Material contribuído por Sharony360

Finding Joy in Cuba

Sharon Yamato

It’s hard to imagine anyone traveling to Cuba and coming back unchanged. It’s a place that has withstood the extremes of enormous wealth and poverty, slavery and revolution, and Soviet aid and the U.S. embargo.

The Power of Irei

The Legacy of Resistance: Nimura/Kashiwagi Family at Ireichō

Sharon Yamato


Rediscovering Poston

Sharon Yamato

There’s a familiar adage that when Nisei get together, one of the first questions asked is “What camp were you in?” I suppose it’s almost like asking where you grew up, yet it definitely holds more meaning.

The Power of Irei

Coming Home: My Family’s Journey to Ireichō

Sharon Yamato


The Power of Irei

A Humble Man: 442nd Veteran Hiroshi Kunimura Honored at Ireichō

Sharon Yamato

When Dennis Kunimura suggested to his father, 98-year-old former 442nd Regimental Combat Team (RCT) artilleryman Hiroshi Kunimura, that they drive from their home in Ogden, Utah, to Los Angeles, to mark the names in Ireichō of family members held at both the Salinas Assembly Center and the Poston Concentration Camp, …

The Power of Irei

A Miraculous Family Gathering: Wasuke Hirota’s Mixed-Race Descendants Celebrate at Ireichō

Sharon Yamato


The Power of Irei

Living, Dying, and Passing It On—Alan Nishio Family at Ireichō

Sharon Yamato

As Los Angeles skies began to clear after the first spell of frigid March rain, a three-generation family gathering was being held to mark Ireichō, the book as monument to those incarcerated during WWII. Convening the intimate get-together was a familiar face in the Nikkei community, someone celebrated for his …

The Power of Irei

Remembering Them—Tsuchiya Family Honors Elders Through Ireichō

Sharon Yamato


The Power of Irei

Digging up Ways to Honor Her Ancestors—Kyoko Oda and Ireichō

Sharon Yamato

Sometimes it takes a soft-spoken woman like Kyoko Oda to use her charm to make sure the lives of 125,284 incarcerated Japanese American are not forgotten. Someone gentle on the outside but no less mighty on the inside as she works in multiple capacities calling attention to the lives forever …

The Power of Irei

Ireichō, Kintsugi, and the Transformation of Karma: A Conversation with Project Founder Duncan Ryuken Williams

Sharon Yamato

To craft into a sacred book listing the names of 125,284 people of Japanese ancestry incarcerated at 75 World War II detention sites, it took inspired thought and meticulous research from its brilliant creative team. Led by Buddhist priest Duncan Ryuken Williams of the University of Southern California Shinso Ito Center …

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Informação

I discovered my Nikkei roots very late in life, and for that reason I have been referred to as a born-again Sansei by some of my sarcastic friends. I used to duck when I saw large groups of JA students while I was at UCLA. But long after I graduated college, I started a Los Angeles chapter of the Sansei Legacy Project, a group that was founded to foster our Sansei-ness. It worked! I now love spending my time writing and making films about what it means to be Japanese American.

Interesses sobre os nikkeis

  • histórias comunitárias
  • histórias familiares
  • culinária japonesa/nikkei
  • bairros japoneses
  • taiko

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