Cultural brokers address systemic gaps by aligning healthcare, social services, and institutions with the cultural realities of immigrant communities—something interpretation alone cannot achieve.
Why Interpretation Is Not Enough
Language access is important—but language alone does not address:
- Historical trauma
- Power dynamics
- Cultural norms
- Systemic racism
- Fear of authority
Without cultural brokerage, even translated care can remain inaccessible.


Cultural Brokerage as Systems Change
Cultural brokers:
- Educate providers and institutions
- Shape policy and program design
- Reduce disparities before they occur
- Build long-term community trust
They work within systems, not just alongside them.
Fartun Weli’s Leadership in Cultural Mediation
As a founder, researcher, and public health educator, Fartun Weli has helped organizations across Minnesota:
- Redesign culturally informed services
- Train healthcare professionals
- Engage Somali families authentically
- Shift from transactional to relational care models
Her work demonstrates that equity requires listening, adaptation, and accountability.
Learn More Through the Podcast and Trainings
These themes are expanded through:
- Podcast conversations
- Organizational trainings
- Community-based research
- Workshops on cultural humility
👉 Explore the Podcast and Training Services to learn more.
Final Thought
Cultural brokers do not “help people fit into systems.”
They help systems do better.