A No-No Boy Goes To Washington – Hiroshi Kashiwagi
June 3, 2011 Leave a Comment
Playwright Soji Kashiwagi, who is active with the Tule Lake Committee, has even more reason to be proud of father Hiroshi Kashiwagi, also a playwright and a “No-No Boy,” who was recently invited to an event at the White House, where he got a chance to meet President Obama and the First Lady. He recently wrote about his father’s experience in our nation’s capital.

Photo: Kashiwagi Family Collection
From a small, country store in Loomis, California, to behind barbed wire at the Tule Lake Segregation Center during World War II, his road to Washington has not been easy. Branded and stigmatized as “disloyal” and a “troublemaker” by members of his own community for his refusal to answer two deeply flawed U.S. Government imposed “loyalty” questions, he has lived a shadowy life of a “No-No Boy,” once considered the “lowest of the low” among those Americans of Japanese ancestry who protested their unjust World War II incarceration in America’s concentration camps. Read more of this post


Dr. Harry Abe, 442nd Regimental Combat Team Medic, Passes
December 2, 2010 Leave a Comment
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by Darrell Kunitomi
Manzanar Committee member Darrell Kunitomi (left) with Dr. Harry Abe.
Photo: Darrell Kunitomi
A couple years back I was glad to see him again in Washington, D.C. after a Grateful Crane performance during the Cherry Blossom Festival. Washington and military types were in attendance, including Rep. Barney Frank and General Antonio Taguba. Dr. Abe was there with his wife Lynn, and, as always, he was smiling and laughing. I treasure the one photo of us together.
On another Crane trip to Seattle, I was fortunate to meet up again with Harry’s wartime pal, Tosh, another 442nd medic. They served together. Read more of this post
Filed under Commentary Tagged with 100th Battalion, 442nd Regimental Combat Team, civil rights, Darrell Kunitomi, discrimination, Dr. Harry Abe, Go For Broke Foundation, Grateful Crane Ensemble, Japanese American, Japanese American Internment, racism, Ted Fujioka