Descubra a los Nikkei

https://www.discovernikkei.org/es/journal/authors/ito-roy/

Roy T. Ito


Roy "Leroy" Ito nació el 1 de septiembre de 1929 en Los Ángeles, California. En abril de 1942, él y su familia fueron evacuados y enviados al Centro de Asamblea de Santa Anita, Arcadia, California y, ese mismo año, al Centro de Reubicación de Amache, Granada, Colorado. Al regresar a Los Ángeles en 1945, completó la escuela secundaria y se graduó de UCLA en 1951 y luego recibió una maestría en administración pública de la USC. Trabajó en varios puestos administrativos en el gobierno del condado de Los Ángeles durante 33 años y se jubiló en 1987. Ha trabajado como voluntario en el Museo Nacional Japonés Americano durante varios años recopilando historias orales para varios proyectos de museos, en particular la historia de los japoneses en el Los Ángeles producen industria.

Actualizado en diciembre de 2008


Historias de Este Autor

The Summer I Grew Up - Part 2

25 de diciembre de 2008 • Roy T. Ito

>> Part 1After a few days, I went to the Social Security office to obtain a Social Security card because I had learned that you had to have a card to be employed and I wanted to work. I obtained the card under an alias because I wasn’t supposed to work on my visitor’s pass from camp and also I was under age to be working. I chose the name Fred Itano because it was short and easy to remember. …

The Summer I Grew Up - Part 1

24 de diciembre de 2008 • Roy T. Ito

I decided to go over to the Hikawa’s place on the other side of the block about 10:15 in the morning after school let out for the summer. I had been living in Amache since being “relocated” to southeastern Colorado from Santa Anita Assembly Center, California three years earlier. A lot had changed in three years. As a 13 year old, everything was new and different. Having come from a white middle class neighborhood in West Central Los Angeles, I …

Naotaro and Tsuruko, My Issei Parents - Part 3

6 de diciembre de 2008 • Roy T. Ito

>> Part 2In the morning of Sunday, December 7, 1941, the family heard radio reports of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor but went about carrying on as usual not realizing what profound effect this event would have on their lives. Not knowing what else to do, Emi and Takeshi walked to the movie theatre at Washington Boulevard and Vermont Avenue to see the afternoon show. When they returned, the family was about ready to have dinner. After dinner, Hiroshi, …

Naotaro and Tsuruko, My Issei Parents - Part 2

28 de noviembre de 2008 • Roy T. Ito

>> Part 1In the years following, the couple lived very frugally and carefully saved practically every dollar they earned, hoping for a good business opportunity. Naotaro worked as a cook at Booz Brothers Cafeteria on Hill Street and Third. Also working there were Matsushi Naruse and Senenmon Tsunekawa both men also of Aiichi Prefecture and equally anxious to start a business. Noticing the volume of business at Grand Central Market which was adjacent to Booz Brothers, all three men leased …

Naotaro and Tsuruko, My Issei Parents - Part 1

21 de noviembre de 2008 • Roy T. Ito

Naotaro Ito was born in 1886 as a second son to a rice farming family in Kitsuneji, a tiny rural hamlet in Aiichi Prefecture, near Nagoya, Japan. He received a basic elementary education then was sent to a bicycle shop merchant to serve as an apprentice in his early teens since only the eldest son was slated to inherit the farm, according to long standing custom (primogeniture). At the age of eighteen, circa 1904, he decided to immigrate to America …

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