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What It Means to Be Told “You Represent Your People”

I met a woman from Indiana who’d come up to Michigan for the training, a white woman from rural Indiana. And when we said goodbye at the end of it, she said to me, “Wendy, you’re my very first Oriental. And I want you to know, you represent your people so well.”

And there again was an example of someone who, with very good intentions, didn’t realize, I mean first of all, the word Oriental makes us cringe. But the idea that I was the representative of an entire race of people and that she was going to form her opinion based on me. Thank goodness she had a good opinion of me because she was going to judge all other Asian people by her experience with me.


ethnicity group identity identity prejudices stereotypes

Date: Jul 3, 2025

Location: California, US

Interviewer: Kaori Nemoto

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

Interviewee Bio

Born in 1950 to Nisei parents, Wendy Shiba grew up in the all-White suburb of Westlake, Ohio. Despite the lack of representation, Shiba pursued higher education as a first generation and first woman in her family to do so. After graduating Temple Law School at the top of her class, Shiba went on to work in several prestigious positions, including as a law clerk to California Supreme Court Associate Justice Stanley Mosk, a law professor, a Big Law corporate attorney, and a C-suite executive for a Fortune 500 company.

Through her professional experiences, Shiba developed a passion for promoting allyship, DEI, and mentorship within the workplace and in the community. She served as NAPABA president from 2012 through 2013 and was a board member for the Japanese American National Museum since 2009.

Shiba today advocates for marginalized communities as chair for the ABA’s Center for Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion. She hopes young people will consider how to embody allyship for communities that are especially at risk for discrimination and face constant threats to their civil liberties today. (September 2025)

 

*This interview was conducted as part of the Japanese American Bar Association (JABA) Legacy Project by the Nikkei Community Internship (NCI) Program intern co-hosted by JABA and the Japanese American National Museum each summer.

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