2011 Cherry Blossom Festival Scheduled For September 24-25, 2011 In Los Angeles’ Little Tokyo

The following was excerpted from a press release by the Cherry Blossom Festival SoCal.


CHERRY BLOSSOM FESTIVAL: Manzanar Committee to be honored

To download a printable flyer,
click on the image above.

LOS ANGELES — Celebrating its tenth year, the Cherry Blossom Festival SoCal will be held on September 24-25, 2011, in Los Angeles’ Little Tokyo (enter the festival at the intersection of Temple and Alameda Streets).

Produced by the grass-roots, 100 percent volunteer Cherry Blossom Festival SoCal, a fiscally sponsored project of the Pasadena Arts Council, the annual festival promotes and educates attendees about the culture of Americans of Japanese Ancestry, along with Japanese culture. This year, the festival recognizes the history of Japanese Americans during the World War II era and Japan Rebuilt/10,000 Origami Cranes. Read more of this post

We Hate To See The Great Ones Go: Sue Kunitomi Embrey

Editor’s Note: As I was standing in front of the audience, relating my experiences with, and my deep admiration for, Aiko Herzig-Yoshinaga, at the July 17, 2011 event in which the Manzanar Committee honored her (see Manzanar Committee Lauds Aiko Herzig-Yoshinaga With Sue Kunitomi Embrey Legacy Award On July 17, 2011), I could not help but think of former Manzanar Committee chair Sue Kunitomi Embrey, who passed away back in May 2006. The following is a piece I wrote about Sue that was published in the June 14, 2006 edition of the Rafu Shimpo.


Sue Kunitomi Embrey (center) listens intently during a small group session at the 2004 Manzanar At Dusk program, held at the VFW Hall in Independence, California.
Photo: Gann Matsuda

LOS ANGELES — As many in the Los Angeles Japanese American community as well as most anyone who has been even remotely involved with Manzanar know, Sue Kunitomi Embrey, chair of the Manzanar Committee, passed away on May 15, 2006, at the age of 83. When I learned of the news, I was reminded of a comment made at a press conference a couple of months ago where Los Angeles Kings superstar left wing Luc Robitaille announced his retirement. Read more of this post

Manzanar NHS To Host The Play, “Bronzeville,” May 20-23, 2011

The following is a press release from the National Park Service.


INDEPENDENCE, CA — In Spring 1942, the U.S. Army forcibly removed more than 110,000 Japanese Americans from their West Coast homes; over 11,000 of them were imprisoned at Manzanar. Communities like Little Tokyo in Downtown Los Angeles were abandoned literally overnight.

To download a printable flyer,
click on the image above.

At the same time, Blacks from the Deep South headed west to work in defense industry. Prohibited from living in “white” neighborhoods by restrictive housing codes, many people moved into Little Tokyo, eventually renaming the area Bronzeville.

The story of Bronzeville will come to life in the Manzanar Interpretive Center from May 20 through 23, as Robey Theatre Company, Inyo Council for the Arts, and the Manzanar National Historic Site present the play Bronzeville.

Co-written by Japanese American playwright Tim Toyama and African American playwright Aaron Woolfolk, and directed by Ben Guillory, Bronzeville explores the conflicting reactions of members of a Black family when they discover a Japanese American hiding in “their” attic to avoid being sent to Manzanar. Each person wants to “do the right thing,” but they have differing ideas of what that means. Read more of this post

Los Angeles Middle School Classes Make The Trek To 42nd Annual Manzanar Pilgrimage

by James To

Students from Thomas Starr King Middle School in Los Angeles attended the 42nd Annual Manzanar Pilgrimage, April 30, 2011, at the Manzanar National Historic Site
in California’s Owens Valley.
Photo: James To


This past Saturday, I welcomed forty students and their teachers from Thomas Starr King Middle School in Los Angeles to the 42nd Annual Manzanar Pilgrimage.

Seventy years ago, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066, which established an exclusion zone and allowed the forced evacuation and incarceration of over 120,000 Americans of Japanese ancestry into concentration camps, such as Manzanar in California’s Owens Valley, where they spent up to four years in “camps” during World War II. Read more of this post

2011 Sue Embrey Community Service College Scholarship Available

The following is an announcement from the Asian Pacific Committee of United Teachers Los Angeles.


The Asian Pacific Committee of United Teachers Los Angeles (UTLA) is, once again, offering scholarships up to $1,000 to current high school seniors enrolled in Los Angeles Unified School District schools.
The Sue Embrey 2011 Community Service College Scholarship was established in 2008 by the Asian Pacific Committee of UTLA to honor of the legacy of longtime teacher, community activist, and Asian Pacific Committee member, Sue Kunitomi Embrey.

The scholarship funds are part of UTLA’s continuing program to help fund young people who desire to continue their education in a community college or university.

“Sue Embrey, educator, activist and author, lived by her principles of non-violence, self-determination through unionization, social justice for workers, teamwork, collaboration, service to others, and empowerment of the disenfranchised,” the union said in a statement. Read more of this post

Venice, California Street Corner To Become Japanese American Memorial Site

The following is a press release from the Venice Japanese American Memorial Marker Committee.


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Suzanne Thompson
Phone: (310) 570-5419
suzannethompson55@gmail.com

LOS ANGELES — On September 11, 2010, former Manzanar internees and their families along with community leaders, elected officials, educators, historians and concerned citizens will meet at the Venice Hongwanji Buddhist Temple from 2:00 PM – 5:00 PM in West Los Angeles to discuss the appearance and scope of the Venice Japanese American Memorial Marker (VJAMM), located at Venice Hongwanji Buddhist Temple, 12371 Braddock Drive, Los Angeles, California 90066. Read more of this post

The Fighting 442: Live With Honor, Die With Dignity Makes So Cal Debut – July 25, 2010

On July 25, The Fighting 442: Live With Honor, Die With Dignity, a new film by Ann Haneda that documents the heroic exploits of the 442nd Regimental Combat Team, the Japanese American unit that fought gallantly in Europe during World War II, makes its Southern California debut at the Japan America Theatre in Los Angeles’ Little Tokyo. Read more of this post

41st Annual Manzanar Pilgrimage: A Letter To Obaa-chan

by Jaymie Takeshita

Dear Grandma,

Every time I talk to you on the phone, I tell you about all the things I do with the UCLA Nikkei Student Union (NSU), right? I have yet another NSU story for you. Yesterday, a bunch of us from UCLA went on the 41st Annual Manzanar Pilgrimage. My friends who have been on the Pilgrimage before told me that it would be a great experience; I didn’t expect it to be as amazing as it actually was.

Jaymie Takeshita
Photo: Gann Matsuda

I don’t think I ever told you this before, but when I was in elementary school, every time you talked about “camp” with your friends, or the other grandmothers, or the strangers at Marukai, I always thought that you were talking about summer camp. You would always tell stories about classes and playing with friends. Once you found out that I learned about Japanese American Internment in my California History class, you and all the other grandparents started passing along your books and pictures of barracks in the desert, mess halls, and lots and lots of Japanese Americans. The black-and-white-photo-filled books were interesting at first, but eventually I stopped looking at them. You gave them to me, and I put them on my bookshelf without ever reading the first chapter. Read more of this post

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