Discover Nikkei

https://www.discovernikkei.org/en/interviews/clips/640/

Visiting family in Japan

To the end of my term which was the Fall of 1947. During that time I was able to visit my relatives in Fukuoka. I flew down there on military transport and visited first I think my father's side and then visited my mother's side. My grandmother, who must've been about close to 90 years old, and I stayed there. I still remember taking a bath in a furo tub and it was located outside. They heated with wood underneath and that was their bath tub. It was just a piece of metal. I didn’t know how to use it so I just jumped in and nearly burnt my back and my rear. I jumped out, was so hot! I still remember that. I couldn’t forget. Anyway, I stayed there for one night. Next morning I wanted to go over to see my mother’s family, but my grandma said “Don’t do such foolish thing. Just stay here! This is your home!,” she said. She didn’t realize I was just visiting. Went to my mother’s side and the family, I stayed for a couple days and for the first time I heard and learned about my uncle, my mothers youngest brother that he had come to attack Pearl Harbor on that fleet. On the second visit, attack on Wake island, he died in the battle there.


bathing families Japan

Date: May 29, 2006

Location: Hawai`i, US

Interviewer: Akemi Kikumura Yano

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

Interviewee Bio

Francis "FranK" Y. Sogi was born in Lanihau, Kona, on the Big Island of Hawai‘i in 1923, the youngest of five children born to Issei parents who farmed vegetables, bananas and coffee.

Francis began studies at the University of Hawai‘i (UH) in 1941 at 18 years old, and—as required--served in the Reserve Officer Training Corps (R.O.T.C.) to prepare for military service. After the bombing of Pearl Harbor, all R.O.T.C. students were inducted into the Hawai‘i Territorial Guard. However, he was soon discharged as being an “enemy alien,” and he returned to UH to continue his education. Men at UH with knowledge of the Japanese language were being recruited to join the United States Military Intelligence Service, so Francis volunteered and in 1944 was sent to Camp Savage and Fort Snelling, Minnesota, for training.

After serving in Japan, translating documents for the U.S. counterintelligence corps, he once again enrolled at UH in 1947. He completed his studies in 1949 and went on to Fordham Law School in New York City while his wife, Sarah, attended Columbia University. He passed the bar exam in December 1952 and was admitted to the New York state bar. In 1953, Frank was asked to serve at the Tokyo office of the law firm of Hunt, Hill and Betts and represented Fortune 500 companies doing license agreements, joint ventures and investments of all kinds. From 1959 - 1984 he was with Miller Montgomery Spalding & Sogi, and in 1984 he joined Kelley Drye & Warren until his retirement in 1993.

Because of their growing philanthropic interests, Francis and his wife Sarah created the Francis and Sarah Sogi Foundation, a charitable foundation that currently supports the work of several non-profit organizations.

He passed away on November 3, 2011(November 2011)

 

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