Descubra a los Nikkei

https://www.discovernikkei.org/es/interviews/clips/1701/

Camp stories impact on her career

When I was growing up I never heard about it. Back in the 50s and 60s it was something to be ashamed of. And, but it’s interesting because in church all the other Nisei who had been in camp, they would do like skits and things where they would have ‘Topaz’ on the back and they really made it sound to to the children that it really was not a bad thing. And, we were just fine, and we were with our friends there, and it was okay and it wasn’t until really much later that my parents opened up and talked about what a horrible experience it was.

So, even though we didn’t hear about it when I was really little, as we got got older and especially as the Asian American awareness movement started, and then we started to hear about the experience and it was just amazing, to me, as a young woman to think about having my parents just told you’re leaving, you can carry a duffle bag with your things in it, and you’re gonna go to some godforsaken place in the desert. And it has sort of a affected the way that I look at life, the way I look at government, and the way that I look at the law and how it is as a judge, now, being a Japanese American judge, to me means this will never happen again to our people, and it should mean that it won’t happen to anybody else either. I gotta-- wipe that [tear] away…


emociones gobiernos vergüenza Segunda Guerra Mundial campos de la Segunda Guerra Mundial

Fecha: July 11, 2019

Zona: California, US

Entrevista: Kayla Tanaka

País: Watase Media Arts Center, Japanese American National Museum; Japanese American Bar Association

Entrevista

La juez Holly J. Fujie es una juez sansei en el Tribunal Superior del condado de Los Ángeles en California desde 2012. Creció en West Oakland, California, en un vecindario diverso. Sus padres fueron encarcelados cuando eran niños durante la Segunda Guerra Mundial, pero no compartieron sus experiencias con ella hasta que creció. Esto afectó su punto de vista sobre las leyes y el gobierno y la motivó a seguir una carrera como abogada y luego como juez.

Como abogada, se involucró con varias asociaciones de abogados de minorías, incluyendo el Colegio de abogados japonés-americanos y programas de tutoría. Fue la primera presidenta asiática-estadounidense del Colegio de abogados de California en 2008. (Julio de 2019)

Naganuma,Kazumu

Su hermana Kiyo fue como una segunda madre para él.

(n. 1942) Japonés peruano encarcelado en Crystal City

Yamamoto,Mia

Impacto de su padre

(n. 1943) Abogado transgénero japonés-estadounidense