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Power of Our Stories
Campu, the Podcast: Reanalyzing Japanese American Incarceration in the 21st Century, How is it relevant today?
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Introducing Campu: a podcast that offers a fresh, raw, and insightful scope into the diverse experiences of Japanese incarceree daily life during World War II. Campu analyzes the political, racial, social, psychological, physical, and systemic barriers that Japanese immigrants and Japanese Americans endured during this event in history.

Nikkei Chronicles #9—More Than a Game: Nikkei Sports
Making a Splash: Nikkei Role Models in Swimming
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Power of Our Stories
50 Objects, 50 Stories: The Untold Stories of Incarcerated Japanese Americans during WWII
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“50 Objects/50 Stories of the American Japanese Incarceration” is a project made up of 50 objects that each give a raw, true narrative of the exclusion and confinement of 120,000 American Japanese during World War II. Objects owned by families, museums, and educational institutions have been researched, reviewed, and compiled …

“Chapters” by Trevor Allred: The Power of Storytelling
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Trevor Allred is a founding part of Heritage Future, a nonprofit organization dedicated to storytelling as a tool for community betterment, and a moderator on the Creative + Cultural podcast. In “Chapters,” a five-part podcast series dedicated to stories surrounding the exclusion, forced removal, and incarceration of Japanese Americans with …

Finding His Identity: Mark Nagata on Being a Sansei and Kaiju vs Heroes
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Currently featured at the Japanese American National Museum is Mark Nagata’s Kaiju vs Heroes exhibition. Mark Nagata is a third-generation, Japanese American artist who was inspired by the Japanese kaiju toys from his childhood to pursue a career in freelance illustration and eventually start his first toy company called Max …

Nikkei Chronicles #7—Nikkei Roots: Digging into Our Cultural Heritage
My Nikkei Tradition
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Ever since I was six years old, my mom and dad always took my older sister and I to the Nisei Week festival in Little Tokyo of Downtown Los Angeles. I remember my parents buying my sister and I fresh dango and korokke for the first time from one of …