キヨコ・ニシカワ・アセベス

(Kiyoko Nishikawa Aceves)

Es licenciada en Comunicación por la Universidad Iberoamericana, realizó un diplomado en Técnicas de Investigación sobre Cultura, Sociedad y Comunicación por la misma universidad, y es máster en Procesos Editoriales por la Universidad Abierta de Cataluña. En el campo de la investigación sobre migración japonesa ha trabajado de manera independiente desde 1996. En el año de 1998 realizó el proyecto archivo oral y visual de la comunidad japonesa en Ensenada. Japonesa de tercera generación participa activamente en la Asociación Japonesa de Ensenada en la promoción de la cultura japonesa y en la creación de la Escuela de Japonés de dicha organización. En 2005 fue becaria del Programa de Jóvenes Líderes Nikkei de Latinoamérica, auspiciado por el Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores del Japón, en tres ciudades: Tokio, Hiroshima y Kioto.

Última actualización en junio de 2019

war en es

Takeshi Morita: A Mexican Fisherman Imprisoned in U.S. concentration camps

The Japanese attack on the U.S. fleet in Hawaii on December 7, 1941 triggered war between the two countries. On this side of the Pacific, throughout the entire continent, that date also marked the beginning of a peculiar war against hundreds of thousands of Japanese immigrants living in numerous countries, who were promptly accused of being “foreign enemies.” In the United States, on the eve of that fateful day, Japanese Americans were preparing for the upcoming Christmas and New Year festivities. These immigrant communities were already well integrated into the U.S. economy and …

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community en es

Totaro and Kazuma Nishikawa: The Legacy of Japanese Fishermen in Baja California - Part 2

Read Part 1 >> On December 7, 1941, the Japanese navy attacked Pearl Harbor. Although the tension between Japan and the United States catalyzed the imminence of war, the attack on the U.S. naval base in Hawaii surprised everyone. The news spread like wildfire in Ensenada. The fishermen were on the dock that afternoon when their colleagues rushed to tell them, “War broke out, war broke out! Japan bombed Pearl Harbor!” Their initial reaction was one of great pride at knowing that the attack had been a success; however, at the same time, the news overwhelmed them with uneasin…

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community en es

Totaro and Kazuma Nishikawa: The Legacy of Japanese Fishermen in Baja California - Part 1

Two brothers named Totaro and Kazuma Nishikawa formed part of an important wave of Japanese fishermen who settled in Ensenada in the early 1930s. Twenty years before, however, the first Japanese fishermen had already arrived in Baja California, when the Porfirio Díaz administration granted Aurelio Sandoval a fishing permit that Masaharu Kondo, an expert in fishing technology, would subsequently approve upon realizing the fruitfulness of the waters of Baja California. The fishing industry in the peninsula would enjoy a boom from 1930 until the beginning of World War II, thanks to the…

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