Entrevistas
Marriage and Returning to US
In 1948, we were married in a little Methodist Church on the Ginza—just her father, Shizuko Naito, and I guess her father's friends or...there were only a small group of us at the wedding.
And nineteen...we lived in Fujisawa, I worked at NYK building in Tokyo and took the train everyday—commuted—from Fujisawa because her father gave us a room for ourself, which extended to the Japanese garden, it was a beautiful place and had a big pool with Japanese carp and beautiful goldfish and in 1950 I finally got permission to take my wife back to the U.S.
At that time, there were no Orientals allowed, in 1950, in America. So my father went to an alderman, greased his palm—for his connections in Washington—and there they passed a bill, I forget the name of it—the number, 7276 or something like that, that allowed her to come into the United States. And so in 1950, November, we left on the General Mann, it was a transport ship—army transport—and there was a storm just outside of Yokohama—again—in the winter, of course, and it followed us all the way to San Francisco, where we docked. And then we got on a train, and Hamako was very sea-sick and miserable, and we went to Solano Beach, where my aunt had my father buy a small place, so we would have a place to live.
Data: January 26, 2012
Localização Geográfica: California, US
Entrevistado: John Esaki, Yoko Nishimura
País: Watase Media Arts Center, Japanese American National Museum
Explore More Videos
His parents had little hope that he had survived the atomic bomb
(n. 1938) Nipo-americano. Sobrevivente da bomba atômica de Hiroshima
His views on nuclear weapons
(n. 1938) Nipo-americano. Sobrevivente da bomba atômica de Hiroshima
Perda ao partir para Manzanar (Inglês)
Animador nipo-americano da Walt Disney e Hanna Barbera (1925-2007)
Forcibly deported to the U.S. from Peru
(n. 1936) Japonês peruano encarcerado em Crystal City
Stories of Grandfather at a concentration camp in Fusagasuga
(n.1974) Colombiana japonesa que atualmente reside nos Estados Unidos
Her grandfather in a concentration camp in Fusagasuga (Spanish)
(n.1974) Colombiana japonesa que atualmente reside nos Estados Unidos
Family welcomed at Crystal City
(n. 1936) Japonês peruano encarcerado em Crystal City
First meal at Crystal City
(n. 1936) Japonês peruano encarcerado em Crystal City
Pintando murais e placas no exército
(n. 1938) Nipo-peruano encarcerado em Crystal City
Sua irmã Kiyo era como uma segunda mãe para ele
(n. 1942) japonês peruano encarcerado em Crystal City