Discover Nikkei

https://www.discovernikkei.org/en/interviews/clips/1044/

Never married

Never thought of marrying, I was too busy to think about it. Really, I was busy night and day. If I were married I couldn’t have done what I did in medicine. And I didn’t meet anyone that I thought enough to give medicine up. I really never…if I come home at two in the morning – no one said anything. If I didn’t come home at all, it was all right too. I didn’t have to do any cooking except for myself and so no, I couldn’t live married where I had to do certain things, you know. In fact my practice was such that I couldn’t afford to. I had to give up part of my practice if I were to get married, so I mean I just couldn’t…I didn’t like that idea, cause I preferred my practice to anyone I’ve ever met, you know.


marriages medicine

Date: March 31, 2005

Location: California, US

Interviewer: Gwenn M. Jensen

Contributed by: Watase Media Arts Center, Japanese American National Museum

Interviewee Bio

Dr. Sakaye Shigekawa was born January 6, 1913 in South Pasadena, California. When she was a child, her father was hospitalized from double pneumonia and while visiting him, she got acquainted with the doctors and nurses and decided then to become a doctor. After studying premed at USC, she was accepted to Stritch Loyola Medical School and was only 1 of 4 women in her class. She persevered through medical school despite sex discrimination from instructors and fellow students and began practicing medicine in the Los Angeles area.

She was one of the first to be incarcerated at the Santa Anita Race Track on March 1, 1942. She was invited to join Dr. Norman Kobayashi and Dr. Fred Fujikawa treating patients while there which helped her overcome the bitterness and depression she was in. At first she was only allowed to treat skin conditions, but after a while she asked to be able to do other things and began to do obstetrics and other parts of medicine.

After the war she continued to practice medicine and eventually opened up her own practice, which she continues. In her thirty-nine years of obstetrics practice, she calculates that she delivered over twenty thousand babies and never lost a mother. She passed away on October 18, 2013 at age 100.  (April 2020)

Kakita,Howard

On telling his wife he had radiation sickness and his son’s cancer

(b. 1938) Japanese American. Hiroshima atomic bomb survivor