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Nichi Bei News


The Nichi Bei News rose out of the ashes of the historic Nichi Bei Times (1942-2009) and Nichi Bei Shimbun (1899-1942) legacy to launch the first nonprofit ethnic community newspaper of its kind in the U.S. in September 2009. From community issues and events taking place in the historic Japantowns and beyond, to entertainment profiles, food, film and book reviews, politics, hard news and commentaries, the Nichi Bei News has you covered. Published by the innovative nonprofit Nichi Bei Foundation, it proudly follows the rich tradition of some 125 years of community leadership through quality media.

Updated Jnauary 2024


Stories from This Author

‘Treasure Trove of Invaluable New Inf(o)’ on the WWII Camps

April 1, 2016 • Arthur A. Hansen , Nichi Bei News

In the interval between 1973 and 1988, thanks to some enterprising undergraduate and graduate students of mine affiliated with the Japanese American Oral History Project (JAOHP) of the Oral History Program (OHP) at California State University, Fullerton (CSUF), an archive of oral history interviews was compiled with World War II residents of the small towns located in close proximity to four U.S. War Relocation Authority (WRA)-administered concentration camps incarcerating evicted Americans of Japanese ancestry—Manzanar and Tule Lake in California, Poston …

Girls’ U.S. Sojourn A ‘Historical Tragedy’

March 22, 2016 • Arthur A. Hansen , Nichi Bei News

Over the years I have been honored to be privy to the transnational stories both of Japanese women who lived in the United States and Japanese American women who resided in Japan. Some were students of mine at California State University, Fullerton (Mariko Yamashita, Chiaru Kawai, and Reiko Katabami), others I interacted with as peers through the Japanese American Council of the Orange County Historical and Cultural Foundation (Yasko Gamo, Masako Hanada, and Yukiko Sato), a few were Japanese American …

The History and Legacy of “Ragtag” Plantation Kids Who Became National Champion Swimmers

March 8, 2016 • Arthur A. Hansen , Nichi Bei News

My favorite southern California bookstore is in Santa Barbara. Although located in a commonplace strip mall on the outskirts of this picturesque, Spanish-themed resort community, Chaucer’s Bookstore is an enchanted place. This is in part owing to its employees, who are not only lovers of people and books, but also dedicated to nurturing a fruitful relationship between them. But this independent bookstore’s enchantment is due as well to the cosmopolitan makeup of its stock, which goes well beyond the standard-issue …

San Jose Japantown ‘Stand(s) on Giants’ Shoulders

Oct. 21, 2015 • Arthur A. Hansen , Nichi Bei News

While perusing this beautiful and bountiful 470-page tome affording its lucky readers a temporal, spatial, and sociocultural journey relative to San Jose’s Japantown, I reflected upon my personal journey regarding this historic place. It was secured by my reading of Stephen Misawa, ed., Beginnings: Japanese Americans in San Jose (1981) and Timothy J. Lukes and Gary Y. Okihiro, Japanese Legacy: Farming and Community Life in California’s Santa Clara Valley (1985). It was humanized by my oral history fieldwork with Kibei …

‘Consequential’ and ‘Transformative’ Study of Crystal City’s WWII Incarceration

Sept. 22, 2015 • Arthur A. Hansen , Nichi Bei News

During World War II there existed eight Department of Justice-administered internment camps. Three states had a single facility: Montana (Fort Missoula Internment Camp); North Dakota (Fort Lincoln Internment Camp); and Idaho (Kooskia Internment Camp). Each are represented by a book: Carol Van Valkenburg, An Alien Place: The Fort Missoula, Montana, Detention Camp 1941-1944 (1996); John Christgau, Enemies: World War II Alien Internment (1985); and Priscilla Wegars, Imprisoned in Paradise: Japanese Internee Road Workers at the World War II Kooskia Internment …

HATSUMI: One Grandmother’s Journey through the Japanese Canadian Internment

June 23, 2015 • Arthur A. Hansen , Nichi Bei News

The World War II exclusion and detention experience of Japanese Americans is now fairly widely familiar, at least in general terms, to many within the United States. Their knowledge of this particular subject has been broadened and deepened progressively since the 1970s through a veritable media avalanche of historical representations served up by writers, filmmakers, dramatists, artists, oral historians, bloggers, and many others. However, it is quite apparent that this development has not occurred―even for Japanese Americans―with respect to the …

The ‘Invented Fiction’ of the Model Minority and the Controversy Behind the JA Creed

March 27, 2015 • Arthur A. Hansen , Nichi Bei News

These books by Ellen Wu and Kristin Hass both assess a contested facet of Japanese American studies from a comparative perspective; and both are judiciously conceptualized, skillfully organized, soundly argued, lucidly written, and bountifully documented. Fortuitously, their chronological spans (Wu, 1940s–1960s; Hass, 1982–2004) are sufficiently contiguous to warrant reviewing them jointly. Moreover, by jettisoning their non-Japanese American sections (in Wu, the Chinese American model minority experience; in Hass, three of the four war memorials built in the past three decades …

Exploring the Wartime Kibei-Nisei Struggles

Dec. 26, 2014 • Arthur A. Hansen , Nichi Bei News

“What I have attempted to introduce in (Show Me the Way Home),” writes Takako Day in the preface to her brilliant, bold, highly significant, if rather sprawling book, “are the lives and the struggles of Japanese-speaking Japanese Americans (known as ‘Kibei Nisei,’ a minority within a minority) who survived the tempestuous period of World War II when Japanese was an enemy language.” She then proceeds to say that particularly the “No-No’s” within the Kibei population, owing to prejudice, have been …

Stimulating an Appreciation of America’s Diverse History and Cultures Through Preservation

Dec. 12, 2014 • Arthur A. Hansen , Nichi Bei News

The most fitting way I can think of to begin this review of Mary Adams Urashima’s Historic Wintersburg in Huntington Beach, is to appropriate and slightly modify what the great American poet Walt Whitman said in relation to his most notable poetic volume, Leaves of Grass (1855): “Whoever touches this book touches a (wo)man.” A resident of Orange County’s Huntington Beach and a passionate advocate of historic preservation, the perfervid desire of Urashima to preserve significant historical structures and sites …

A Young Nisei’s Life, Reimagined

Nov. 25, 2014 • Arthur A. Hansen , Nichi Bei News

I knew of Gene Oishi, the Nisei author of Fox Drum Bebop, well before I actually met him. This was because in 1968 he became implicated in a national (even international) cause célèbre for his victimization in a high-profile racist episode. Then a Baltimore Sun reporter, Oishi was slumbering in his seat on a political campaign plane flying from Las Vegas to Los Angeles when a fellow passenger, Republican vice presidential candidate Spiro Agnew, gestured toward him and inquired, “What’s …

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