Discover Nikkei

https://www.discovernikkei.org/en/interviews/clips/1791/

What made your parents decide to move to Brazil?

My father's family had seven members, but at one point five of them went to Brazil. There was a girl called Ninomiya Koto, who was my father's older sister. Then there was Ninomiya Tokuichi, who was two years older than my father. All of these people went to Brazil in 1926 or 1927 as part of the family of my uncle, Kumatsu Harumi.

So, Ninomiya Koto married a man named Shimuta, who was from Fukuoka Prefecture, in Brazil.

The Shimuta couple, who came to Japan at the end of 1952 or the beginning of 1953, seemed to be incredibly wealthy, and when they saw our lifestyle, they must have said something like, "You'd be better off in Brazil. Japan had already lost the war, and there was no future for Japan, so come to Brazil and you'd be able to live a good life." So, how should I put it, my parents were persuaded by their words and said, "Well, then, let's go to Brazil."

We left Yokohama on a ship called America Maru on November 28, 1953, and arrived in Santos on January 16, 1954.


Brazil migration postwar World War II

Date: September 19, 2019

Location: California, US

Interviewer: Yoko Nishimura

Contributed by: Watase Media Arts Center, Japanese American National Museum

Interviewee Bio

Masato Ninomiya was born in Nagano Prefecture in 1948 and moved to Brazil at the age of 5 with his family. He currently maintains a legal office in São Paulo, and in addition to working as a Law Professor at the University of Sao Paulo, also serves as Special Assistant to the President at Meiji University and as Visiting Professor of Law at Musashino University. Since its founding in 1992, he has served as President of CIATE (Center for Information and Support to Workers Abroad), Advisor to the Japan Society for Promotion of Science (JSPS) for Central and South America, and also a Committee Member of the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA). Additionally, he is considered a Nikkei community leader in Brazil, supporting various activities such as improving the working conditions of Brazilian Dekasegi, and the education of Japanese-Brazilian children. . (May 2021)

Michelle Yamashiro
en
ja
es
pt
Yamashiro,Michelle

Grandfather loved to tell her stories of her great-grandfather Arakaki

Okinawan American whose parents are from Peru.

en
ja
es
pt
Michelle Yamashiro
en
ja
es
pt
Yamashiro,Michelle

Parents leaving Peru to move to California

Okinawan American whose parents are from Peru.

en
ja
es
pt
Kay Sekimachi
en
ja
es
pt
Sekimachi,Kay

Moving to Cincinnati after Topaz

(b. 1926) Artist

en
ja
es
pt
Takayo Fischer
en
ja
es
pt
Fischer,Takayo

Facing Prejudice as a Japanese American Teenager in Chicago after the War

(b. 1932) Nisei American stage, film, and TV actress

en
ja
es
pt
Howard Kakita
en
ja
es
pt
Kakita,Howard

Adjustment to American life

(b. 1938) Japanese American. Hiroshima atomic bomb survivor

en
ja
es
pt
Monica Teisher
en
ja
es
pt
Teisher,Monica

Grandfather migrating to Colombia

(b.1974) Japanese Colombian who currently resides in the United States

en
ja
es
pt
Vince Ota
en
ja
es
pt
Ota,Vince

Moving to and living in Japan

Japanese American Creative designer living in Japan

en
ja
es
pt
Kazuo Funai
en
ja
es
pt
Funai,Kazuo

Company in Tokyo burned down (Japanese)

(1900-2005) Issei businessman

en
ja
es
pt
James Hirabayashi
en
ja
es
pt
Hirabayashi,James

Family interrelations between mother and father

(1926 - 2012) Scholar and professor of anthropology. Leader in the establishment of ethnic studies as an academic discipline

en
ja
es
pt
Barbara Kawakami
en
ja
es
pt
Kawakami,Barbara

Going back to Hawaii

An expert researcher and scholar on Japanese immigrant clothing.

en
ja
es
pt
Barbara Kawakami
en
ja
es
pt
Kawakami,Barbara

Picture brides and karifufu

An expert researcher and scholar on Japanese immigrant clothing.

en
ja
es
pt
Roy H. Matsumoto
en
ja
es
pt
Matsumoto,Roy H.

Kibei schoolchildren in Hiroshima, Japan

(b.1913) Kibei from California who served in the MIS with Merrill’s Marauders during WWII.

en
ja
es
pt
Marion Tsutakawa Kanemoto
en
ja
es
pt
Kanemoto,Marion Tsutakawa

Mother's immigration to U.S. as a treaty merchant

(b. 1927) Japanese American Nisei. Family voluntarily returned to Japan during WWII.

en
ja
es
pt
Mitsuo Ito
en
ja
es
pt
Ito,Mitsuo

Chose to go back to Japan

(b.1924) Japanese Canadian Nisei. Interpreter for British Army in Japan after WWII. Active in Japanese Canadian community

en
ja
es
pt
Seiichi Tanaka
en
ja
es
pt
Tanaka,Seiichi

Coming to America

(b.1943) Shin-issei grand master of taiko; founded San Francisco Taiko Dojo in 1968.

en
ja
es
pt