community en
For journalists, there are stories, perhaps only a handful, that never leave you. That’s the way I feel about the Alan Hotel in Little Tokyo. …
About a year ago, a friend and I were boarding an elevator in a downtown high-rise. I pushed the button for the fifth floor. My …
identity en
For Japanese Americans of my generation (second generation Nisei over 60), the source of our moral and cultural values is both clear and easily defined. …
war en
Akio “Lawrence” Nakagawa, a Kibei from the Sacramento Delta region, was interned at the Topaz, Utah camp. Answering the loyalty question “No-No,” he was transferred …
culture en
One of the things I have finally learned is that there are late people and early people. There are late families and early families. And …
Both of my parents were young children when E.O. 9066 was signed. My mom, Machiko Okazaki, lived in four places from the ages of four …
When the war came to a close, many of our friends started to leave camp. My brother Yukio just seemed to disappear at the first …
I spent my childhood years during the 1950s in the San Fernando Valley. My parents, like a number of other Nikkei families, were flower growers …
business en
*Editor's Note: This article was written in 2004 and Fugetsu-do is currently celebrating its 112th anniversary. My grandfather, Seiichi Kito, was born in Gifu, in …
An elderly black man who daily caught a bus that took him from Watts to his job in Burbank was quoted as saying that he …
JAHSSC publications NNV california World War II Los Angeles family little tokyo community education issei food nisei resettlement southern california racism rafu shimpo heart mountain identity japanese american nikkei postwar Bill Watanabe boyle heights business camps concentration camps culture discrimination farming
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