Yao Chen
“I am deeply touched by how refugees keep their dignity and how poverty does not destroy their kindness. I want to let them know they are not alone, there are people who love them."
About Yao Chen
Yao Chen is a Chinese actress and philanthropist, who has starred in countless national and international films and TV shows. She has featured on Time Magazine’s “Time 100” list of most influential people in the world, and on Forbes’ list of “The World’s 100 Most Powerful Women”.
Yao Chen was appointed as a UNHCR National Goodwill Ambassador in 2013 – the first in China – in recognition of her long-standing advocacy for the globally displaced. In June 2017 she met the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, Filippo Grandi in Beijing to mark the extension of her role and ongoing commitment to the refugee cause.
Yao Chen has worked with UNHCR since 2010, when she visited urban refugees in and around the Philippines capital Manila. She was deeply affected by the experiences of the Somali, Sudanese and Palestinian refugees she met – ordinary people forced to flee their homes by extraordinary circumstances.
Following this first field visit with UNHCR Yao Chen has witnessed our frontline work and learnt about the experiences of refugees from numerous other countries.
In 2011, she travelled to Mae La camp in western Thailand, her first visit to a refugee camp. In 2012, she traveled to Buramino, Aw Barre and Sheder camps in Ethiopia where she talked with Somali refugees about their struggle to survive through multiple displacements, and their belief in education as the key to their future.
Yao Chen has shared these experiences, and subsequent field visits to Lebanon and Pakistan, through the media and Weibo. With a social media following of more than 80 million, she has brought a new understanding of refugee issues to the Chinese-speaking world.
In 2019 Yao helped to promote the Chinese version of fellow GWA Khaled Hosseini’s book, Sea Prayer. Yao has stated ‘Every one of us is a beam of light that can dissipate a small piece of darkness. Together, we can light up the hope and future of many refugees’.
Yao was deeply affected by the experiences of the Somali, Sudanese and Palestinian refugees she met in and around Philippines capital Manila – ordinary people forced to flee their homes by extraordinary circumstances. Following this first field visit with UNHCR, Yao Chen has witnessed our frontline work and learnt about the experiences of refugees from numerous other countries. In 2011, she travelled to Mae La camp in western Thailand, her first visit to a refugee camp. In 2012, she travelled to Buramino, Aw Barre and Sheder camps in Ethiopia where she talked with Somali refugees about their struggle to survive through multiple displacements, and their belief in education as the key to their future. Yao has subsequently visited Lebanon and Pakistan with UNHCR and has provided crucial support to help refugee girls attend school.