Discover Nikkei

https://www.discovernikkei.org/en/interviews/clips/1749/

Leaving children in daycare all day to work (Japanese)

(Japanese) There was a place where we could leave our children. They looked after our children while we worked on the plantation. I would leave my kids there at 4:30 in the morning, and we had to get to work at around 5. So we left home when it was still dark. And after we finished at 4:30, we would go back to pick up our kids.


generations Hawaii immigrants immigration Issei Japan migration United States

Date: June and July, 1991

Location: California, US

Interviewer: Robert Nakamura, Karen Ishizuka

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

Interviewee Bio

Haruo Kasahara was born in 1900 in Japan and left Fukushima-ken for Hawaii in 1919 to join her parents. She recalled being so homesick for Japan, she cried every day. She worked on a plantation in the fields cutting grass and watering the sugar cane for a wage of 55 cents a day.

Mrs. Kasahara was married in 1922. She met her husband by Omiai. He also worked at the plantation. For him, it was his second marriage. His first wife had died and left him with two children. When Mrs. Kasahara married him, his children were in Japan. Mrs. Kasahara gave birth to six children, however two died at very young ages. (July 1991)

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