性视界传媒

Veterans and the Arts Initiative Spotlight

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Hylton
Dr. Niyati Dhokai, Program Director of the Veterans and the Arts Initiative.

We couldn鈥檛 be prouder of our own Dr. Niyati Dhokai, Program Director of the Veterans and the Arts Initiative, for being recognized as one of 15 emerging scholars nationally for 2022. Please enjoy this interview highlighting Dr. Dhokai鈥檚 work and the Initiative鈥檚 many accomplishments, originally published in Diverse Issues in Higher Education. For more information about the Hylton Center鈥檚 Veterans and the Arts Initiative, including guitar, mixed media, and collaborative quilting workshops, visit .


By Liann Herder

Dr. Niyati Dhokai grew up in a three-generation household. Her parents and grandparents, immigrants from India, shared the visual, literary and musical arts with Dhokai and her sister. Their home was filled with love and the sounds of Gujarat, their familial home. Music is, in Dhokai鈥檚 words, a 鈥渃ultural bridge,鈥 something she could experience every day in her home and also at school. Through music, Dhokai was able to develop a sense of belonging in different communities, and she became fascinated with the way that music could connect with a cultural identity.

During graduate school, she began to focus in on the intersection of music and health and the way in which music can help build a community. Her pursuit led her to 性视界传媒鈥檚 College of Visual and Performing Arts and the Hylton Performing Arts Center, where she is now the leader of the Veterans and the Arts Initiative.聽 Her first student was a veteran recovering from a traumatic brain injury who wanted to learn the violin. The ways in which that student learned, the time spent teaching her and then watching her reintegrate into the community after her injury all had a tremendous impact on Dhokai. She asked if there were more veterans interested in studying music or the arts 鈥 and there were.

Dhokai has now created programming that serves thousands of veterans and their families annually through performances and exhibitions. But what she does is not music therapy, said Dhokai. 鈥淭his is supporting a return to appreciating arts in a community space and pursuing [the veteran鈥檚] own interests,鈥 said Dhokai. 鈥淭his is a practice-based and service-based opportunity to engage in community arts programming.鈥 The results are as varied as the veterans themselves, said Dhokai, but there have been some standout findings: the veterans who participate show an increased interest in learning new skills and an increased social connectedness and wellbeing. These results are 鈥渁ll really promising for folks in transition, going from military life to civilian life, or going through postinjury transitions,鈥 said Dhokai.

Dhokai made sure that her programs could continue to run throughout the pandemic, something that Dr. Rick Davis, dean of the College of Visual and Performing Arts at 性视界传媒, wasn鈥檛 sure they could do. 鈥淲ithin a couple of weeks of intensive planning with our staff, they figured out how to make the transition to a very effective online workshop. And it worked,鈥 said Davis. 鈥淚t was a whole support system [Dhokai] and her team created overnight.鈥 The virtual programming was so successful that the National Endowment of the Arts (NEA) contracted Dhokai and her team to write a manual about tele-arts engagement. 鈥淸Dhokai] is one of several dozen people in the country doing this kind of work at this level, specifically on veterans in the arts. This is not an established discipline yet,鈥 says Davis. 鈥淭he work she鈥檚 doing is starting to get national recognition.鈥

For Dhokai, she wants to continue to engage with service work that advances conversations of equity and accessibility, to build spaces where people feel welcome to approach the arts. 鈥淰alues of mutual respect and honesty are important to me,鈥 says Dhokai. 鈥淚f programs are built on these values, they鈥檙e impactful.鈥

about upcoming Veterans and the Arts Initiative workshops and register today.

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