Naga American Foundation conference focuses on growing as a community

(left to right) Wati Longchar, Christine Kumar, Fr. Abraham Lotha and Naro Pongen who were the panelists during the NAF conference.

(left to right) Wati Longchar, Christine Kumar, Fr. Abraham Lotha and Naro Pongen who were the panelists during the NAF conference.

DIMAPUR, JULY 10 (MExN): The 2023 conference of the Naga American Foundation (NAF) held in New Jersey on July 7 and 8 explored questions of what it means to adapt to American culture while embracing cultural roots and growing as a community in the United States.



Conference attendees

Over 90 individuals attended this gathering of Nagas in the United States, which is held once every two years.
Rev Dr Louis Ao, head pastor of Stelton Baptist Church in Edison,and his wife, Aienla, and their family hosted this year’s conference, providing meals, event facilities, and program coordination. Fr. Abraham Lotha, pastor of Transfiguration of the Lord Parish, in Highland Park, New Jersey and president of the Lotha Academy in Nagaland, was the featured speaker. 



Musical performance

The conference also included a panel discussion moderated by Naro Pongen, associate pastor of Old Cambridge Baptist Church in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on the topic of Naga identity and cultural adaption and preservation. Panelists were Fr. Abraham, Christine Kumar (optometrist at Dot House Community Health Center in Boston, Massachusetts), and Wati Longchar (manager at Deloitte& Touche in New York, New York). 



Dr Sanyo Konyak

During the general meeting section of the conference, NAF President Dr. Sanyo Konyak, of Rockford, Illinois, announced the appointment of Dr. Kilang Yanger, of Boston, as the organization’s new secretary. She will be taking over the role from Justin Aier, who was named secretary in 2016.The conference came to a close with a cultural show featuring traditional and contemporary musical performances and a video presentation on Naga cultural heritage presented by Dr. Sanyo M Meren, former pastor of Ungma Baptist Church in Nagaland, who is currently visiting family in the US, closed the conference with a benediction.



Younger conference attendees

Dr Sanyo thanked the hosts for working tirelessly to make the conference possible, and also acknowledged event attendees for traveling from all across the Northeastern United States, the Midwest, and from states as far as Texas and California. “Nagas have great potential to build a strong community and positively empower each other,” he said. “Together, we must continue to take concrete steps to act out the NAF mission statement of advancing and bringing together Nagas in America.” 

The NAF is a non-profit, non-partisan, non-political, cultural, and educational organization that promotes and recognizes Naga culture and heritage in America.



Conference group picture

Incorporated as a nonprofit organization in 1991, the NAF organizes social activities and facilitates educational and cultural opportunities for Nagas and Naga Americans living in the Unites States, including the awarding of two annual scholarships: the Inavi Saghu Undergraduate Scholarship and the Aryo Shishak Graduate Scholarship.