Michelle Kim Rogers
Michelle Kim Rogers was born in Seoul in 1961, her early years divided between the discipline of her uncle’s home and the rustic warmth of her grandmother’s farm in Inchon. While her parents worked to establish a foothold in the United States, Michelle spent her childhood in Korea drinking fresh goat milk and wearing hand-knit wool leggings, envisions the United States as a place where “dollar bills were plastered on walls.”
When she finally reunited with her parents in Salt Lake City in 1970 after years of separation, the fantasy was instantly replaced by a sharp realization of the financial and emotional cost of the American Dream. Seeing her mother’s aged face at the airport, Michelle understood that her family’s new life was built not on luck, but on grueling labor in sewing factories and years of disciplined saving.
Her journey through the American landscape—from Utah road trips in an un-air-conditioned Ford LTD to the racial bullying she faced on New Jersey school buses—was anchored by her parents’ resilience and the unexpected kindness offered to her by strangers.
Today, Michelle’s story has come full circle through her work with the International Institute of New England, where she co-sponsors and mentors refugee families seeking to establish their own foothold in America. Working with those in whom she sees her family’s early American selves, she emphasizes the necessity of kindness and generosity in supporting our immigrant neighbors, affirming that the true wealth of the American experience stems from our ability to show up for the most vulnerable.
Special thanks to the American Friends Service Committee and the Korean American Foundation for sponsoring this Legacy Project interview.