Tour Alameda’s Historic Japantown

Tour Alameda’s Historic Japantown

J-Sei Visit Alameda’s Historic Japantown

Friday, May 26th
10 am to 2 pm


Join us for a walking tour of Alameda’s Historic Japantown.  See the newly installed Tonarigumi historic markers, hear the stories of the past, and discover what transpired during the 100-year + history. Then, visit “Overflowing with Hope: the Hidden History of the Japanese in Alameda”, a photo exhibit at the Alameda Public Library.

Tonarigumi – Alameda’s Historic Japantown Neighborhood is a project to raise awareness and reclaim the memories of the past, to remember the Issei elders and all they endured, and to be uplifted by the strength and resilience of a community.  Four markers share a forgotten history of Alameda’s Japantown and impart a lesson from the past to embrace diversity and advocate civil liberties for all people.  The marker project is  a collaboration between Rhythmic Cultural Works, the Buddhist Temple of Alameda, Buena Vista UMC, and the City of Alameda Free Library.

RSVP to jill@j-sei.org   Carpools will be coordinated. A bento lunch can be pre-ordered.

Photo: Kaz Naganuma, Jo Takata and Judy Furuichi
 

Children’s Day Exhbit at J-Sei

Children’s Day Exhbit at J-Sei

Children’s Day Exhibit

May 4 – June 6

During the post-war years, Children’s Day became a national holiday of Japan.  Formerly celebrated as Boy’s Day on May 5th, the holiday was renamed and refocused in 1948 to also honor the role of Mothers, to shift away from Japan’s patriarchal past and move toward peace and equality.

Celebrate our children and mothers.  Our Children’s Day exhibit is on loan from the Berkeley Buddhist Temple on behalf of Andrew Shepherd, and from Margaret and Dennis Lee, and Mitsuko Umemoto.

 

                        

                     

 

J-Sei Congegate Dining Re-Opens

J-Sei Congegate Dining Re-Opens

 

J-Sei Nutrition Program Update

We are thrilled to announce that after 3 long years, we have reopened our onsite dining. We welcome you back to enjoy a delicious and nutritious lunch in a congregate setting.  Much has changed since we last served meals onsite so to ease back in, we will be offering dining bi-weekly.

Thursdays, May 4, 18, June 1, 15, and 29
11:30 am to 12:30 pm

Reservations are required.
Limited seating. Transportation may be available.

RSVP to Kathleen Wong at kathleen@j-sei.org or 510-654-4000 ext 105

Seen and Unseen, a book talk with Elizabeth Partridge

Seen and Unseen, a book talk with Elizabeth Partridge

 Seen and Unseen: What Dorothea Lange, Toyo Miyatake and Ansel Adams’s Photographs Reveal About the Japanese American Incarceration

Saturday, May 6, 3 pm

Elizabeth Partridge, award-winning children’s book author, will discuss her new non-fiction book, “Seen and Unseen,” illustrated by Lauren Tamaki. “Seen and Unseen” received the most distinguished informational book for children in 2022 by the ALA, as well as the 2023 Bologna Children’s Award for Photography.  Presented by Friends of Topaz Museum.

RSVP for in-person or online to jill@j-sei.org

About the Book by author Elizabeth Partridge

Three months after Japan attached Pearl Harbor in 1941, US President Franklin D. Roosevelt ordered the incarceration of all Japanese and Japanese Americans living on the West Coast of the United States. Families, teachers, farm workers—all were ordered to leave behind their homes, their businesses, and everything they owned. Japanese and Japanese Americans were forced to live under hostile conditions in incarceration camps, their futures uncertain.

Three photographers set out to document life at Manzanar, an incarceration camp in the California desert: Toyo Miyatake, Dorothea Lange, and Ansel Adams.

Growing up, I knew that my godmother, Dorothea Lange, had photographed the Japanese American incarceration during WWll, and was horrified by the suspension of civil liberties for the Japanese Americans. I also learned Ansel Adams had photographed the incarceration. Though they were good friends, Dorothea always thought he “didn’t get it.” That intrigued me. I decided to write a book on the incarceration and use both their photographs. I knew we’d also need illustrations to fill in what they were forbidden to photograph (Dorothea) and what they chose not to photograph (Ansel).

As I began researching, I quickly discovered that one of the prisoners, Toyo Miyatake, had smuggled in a camera lens and a film holder. Friends made him the camera body in the woodshop. Toyo later devised an intricate system of smuggling film into the camp. He took several photographs of conditions that Dorothea and Ansel were not able to, as well as documenting everyday life in the camp which provide an intimate, insider-view.

As Toyo told his son while they were in Manzanar, “I have to record everything. This sort of thing should never happen again.”

I wrote this book to bring to light to the injustice of the Japanese American incarceration. We need to know our real American history, and make sure we don’t repeat our earlier, terrible civil rights violations. It’s been made vividly clear in the last few years that our democracy depends on all of us.

Book Event: Secret Harvests

Book Event: Secret Harvests

SAVE THE DATE

Bay Area Book Event
Saturday, April 8th, 1 pm
J-Sei, 1285 66th Street, Emeryville

SECRET HARVESTS

A Hidden Story of Separation
and the Resilience of a Family Farm

Every family has secrets.

A Japanese American family, separated by racism and the discrimination of people
with developmental disabilities, are reunited seventy years later, returning to their roots on a farm and bound by secrets.

https://www.secretharvestsbook.com/

Meet award-winning sansei author David Mas Masumoto

and yonsei illustrator Patricia Wakida

Join us in conversation in-person or online,

moderated by former newscaster Wendy Tokuda.

Hear the story. Buy a book. Celebrate Secret Harvests!

RSVP to jill@j-sei.org with “secret harvests” in the memo.

A special exhibit of artwork from Secret Harvests by Patricia Wakida will be on view from April 8 – 30th, gallery hours MTuThFr 1 to 4 pm, and by appointment.

Patricia Wakida (illustrator) is a writer, artist and bibliophile. Her work spans many mediums and genres: from book editing and essay writing, to oral histories and printing: linoleum blocks, wood and metal type, and hundred year old letterpresses.

David Mas Masumoto (author) is an award-winning author and organic farmer (peaches, apricots, nectarines and grapes for raisins) living and working in the Central Valley of California. He has written 12 books including Epitaph for a Peach, Changing Season, Wisdom of the Last Farmer and more.

About the Book

Organic peach and raising farmer David Mas Masumoto’s new memoir follows a journey of discovering a “lost” aunt, who was separated from the family due to racism and  discrimination against the disabled. Aunt Shizuko had both mental and physical disabilities due to childhood meningitis. In 1942, when Executive Order 9066 was signed, authorizing the mass removal of all persons of Japanese descent off of the West Coast of the United    States, her parents had to make the excrutiating decision between taking her with them into the WWII concentration camp at Gila River, Arizona, or to place her as a “ward” of the state in an institution.

Family lore had convinced them that Aunt Shizuko had eventually died, but seventy years later, she was found alive and living a few miles from our family farm. How did she survive? Why was she kept hidden? How did both shame and resilience empower my family to forge forward in a land that did not want them? In this new memoir, Masumoto is haunted by these questions and driven to explore his own identity and the meaning of family— specially as farmers tied to the land—uncovering stories that binds him to a sense of history buried in the earth that he works and a sense of place that defines his community.

Sansei writer Masumoto teamed up with yonsei artist Patricia Wakida for this exploration of community and family secrets.