation and interpretation; citizenship classes; English language learner classes; business development workshops; parent-child mediation; and recreational activities.

 

Lao Family Community of Minnesota, Inc.

320 West University Ave.

St. Paul, MN. 55103

Ph: 651-209-6807

Email: admin@laofamily.org

Services: English Education Program (including GED, Intensive English for Work, family literacy, and after school homework help), Youth and Families Program (including teen pregnancy prevention and young parents components, in-home parenting, and after school activities), Employment (including Dislocated Worker and employment services to refugees), and Chemical Health (including Rule 25 assessments and a recovery maintenance group)

Payment: none

Intake Procedure: Call. Low income Southeast Asian refugee and immigrant population; serve mainly Hmong.

 

Social Adjustment Program for Southeast Asians

Bigelow Building

450 Syndicates St. N.

Suite 285

St. Paul, MN. 55104

Director: Linda Gensheimer

Ph: 651-647-9676

Website:  www.wilder.org

The Social Adjustment Program for Southeast Asians was established in 1983 as a multicultural provider of mental health services for Southeast Asian refugees. Services are provided to Hmong, Cambodian, Vietnamese, and Laotian refuges, primarily through bilingual and bicultural human services counselors (who are refugees themselves) trained in Western mental health practices and equipped with cultural expertise. Clinical supervision and ongoing training is provided by Western mental health professionals on staff representing the fields of psychiatry, clinical psychology, clinical social work, and public health. The program attempts to combine Western mental health practices with the traditional healing methods of the cultures it serves to ensure effective, clinically sound, culturally appropriate, and individualized services.

 

Hmong American Partnership

1206 42nd Ave. N.

Minneapolis, MN. 55407

Ph: 612-236-9061

Programs and services designed to empower Hmong families to build knowledge and skills needed to become successfully educated and employed, while retaining their cultural heritage and identity.

 

Southeast Asian Community Council

1827 44th Ave. N.

Minneapolis, MN. 55407

Ph: 612-236-9061

Programs and services designed to empower Hmong families to build knowledge and skills needed to become successfully educated and employed, while retaining their cultural heritage and identity.

 

Karen Organization of Minnesota

2353 Rice Street #240

Roseville, MN. 55113

Ph: 651-788-7593

Provides support for Karen refugees in Minnesota. The Karen Organization offers a variety of programs to help refuges transition to life in a new country and achieve their goals. This includes social services, employment counseling, and outreach service. We also provide resources to help organizations learn how to work with this growing community.

 

Southeast Asian Program

3401 S. Chicago Ave.

Minneapolis, MN. 55407

Director: Paj Yang

Email: pyang@reubenlindh.org

Ph: 612-528-8384, ext. 100

Website: www.reubenlindh.org

The Southeast Asian Program serves children of Southeast Asian descent who are at risk for, or have been diagnosed with, health problems or developmental delays. Family support services provide families with a Southeast Asian family worker whose roles is to advocate for an empower families through education, information, and support provided by weekly in-home visits and parent support and education groups.

 

Vietnamese Social Services of Minnesota

277 University Ave. W.

Minneapolis, MN. 55407

Ph: 651-632-8927

Dedicated to maintaining the identity of the Minnesota Vietnamese community. The Vietnamese Social Servies of Minnesota works with low-income immigrants and refugees of diverse background to meet their basic needs without public or private assistance. Our organization facilitates access to work support for families and enables individuals to design strategies and budgets that enable them to reach self-sufficiency and self-confidence. VSS of MN partners with a range of government, non-profit organizations, and community-based groups, from workforce councils to state and federal agencies, as well as a variety of economic opportunity initiatives.

 

Centre for Asians and Pacific Islanders (CAPI)

5930 Brooklyn Boulevard

Brooklyn Center, MN. 55429

Ph: 612-721-0122

Email: info@capiusa.org

Assists Southeast Asian and East African immigrants and refugees in becoming self-sufficient and contributing members of the community. The agency’s employees speak collectively 10 languages and offer services from several Minneapolis locations.

 

Hmong American Mutual Assistance Association, Inc.

1130 N. 7th St.

Minneapolis, MN. 55411

Executive Director: Yee Yang

Email: hamaa@hamaa.org

Ph: 612-374-2694

The Hmong American Mutual Assistance Association provides employment, children/youth services, crime prevention activities, mediation advocacy, and business/economic development to the Hmong American community.

 

Bhutanese Community Organization of Minnesota Agency

1394 Jackson St.

Suite 200

St. Paul, MN. 55113

Director: Puspa Bhandari

Ph: 651-202-3715

Website: www.bhutanesemn.org

Programs and services available: elderly support service, Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program outreach, job skill supports, English Language Learner classes, immigration legal services, housing assistance, transportation help, citizenship preparation.

Employment training offered: Job readiness orientation, interview, resume development, job search and application, job placement.

Languages: Bhutanese, English, Hindi, Nepali

 

Lao Assistance Center of MN

505 Irving Ave. N.

Minneapolis, MN. 55406

Ph: 612-374-4967

Hours; Mon. – Fri: 9:00 am – 5:00 pm

Website: www.laocenter.org

Provide direct services. Help with employment, housing, and chemical dependency care.

 

Ture Thao counseling Services

796 E. 7th St.

St. Paul, MN. 55106

Ph: 651-771-2155

Website: http://www.mnchurches.org/refugee/healing/?p=1856

Trauma-informed and evidence-based treatment modalities; individual, couples, and family counseling; understanding of new refugees’ lives and the issues affecting them. Services are provided by therapist in Hmong, Nepali, Hindi, and Tibetan.

 

Asian Women United

PO Box 6223

Minneapolis, MN. 55406

Ph: 612-771-2155

Website: www.awum.org

Asian Women United offers programs for domestic violence victims and their children, and the community at large. We help empower Asian women and girls to support each other. We also give volunteers and others a meaningful way to get involved in ending domestic violence. Safe shelter for women and children affected by domestic violence, 24-hour, multilingual crisis line and helpline, courtroom advocacy and orders for protection (OFP) & harassment restraining orders (HRO), personal and group support, help with housing, money and employment, immigration assistance and programs for children.

 

Korean Service Center

630 Cedar Ave. S.

Suite B1

Minneapolis, MN. 55454

Director: Yoon-Ju Park

Ph: 612-342-1344 or 612-342-1345

The Korean Service Center was established to provide a variety of services needed by Korean immigrants, especially newly arriving families and elderly Korean immigrants whose needs include bilingual professional services in Korean and English.

 

Southeast Asian Refugee Community Home

1113 E. Franklin Ave.

Minneapolis, MN. 55404

President: Hoang Tran

Email: search-mn@visi.com

Ph: 612-973-9388

Southeast Asian Refugee Community Home (SEARCH) provides employment training services, economic and cultural development services, and pro bono legal services to Southeast Asians.

 

United Cambodian Association of Minnesota

1101 Snelling Ave.

N. St. Paul, MN. 55108

Executive Director: Sotheary Duong

Ph: 651-222-3299

United Cambodian Association of Minnesota (UCAM) currently provides the following social services to the Cambodian population of Minnesota, particularly in the Twin Cities metropolitan area: family self-sufficiency, education-based programs for youth and elementary students, elders’ and women’s programs, legal services, and chemical dependency prevention and intervention programs.

 

Vietnamese Minnesotans Association

Hubb Life Long Learning Center

1030 University Ave.

Suite 160-C

St. Paul, MN. 55104

Executive Director: John Tranberg

Email: vma@rptanet.org

Ph: 651-290-4791

Website: www.vmna.org

The mission of the Vietnamese Minnesotans Association (VMA) is to promote the self-sufficiency and well-being of Southeast Asian refugees and Asian Minnesotans, particularly the Vietnamese and their integration into American society. The association provides emergency assistance along with counseling, information/referrals, and advocacy in the areas of employment, legal aid, youth training and leadership, AIDS and HIV prevention, and victim services.