Interviews
Mochitsuki tradition
Right after the war, people didn’t have any place to live. And so therefore we had a little community there of our relatives who lived in the barn, in the basement, in the bedroom. We had about seven families living together on the ranch right where you saw…and of course we had our own mochitsuki we started back in 1945. One of my cousins was from Japan and as a result he knew how to do it. My father followed suit. We had every moochitsuki period. We would do our own moochitsuki.
We still do it now. The spirit isn’t there anymore because the next generation, they don’t relate to the Japanese-ness of mochitsuki, they just have an open house. That’s the unfortunate thing about it. We have lost the spirit of the pounding of the rice and the sacredness of the rice and the seiro and putting the mochi to the altar and things like that. A lot of that is being lost. We still go through the motion of having the mochitsuki right now. So that’s how that is. We are stubbornly still continuing that.
Date: March 22, 2018
Location: California, US
Interviewer: John Esaki
Contributed by: Watase Media Arts Center, Japanese American National Museum
Explore More Videos
Integrating As First-Generation Japanese-Peruvian (Japanese)
(b. 1962) Japanese restaurant owner and chef in Peru
The Nikkei community that didn't support Former President Fujimori's election (Japanese)
(b. 1948) Executive Director of Amano Museum
The differences in attitude of pre-war and post war in terms of the President Fujimori presidency (Japanese)
(b. 1948) Executive Director of Amano Museum
President Fujimori as elected by Peru's general public (Japanese)
(b. 1948) Executive Director of Amano Museum
The Nikkei community's view toward Former President Fujimori (Japanese)
(b. 1948) Executive Director of Amano Museum
Japanese Culture and the crafting Sushi in the States (Japanese)
(n. 1962) Sushi Chef
The Grand Duty left to the Issei (Japanese)
(b. 1943) Paraguayan Ambassador to Japan
How I became a volunteer at the International Association of Yamato (Spanish)
Japanese Peruvian in Japan
Several ways to participate and integrate into Japanese society (Spanish)
Japanese Peruvian in Japan
How he got into politics
(b. 1931) U.S. Former Secretary of Transportation
Citizen participation
(b. 1931) U.S. Former Secretary of Transportation
Opening Up Shop in Little Tokyo
(b. 1942) The first Asian American woman judge
JABA: On Engaging Students and Community
(b. 1942) The first Asian American woman judge
On Justice Todd’s Involvement with the Japanese American Cultural and Community Center
(b. 1942) The first Asian American woman judge