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https://www.discovernikkei.org/en/interviews/clips/466/

Ring name: "Yamato Damashi"

And I’m also flattered the my nickname is “Yamato Damashi,” which means “Japanese spirit.” Lot of people portrayed it as a samurai spirit because it was a word that was used back in the Edo-jidai, which is the samurai days. And it is a very, very great word, subarashi word. [It’s] almost a word so good that I feel like I’m not doing the word justice, me equaling yamato damashi. So to me, they not only took me under, they slammed me—I didn’t choose that word. I didn’t pick that word. I didn’t even know what the word meant at first. But the mass komi (mass communication), the press, are the ones who slammed me with that word, saying that you equal yamato damashi. You have more yamato damashi than Japanese people themselves. And there’s some articles that say that “Enson is more Japanese than Japanese,” which is really flattering for me.


Finding Home (film) identity

Date: October 14, 2003

Location: Saitama, Japan

Interviewer: Art Nomura

Contributed by: Art Nomura, Finding Home.

Interviewee Bio

Enson Inoue was born and raised in Hawai`i and attended college there for 3 years studying psychology. At age 23, he went to Japan to play racquetball in a two-week tournament without any intention of living there. He won the tournament and then stayed for 3 months to give racquetball seminars. Thereafter, he continued to live in Japan, intending to return to Hawai`i in a year. Enson, however, decided to stay for still another year, teaching English and running his brother’s racquetball company in Japan. He then became a boxer and gave up racquetball. At the time of the interview in Fall 2003, Enson had lived in Japan for thirteen and a half years and had not been back to Hawai`i for six years. Now he is a professional fighter with the ring name “Yamato Damashii (Japanese Spirit or Samurai Spirit).” As for his identity, he feels that although he is an American, his home is Japan. (October 14, 2003)

Roy H. Matsumoto
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Mixed emotions after declaration of war on Japan

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Nosuke Akiyama
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Identifies as Japanese, but home is San Francisco

Shishimai (Lion dance) and Taiko player with San Francisco Taiko Dojo.

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Richard Kosaki
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Growing up in Waikiki

(b. 1924) Political scientist, educator, and administrator from Hawai`i

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Roger Shimomura
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Depicting issues of ethnic identity through childhood artwork

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Frank Yamasaki
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Starting over after the war: denial of all things Japanese

(b. 1923) Nisei from Washington. Resisted draft during WWII.

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Frank Yamasaki
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Have compassion for all of humanity

(b. 1923) Nisei from Washington. Resisted draft during WWII.

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Frank Yamasaki
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Thoughts on post-9/11 atmosphere: what it means to be American

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Sam Naito
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Growing up outside of Portland’s Japanese community

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Kenny Endo
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Internship on a Native American reservation in Arizona

(b.1952) Master drummer, artistic director of the Taiko Center of the Pacific

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Seiichi Tanaka
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Differences between American-born Japanese and Japanese from Japan

(b.1943) Shin-issei grand master of taiko; founded San Francisco Taiko Dojo in 1968.

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Seiichi Tanaka
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Differences between American and Japanese taiko

(b.1943) Shin-issei grand master of taiko; founded San Francisco Taiko Dojo in 1968.

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Kip Fulbeck
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Early consciousness of identity

(b. 1965) filmmaker and artist

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Kip Fulbeck
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Finding parallels through art

(b. 1965) filmmaker and artist

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Kip Fulbeck
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Refusing to use a Chinese name to identify as Asian American

(b. 1965) filmmaker and artist

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Kip Fulbeck
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The Hapa Project

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