Long-Overdue Reparations for African Americans

Long-Overdue Reparations for African Americans

Long-Overdue Reparations for African Americans: Why Japanese Americans and AAPI’s Should Care – Saturday, Feb 10, 2 to 4 pm (Hybrid)

 Don Tamaki, who served on the 9-member California Reparations Task Force, will make the case that the racial pathology that resulted in the incarceration of 120,000 Japanese Americans has its origins in the cultural values, policies, and laws that propped up slavery and its aftermath. Four months after the murder of George Floyd on May 25, 2020, which triggered the largest protests in U.S. history, the California Legislature passed AB 3121 creating the Task Force to Study and Develop Reparation Proposals for African Americans.

 The Task Force convened in June of 2021, and on June 29, 2023 its ground-breaking 1,100 page Final Report was presented to the Legislature.  The Final Report traces the harm of 246 years of slavery, 90 years of racial segregation after slavery ended, and decades more of continuing discrimination—resulting in today’s outcomes.  

 “California’s history is rife with instances of how anti-Black animus so easily morphed to target other people of color too. Decades after California passed Fugitive Slave Laws and adopted Jim Crow policies, the rounding up of Japanese American families was so normal as to be beyond question.”  Don Tamaki is a Senior Counsel at Minami Tamaki LLP, and participated on the legal team that reopened Korematsu v. the United States. 

Co-presented by Friends of Topaz Museum. RSVP at http://tinyurl.com/long-overdue

Pictures of Belonging: Miki Hayakawa, Hisako Hibi and Mine Okubo

Pictures of Belonging: Miki Hayakawa, Hisako Hibi and Mine Okubo

Pictures of Belonging: Miki Hayakawa, Hisako Hibi and Mine Okubo

Art Talk by scholar ShiPu Wang – Saturday, March 2, 2 pm (In-person only)

Pictures of Belonging brings together over ninety works by three pioneering Japanese American artists from the pre–World War II era. Despite long careers and critical acclaim, Miki Hayakawa, Hisako Hibi, and Miné Okubo have largely been overlooked in traditional American art history. This groundbreaking exhibition reintroduces their work and explores their deep connections with each other for the first time. The traveling exhibition will begin at the Utah Museum of Fine Arts (Feb-June 2024), Smithsonian American Art Museum (Nov 2024-Aug 2025) and will follow at several other sites. 

Curator and scholar Dr. ShiPu Wang returns to J-Sei to talk about the new exhibit he has curated. He is the Coats Endowed Chair in the Arts and Professor of Art History and Visual Culture at the University of California, Merced, and Commissioner of the Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery. Pictures of Belonging: Miki Hayakawa, Hisako Hibi, and Miné Okubo, co-published by the Japanese American National Museum and the University of California Press, will be available for purchase for $50. 

Co-presented by Friends of Topaz Museum. RSVP at http://tinyurl.com/pictures-of-belonging

I Would Meet You Anywhere by Susan Kiyo Ito

I Would Meet You Anywhere by Susan Kiyo Ito

I Would Meet You Anywhere – A Book Talk with Susan Kiyo Ito

 

Saturday, March 30, 2 pm (in-person)

Growing up with adoptive nisei parents, Susan Kiyo Ito knew only that her birth mother was Japanese American and her father white. But finding and meeting her birth mother in her early twenties was only the beginning of her search for answers, history, and identity. Though the two share a physical likeness, an affinity for ice cream, and a relationship that sometimes even feels familial, there is an ever-present tension between them, as a decades-long tug-of-war pits her birth mother’s desire for anonymity against Ito’s need to know her origins, to see and be seen.

Along the way, Ito grapples with her own reproductive choices, the legacy of the Japanese American incarceration experience during World War II, and the true meaning of family.

“A brave, compassionate, and necessary memoir that bears witness to how we let go, when we hold on, and how families are not just born but chosen.”

— Rahna Reiko Rizzuto, author of Hiroshima in the Morning

Susan Kiyo Ito is the co-editor of the literary anthology A Ghost at Heart’s Edge: Stories and Poems of Adoption. Her work has appeared in numerous literary magazines and anthologies. A MacDowell Fellow, she has also been awarded residencies at the Mesa Refuge, Hedgebrook, and Blue Mountain Center. She has performed her solo show, The Ice Cream Gene, around the US and adapted Untold Stories: Life, Love, and Reproduction for the theater. She writes and teaches in the Bay Area.

Join us for a book reading, an engaging conversation with writer and artist Patricia Wakida, and tea.  Book sales and signing will follow.  Hardcover, Retail: $24.95

RSVP for free event. Limited space available.

Book Launch: The Poet and the Silk Girl by Satsuki Ina

Book Launch: The Poet and the Silk Girl by Satsuki Ina

Book Launch: The Poet and the Silk Girl, a memoir by Satsuki Ina

Sunday, March 24, 2 pm (Hybrid)

The Poet and the Silk Girl follows the harrowing journey of the Ina family through wartime race-based incarceration and traces the echoes of trauma across generations. Join us for this book launch with filmmaker, activist, and psychotherapist Satsuki Ina in conversation with her son cartoonist and illustrator Adrian Tomine.

The Poet and the Silk Girl illustrates through one family’s saga the generational struggle of Japanese Americans who resisted racist oppression, fought for the restoration of their rights, and clung to their full humanity in the face of adversity.

In 1942 newlyweds Itaru and Shizuko Ina were settling into married life when the United States government upended their world. They were forcibly removed from their home and incarcerated in wartime American concentration camps solely on account of their Japanese ancestry. When the Inas, under duress, renounced their American citizenship, the War Department branded them enemy aliens and scattered their family across the U.S. interior.

Born to Itaru and Shizuko during their imprisonment, psychotherapist and activist Satsuki Ina weaves their story together in this moving mosaic. Through diary entries, photographs, clandestine letters, and heart-wrenching haiku, she reveals how this intrepid young couple navigated life, love, loss, and loyalty tests in the welter of World War II-era hysteria.

With psychological insight, Ina excavates the unmentionable, recovering a chronicle of resilience amidst one of the severest blows to American civil liberties. As she traces the legacies of trauma, she connects her family’s ordeal to modern-day mass incarceration at the U.S.-Mexico border. Lyrical and gripping, this cautionary tale implores us to prevent the repetition of atrocity, pairing healing and protest with galvanizing power.

Renowned cartoonist, Adrian Tomine, son of the author will join the event to be in conversation with his mother and together explore the intergenerational impact of the family’s wartime experience on identity and literary expression. Adrian published his comic book series at the age of 16, and he has since illustrated highly touted covers for The New Yorker magazine. His graphic novel Shortcomings, named a New York Times Notable Books of the year, was adapted for film and released in 2023.

“A powerful quilt work of memory, The Poet and the Silk Girl sutures the traumatic wounds of Japanese American incarceration with care for the past and struggle for the future.”Andrew Leong, author of Lament in the Night

Published by Heyday Books, Hardcover, 6 x 9, 312 pages

Book sales & signing to follow. Light reception.

RSVP for free event, in-person or online. Limited space available.

 

SPEAKER BIOS

Satsuki Ina is a licensed psychotherapist specializing in community trauma. She helps victims of oppression to claim not only their voice but also their power to transform the systems that have oppressed them. Her activism has included cofounding Tsuru for Solidarity, a nonviolent, direct-action project of Japanese American social justice advocates working to end detention sites. Ina has produced two documentaries about the World War II incarceration of Japanese  Americans, Children of the Camps and From a Silk Cocoon. She has been featured in the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, TIME, Democracy Now! and the documentary And Then They Came for Us. A professor emeritus at California State University, Sacramento, she lives in the San Francisco Bay Area.

 

 

Author photo by Paul Kitagaki, Jr.

Adrian Tomine began self-publishing his comic book series Optic Nerve when he was sixteen, and in 1994 he received an offer to publish from Drawn & Quarterly. His comics have been anthologized in publications such as McSweeney’s, Best American Comics, and Best American Nonrequired Reading. Both his graphic novel Shortcomings and his memoir The Loneliness of the Long-Distance Cartoonist were named New York Times Notable Books of the year. Since 1999, Tomine has been a regular contributor to the New Yorker. He lives in Brooklyn with his wife and daughters.