Descubra Nikkei

https://www.discovernikkei.org/pt/interviews/clips/1708/

Nisei Parents

Both of my parents are Niseis. They’re second-generation Americans. My father was born in Bakersfield, California and my mother was in Brawley, California. Both of my parents went back to Japan at a very early age. I guess that it was for education purpose, or whatever. Perhaps their dream of a better life in America didn’t fulfill itself.

My father, at a pretty young age, probably in the early-teens, came back to the United States alone and worked as a house boy in Bakersfield. He grew up there, went to high school, started to work and he was living a pretty happy life, until around age 25. He had a girlfriend and I guess things were getting pretty serious, there until he received a letter from his father, which is my grandfather, saying that, “Hiroji,” that’s his name, “You are now married. Your wife is arriving in San Pedro Harbor. Go pick her up.’ He said it was very difficult for him to tell his girlfriend that now…he is now married and he has to go pick up his wife in San Pedro.

Now I’m not sure whether my father embellished the story or not, but that’s the way he told me, the way he got married. So, he went to San Pedro Harbor and I asked him, I says, “How did you feel when you first saw your bride?” And he says, “Ichiban busaikuna” “busaikuna” means kind of not so good. That's a derogatory word. Then I asked my mother, I said, “Gee, how did you feel when you first saw my father?” And she said, “gakkarishita.” She was greatly disappointed. However they had a wonderful life. Well, I don’t know, maybe not such a wonderful life, but they were married for 50-some odd years until they passed away.They were married in 1935. My older brother Kenny was born in 1936, and I was born in 1938.


casamentos arranjados famílias gerações Nipo-americanos casamentos Nisei pais

Data: September 3, 2019

Localização Geográfica: California, US

Entrevistado: Masako Miki

País: Watase Media Arts Center, Japanese American National Museum

Entrevistados

Howard Kakita nasceu em 1938 em East Los Angeles, Califórnia. Sua família o levou para o Japão em 1940. Seus pais e o irmão mais novo voltaram para os Estados Unidos em 1940 para cuidar dos negócios da família, mas Howard e um irmão mais velho, Kenny, ficaram no Japão.

Quando a guerra eclodiu, sua família nos EUA foi encarcerada em Poston, AZ. Em 6 de agosto de 1945, a bomba atômica foi lançada em Hiroshima. Howard estava a 1,3km do hipocentro e sobreviveu. Ele e Kenny voltaram para os EUA e reuniram-se com sua família em 1948.

Howard seguiu carreira em Engenharia da Computação. Após sua aposentadoria, ingressou na American Society Hiroshima-Nagasaki Survivors Bomb Atomic (ASA) e tem compartilhado ativamente sua experiência com a bomba atômica. (Setembro de 2019)

Bashi,Kishi

His Shin-Issei parents

(n. 1975) Músico, compositor e autor musical

Yamashiro,Michelle

Parents identification as Peruvian Okinawan

Norte-americana Okinawana, cujos pais são peruanos

Yamashiro,Michelle

Okinawan cultural appreciation

Norte-americana Okinawana, cujos pais são peruanos

Yamashiro,Michelle

Working together in Okinawa using three languages

Norte-americana Okinawana, cujos pais são peruanos

Wasserman,Fumiko Hachiya

Her motto came from her mother

Juíza Sansei do Tribunal Superior do Condado de Los Angeles na Califórnia

Yamamoto,Mia

A discriminação racial a preparou para se tornar a primeira advogada transgênero

(n. 1943) advogado transgênero nipo-americano

Sakata,Reiko T.

Casamento dos Pais

(n. 1939) uma mulher de negócios cuja família se mudou voluntariamente para Salt Lake City, em Utah, durante a guerra.