Stuff contributed by Greg
Stepping over the Color Line: Nikkei at Historically Black Colleges and Universities
Greg Robinson
One pillar of American education is the network of Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU). Founded to give free blacks access to higher education in the century following Emancipation, a period when African American students remained largely excluded from mainstream universities, these institutions sprang up all through the South and …
Ken Magazine and Prewar anti-Japanese Propaganda
Greg Robinson
One of the larger causes of Executive Order 9066, and the U.S. government’s wartime confinement of Japanese Americans, can be found in the widespread expressions of race-based fear and suspicion against West Coast Issei and Nisei in the years before Pearl Harbor. During these years hate merchants, both on the …
Paul Takagi: A fearless Advocate
Greg Robinson
Many notable events of 1969—the first landing on the Moon, the Woodstock Rock Festival, the Stonewall Riots, and the New York Mets World Series victory, among others—have been the subject of widespread commemoration lately, as their respective 50th anniversaries dawn and people take stock of the diverse legacies of that monumental …
Teru Shimada - a Japanese American Pioneer in Hollywood - Part 1
Greg Robinson
One of the great leading men of motion picture history was Sessue Hayakawa, whose magnetic good looks and style captivated audiences around the world. Hayakawa and his wife Tsuru Aoki were top stars in Hollywood during the silent film era. However, with the coming of sound film, their careers declined. …
Brother Theophane Walsh
Greg Robinson, Jonathan van Harmelen
In November 2018, the New York Times wrote an article highlighting the work of Father Ruskin Piedra, the priest of the church Our Lady of Perpetual Help in New York City.1 At 84, he busies himself with supporting litigation on behalf of immigrants - some from his own parish - …
Ways and Means: The Woman Behind The Moved-Outers
Greg Robinson
In the face of the tragic events of official confinement and loss that Japanese Americans experienced during World War II, there were numerous non-Japanese who found ways to help Issei and Nisei, or who protested their official treatment. A number of years ago, the Board of Directors of the Military …
The Undiscovered History of Japanese Americans and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints - Part 2
Greg Robinson, Christian Heimburger
Read Part 1 >>
The Undiscovered History of Japanese Americans and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints - Part 1
Greg Robinson, Christian Heimburger
A rather unsuspected but significant force in Japanese American life has been the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (whose members are commonly known as Latter-day Saints or Mormons—the latter name derives from the Book of Mormon, the Church’s key scriptural text).