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Volume IX, Number
1 Winter 2002
Women Artists
A Gallery of Artists
- Ruth Asawa
- Mary Ijichi
- Mine Okubo
- Yoshiko Wada by
Patricia Wakida
A Spectrum of Voices,
A Common Vision
by Betty Kano and Clara Kim
What's APA?
by Andrew Amorao
A Framework for History
by Alan Ohashi
Member News
In Their Own Words:
Art Shibayama by Ken Tanemura
Donor List
Program Calendar
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Our
fall Allies issue went to press a few weeks before the
events of September 11, so we had no idea that the material would
prove to be so timely. Nikkei readers immediately saw parallels
between the indignities experienced by Japanese-Americans in the
aftermath of Pearl Harbor and the treatment of anyone perceived
as Middle Eastern following the Pentagon and World Trade Center
attacks.
That
issue of Nikkei Heritage examined alliances between Japanese-Americans
and other ethnic groups in politics, labor, business and education.
It was inspired by the concurrent exhibition at NJAHS, The
Enemy Alien Files: Hidden Stories of World War II, which documented
the imprisonment of Italian-American, German-American and Japanese-Peruvian
citizens. By emphasizing our shared experience, both the Nikkei
Heritage editorial committee and exhibit organizers hoped to illustrate
an ongoing need for communication and collaboration between all
who work for freedom and justice.
That
need has become even more evident, noted one organizer, Grace Shimizu,
at a press conference: One of the best ways of promoting peace
is to know our history . . .The abuses of the past cannot occur
again. Coverage in The New York Times, San Francisco Chronicle,
Nichi Bei Times and Hokubei Mainichi underscored that sentiment.
For a personal view of the Japanese-Peruvian experience, see the
interview with Art Shibayama on p. 18.
Our
present issue again echoes the theme of a NJAHS exhibit based on
another ally relationship. Originally planned as a review of two
historically divided communities, co-curators Betty Kano and Clara
Kim transformed an exhibition of art by Nikkei and Korean-American
women artists into a celebration of commonality. Their essay on
p. 10 introduces you to the thought behind Bridges: Works
by Contemporary Korean American and Japanese American Women Artists.
And
to illustrate the breadth of creativity in our community, we offer
a gallery of artist profiles throughout the issue. Of
course, there are hundreds of worthy stories we have not been able
to include, but well do so in future issues. Wed like
this journal to grow as a national forum for the Nikkei voice, and
we can accomplish that best with your help. Please send us your
comments, suggestions and submissions.
- Chiori
Santiago, Nikkei Heritage, Editor
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