Marshallese Educational Initiative
We serve the Marshallese community, promote history & culture, & facilitate intercultural dialogue.
MEI was established to blend scholarly research with practical outreach efforts to create awareness on a national stage, while also making a real difference in the lives of individual Marshallese. Today, our Marshallese staff serve our community through direct outreach, provide programming for youth, women, and elders, and continue to raise awareness of the ongoing consequences of nuclear testing
06/06/2026
MEI staff members Marcina Langrine, Mia Bien, and April Brown provided a class on Thursday to members of the Arkansas Dept of Education in Little Rock about Marshallese in Arkansas. The class is part of our MICI project that includes interpreter training for Marshallese interpreters. MICI is a collaboration project of UA Partners, Seso, Inc., and MEI and funded through AR Governors Council on Developmental Disabilities. MEI will be hosting another class virtually on 6/24 and two lunch and learn sessions 6/19 and 6/29 when those who’ve taken a class can join for Q&A sessions. We will offer another interpreter training this month. Stay tuned for announcements and links to register next week! Shout out to our colleague and friend Tanya Miller-Witsell who has worked with us from the beginning and provided so many opportunities and resources for Marshallese families with a member with disabilities. Thank you!!!
"For Now and Forever" is for the mothers who never got to hold their babies — and for the mothers who did, only to lose them far too young. For the children taken in the womb, at birth, in childhood, and in the years that followed. For every mother who has carried the weight of radiation's silent toll across a lifetime. 🕊️
This song carries their names, their grief, and their love. It is dedicated to every mother and child whose life has been forever altered by nuclear testing — in the Marshall Islands and in all communities that have endured nuclear harm.
This is the first track from MARK Harmony's new album, dedicated to the 80th anniversary of the beginning of U.S. nuclear testing in the Marshall Islands. The full album drops after the Solidarity Concert on June 30.
Teaser out now. Full song coming soon.
05/26/2026
80 years ago, U.S. nuclear testing began in the Marshall Islands. This June 30, we mark the anniversary the way our people know best — with music, with memory, and with resilience. 🎶
Join us for the Solidarity Concert, featuring the debut of MARK Harmony’s new album dedicated to the anniversary. Registration opens Monday, June 1, and more information about the program, including special guests, will be provided shortly.
Free and open to the public.
05/10/2026
Benetick Kabua Maddison, MEI’s ED and Kathleen Sullivan of Nuclear Truyh Project met with Christopher King, Chief, Weapons of Mass Distruction Branch UNODA on May 08th discussing the opportunities for the future and work surrounding the TPNW!
05/10/2026
On May 08th MEI Executive Director, Benetick Kabua Maddison joins Nuclear Truth Projects in a side event to address protocols for working with members of affected communities.
Thank you for hosting this side event at the 11th NPT RevCon on Friday.
05/06/2026
80 Years of Nuclear Injustice: The Marshall Islands' Ongoing Legacy - A Roundtable Bwebwenato (Talk Story)
Executive Director gave a comprehensive presentation on the enduring nuclear legacy, a consequence of U.S. actions that remains unresolved after nearly eighty years of injustice. This year signifies eight decades since the Marshall Islands' nuclear history was ignited by the forced relocation of Bikini Atoll residents on March 7, 1946, ahead of the nuclear tests conducted later that summer.
Benetick’s presentation provided a detailed historical overview and highlighted the ongoing challenges confronting the Marshallese people today. He critically examined the shortcomings of the Compact of Free Association (COFA), describing it as "an obstacle to genuine justice." He emphasized that the COFA is merely a temporary fix on a profound issue that demands more comprehensive solutions. The nuclear issues at hand—covering health impacts, environmental degradation, cultural disruptions, and economic hardships—are deeply intergenerational, affecting current and future generations of Marshallese.
The event included the short film "Anointed," a powerful poem by Kathy Jetn̄il-Kijiner, a well-renowned poet and climate envoy for the Marshall Islands. It adeptly illustrated the themes discussed by Benetick and added a visceral dimension to the conversation, resonating with attendees during the subsequent roundtable bwebwenato (talk story) session.
This side event was organized collaboratively by the World Council of Churches and the United Church of Christ. Many thanks go to UCC and WCC, long-standing advocates for the Marshallese nuclear cause, who have tirelessly amplified this issue for decades. MEI has an upcoming event with the WCC, UCC, and other UN-affiliated entities to foster greater awareness and action concerning the persistent nuclear legacy and its profound impacts on the Marshallese people—more details to come.
🇲🇭🇺🇳
05/05/2026
It was great to reconnect with a familiar face we hadn't seen since the last NPT: Yuta Takahashi. Our executive director had a bilateral meeting with Yuuki Tokuda and Yuta Takahashi, both members of the Katawara Association, on the sidelines of the NPT Review Conference at the UN. In 2022, Benetick and Yuta presented a joint statement together at the NPT (see the last photos).
During their meeting, Hiroshima Home Television covered their discussions and conducted an interview with Benetick, who shared insights into his work on nuclear justice and abolition, as well as MEI's role in fostering awareness and advocacy. They also discussed MEI’s involvement at the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, which concluded on Friday.
Best wishes to Yuta, Yuuki, and the Katawara Association in their efforts to promote peace and educate others about the experiences of Japanese atomic survivors. You can follow their work at .you.
🇯🇵🇲🇭
05/04/2026
MEI's Executive Director Benetick Kabua Maddison delivered a joint NGO statement at the NPT Rev Con held at the United Nations General Assembly. The statement was delivered on behalf of the Affected Communities and Allies Working Group, the Indigenous World Association, the Marshallese Educational Initiative, and the Congolese Civil Society of South Africa and endorsed by 73 organizations in the U.S. and around the world.
The full statement:https://reachingcriticalwill.org/images/documents/Disarmament-fora/npt/revcon2026/statements/1May_Affected_Communities_WG.pdf
05/01/2026
On the margins of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) Review Conference at the United Nations in New York, survivors from Japan, South Korea, and the Marshall Islands took part in a panel at the People’s Forum organized by Gensuikyo. The survivors recounted their experiences of the ongoing suffering faced by their communities due to nuclear weapons, highlighting the shared responsibility across generations to raise awareness for justice and to push for the complete abolition of nuclear weapons. In his statement, MEI's Executive Director Benetick Kabua Maddison shared, "Our stories are different in geography, but they are identical in their moral truth: There is no such thing as a limited nuclear war. There is no such thing as a humanitarian nuclear weapon." Despite claims from nuclear-armed states that nuclear weapons are vital for maintaining global stability, the persistent injustices faced by communities affected by these weapons serve as a powerful reminder that such weapons are both illegal and immoral and must be eliminated. 🇯🇵🇰🇷🇲🇭
04/30/2026
MEI would like to thank the students and staff at Paragould and Pocahontas High Schools and the staff at BRTC for welcoming us to your campuses this week! MEI is partnering with BRTC on a program that trains youth in health fields while still in high school. MEI would also like to thank Carolina Edwin Tarbwillan with the RMI Springdale Consulate’s office for joining us and cohosting a community event in Paragould, and for liaison Darlynn Johnson for helping organize and supporting the students, and as always, Candy Taylor at BRTC. We look forward to supporting the new Marshallese recruits in the program at BRTC next Fall! We will return soon!
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614 East Emma Avenue , Ste 203
Springdale, AR
72764
Opening Hours
| Monday | 9am - 5pm |
| Tuesday | 9am - 5pm |
| Wednesday | 9am - 5pm |
| Thursday | 9am - 5pm |
| Friday | 9am - 5pm |