University of Hong Kong, Pok Fu Lam, Hong Kong
Benji speaking at my university class, of course he brought a posse
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Benji was a really good human being. Always “in the mix”, always connecting people. Good to his core in a way few people are. I’m lucky to have crossed paths with him and to have had him as a colleague and friend. It’s still very difficult to process his passing and my heart goes out to his family, especially his wife Jenny and daughter Rayen.
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2018, Auckland, New Zealand
The dinner in Auckland, NZ was really great thanks to Benji and Jenny, the sweetest ever friends. Great memories of the sociolinguistics symposium too! Miss you, Benji!
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2016, Hong Kong - above the night street market
Best meal we had when Benji brought me and the family out for a 1 week residency at the Education University of Hong Kong. This captures a lot of Benji for me - good food and always joking
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2018, American Educational Research Association
Benji and I posing in front of the Rethinking Schools booth.
— with
Wayne Au
and Benji Chang
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Some word association when I think of the name Benji Chang:
Wisdom. Discipline. Tradition. Leader. Historian. Mentor. Master. Educator. Lifelong Student. Global. Journey. Purpose. Urgency. Morality. Activist. Organizer. Humility. Patience. Curiosity. Creativity. DJ. Warmth. Nurturing. Big Brother. Hero. Bad Ass Motherfucker. Beloved.
The man had incredible gifts. He was so intelligent, so creative, and so masterful at all of his various crafts (from DJing to writing to kung fu and lion dance) but the thing that stands out above all else was his selfless dedication to his community. His talent was to help you recognize your own. His talent was to uplift you. His talent was to unite people and get them to move in unison in ways that were greater than the sum of their parts. That was as true on the dance floor as it was in the dojo or the school classrooms that he taught.
He was the ultimate catalyst for energy and growth. He simply WAS inspiration. I admired the hell out of him. We all did.
My own path in life intersected Benji’s in so many ways. First as a fresh faced Taiwanese kid partying in Taipei with him on the Love Boat program back in 1999. After I attended college and became immersed in music and sociology, Benji helped me connect the dots from civil rights era songs to the social context in which they were written. It was bigger than just drum breaks and horn samples - there was always a reverence of the original message. He DJ’d parties that I threw, including my own birthday. As I matured and found my own purpose in community work, again Benji was there to support me and lend his own experience and wisdom.
I remember one of the deep topics we discussed during our last proper hang out was how the nature of political organizing had changed from the early 2000s to now, and how technology and social media was a double edged sword.
The number of folks who I can relate to as a Chinese American, music and history nerd, AND who also organized around social justice and had been doing so for decades? Not many. That’s a niche within a niche within a niche. It feels a lot lonelier around here now.
Benji, you’ll be in my heart and mind forever. Your legacy and impact are eternal, and no doubt your loving family will carry the torch for you and we will help them do so.
Farewell, and thank you for everything big brother.
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2015, Tuen Mun, Hong Kong
The first time I met Benji. We had hotpot.
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1999, Taipei, Taiwan
I wish I could find pics from Benji DJ'ing in Taipei - such epic times and fond memories of crazy young summer fun in taiwan. And I wish I kept in touch with Benji, who always shined as an amazing yet incredibly down-to-earth good dude. RIP.
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Benji wants to let everyone know he feels the outpouring of love from his family and friends. He is above and smiling down on each and everyone one of you who meant so much to him in life.
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2017, Los Angeles, CA, USA
I'm going to miss you Sihing
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