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Iman Snobar

Iman Snobar reduced

A Renaissance woman, Iman Snobar is guided by the conviction that the humanities should be accessible and relevant to all communities.

Being a Road Scholar is as an extension of her commitment to the public humanities—curating accessible platforms for storytelling, facilitating dialogue, and preserving lived histories. Illinois is home to diverse immigrant, refugee, and diasporic populations. Iman aims to foster connections across difference, encouraging conversations about displacement, resilience, and the meaning of home that resonate beyond any single community.

Available

More than a Number: The Connection between the Diaspora & the Homeland for Midwestern Palestinians

Available in English and Spanish

Bridgeview, Illinois—home to the largest Palestinian population in the United States, with over 18,000 residents in the area affectionately known as Little Palestine—stands as a vibrant center of diasporic life and memory. This program explores the experiences of Palestinians across the broader Chicagoland area and in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, where many have also settled, creating interconnected Midwestern diasporas only a short two-hour drive apart.

More Than A Number is a multimedia exhibition featuring portraits and personal narratives of Palestinians in the diaspora. Each portrait is accompanied by a brief caption capturing memories, aspirations, and reflections on home, displacement, and belonging. Together, they offer an intimate look into the resilience and humanity of Palestinians—reminding us that they are not merely statistics or headlines, but individuals with complex lives and enduring ties to their homeland.

This presentation delves into the themes of collective memory, belonging, and tetherment to the land, inviting audiences to consider how identity and memory are preserved across distance. The session includes a guided walkthrough of the exhibition’s images and narratives, offering space for dialogue on what it means to live—and remember—in the diaspora.

This presentation aligns with the Illinois America 250 Commission's theme “We the People.” This theme invites us to explore ideas of who has been included and who has been left out of the nation’s promise, as well as how people from all backgrounds have shaped and reshaped what it means to be part of “the people.” The Illinois America 250 Commission's goals are to uplift local stories, places, and programs; build pride; and showcase how Illinois brings the ideals of the Declaration of Independence to life.

Audience Recommendations

This presentation is appropriate for all ages. Groups that may find particular interest in it include student organizers, university students, cultural or historical societies, as well as book clubs exploring themes of immigration, migration, or displacement.

Program Logistics

This 45–60 minute program requires the host organization to provide a projector, microphone (if possible), and sufficient space to display the easels of portrait narratives and accompanying biographies.

The program begins with a 15–20 minute interactive gallery experience, inviting audience members to enter the living exhibition space and engage directly with each of the twelve portraits and their narrative pairings. Participants will have time to read, observe, and reflect on the stories presented before the facilitated discussion begins.

Following this interactive portion, Snobar will guide the audience through an exploration of collective memory and the enduring presence of homeland as expressed through each participant’s story. The session concludes with an open Q&A, offering time for dialogue and reflection.

Audio or video recording is permitted only by the host organization, and may be made available afterward for those unable to attend. A keepsake booklet—containing selected portraits and narratives—can also be printed or distributed digitally (PDF) by the host organization as a takeaway for attendees.

Bio

Based in Chicago, IL

Iman Snobar is a writer, poet, artist, educator, archivist, and photographer whose interdisciplinary practice engages image, collective memory, and narrative storytelling to illuminate the experiences of marginalized communities. Her work focuses in particular on the Palestinian and Puerto Rican diasporas.

She is a two-time alumna of the University of Chicago, where she earned her Master’s degree in the Program of the Humanities with a concentration in Race, Diaspora, and Indigeneity, and her Bachelor’s degree in Critical Race and Ethnic Studies with double minors in Middle Eastern Studies and Human Rights. Originally from Milwaukee, Wisconsin, she has called Chicago home for the past four years, where she herself is now an educator, guiding new generations of students through her interdisciplinary approach to writing and education.

Her exhibition More than a Number debuted at Rockefeller Chapel in Chicago, with subsequent activations including WHERE ARE YOU AND WHY? Univer/City at the Reynolds Club on the University of Chicago campus. She has also presented her work at the inaugural Indigeneity and Arts Conference at the University of Chicago in 2025.

Her current work explores the intersections of diaspora, memory, and resistance through visual storytelling, oral history, and community-based archival practice. She is looking forward to expanding her project both with Middle-Eastern and Latinx populations. 

Book this Road Scholar

Follow the steps below to book a presentation.
  1. Contact Iman to schedule a date and time via email at imansdiasporicarchive@gmail.com.
  2. Once you and Iman have agreed upon a date and time, complete the online Road Scholars Host Organization application.
Contact Us

Nicole Rodriguez
Senior Manager of Community Conversations

speakers@ilhumanities.org
(312) 374-1558