Descubra a los Nikkei

https://www.discovernikkei.org/es/interviews/clips/1288/

Larry designing chairs in the camp

Next morning when we got up from these iron beds, on this old terrible mattress, Lawrence said, "Last night when we went to stuff these mattresses, I noticed there were some crates behind the latrine. I think I could make some chairs for mom and grandma." Lawrence already had conceptualized how he could make those into these really wonderful chairs.

So he kept one box pretty much in its regular shape but he took the top solid area out and lowered that to make that a seat then on the second box, he took one of the sides and he reclined it on the seat to make a reclining back. The three sides become the three sides of the chair and he took two heavier boards and made armrests. So it really was a perfect chair, a lounge chair almost, it was a perfect chair for a short person.

My mother and grandmother were under five feet and they just loved it. And my grandmother, I don’t know whether she had those cushions; she had brought them with her, because she always had zabutons. So she might have stuffed them in her duffle bag; we each came with a duffle bag. I don’t know, but anyway, she had those cushions that she put on there.

I still remember them praising those chairs and then my grandmother said, "Well, this isn’t such a bad place after all," she said, "I’m grateful." And she said, "And then the water is good here, it tastes good and we have nice water all the year round so what more could you ask for? We should be grateful that we have that," she said, "Now that I have the chair," she said, "I'm a very content obaasan."

I still remember my grandmother saying that and my mother was very happy. And well word spread like wildflower, people heard about these chairs and there was a run on toilet boxes. And it was a long time before we had more than two chairs.


manualidades Larry Shinoda campos de la Segunda Guerra Mundial

Fecha: September 9, 2011

Zona: California, US

Entrevista: John Esaki

País: Watase Media Arts Center, Japanese American National Museum

Entrevista

Grace Aiko (Shinoda) Nakamura tenía 15 años cuando el presidente Franklin D. Roosevelt firmó la Orden Ejecutiva 9066. El 16 de mayo de 1942, su familia, compuesta por siete personas, tuvo que abordar un tren en la Estación Unión en el centro de Los Ángeles con destino al campo de concentración Manzanar en California. 

En Manzanar, el hermano menor de Grace, Larry, diseñó para su madre y su abuela dos sillas hechas de jabas de madera reciclada usadas como inodoros, que incluían los reposabrazos y respaldos abatibles. Se convirtieron en la “sensación” del campo, atrayendo a muchos admiradores. Años después, Larry se convirtió en un diseñador de fama internacional cuyos diseños para el Corvette Sting Ray de 1963 y el Mustang Boss 429 siguen siendo sumamente admirados. 

En la primavera de 1944, Grace, Larry y su madre abandonaron Manzanar en un bus y se mudaron a Grand Junction, Colorado. El Proyecto de Reubicación de Estudiantes Japoneses Americanos del Servicio Americano de los Amigos de los Cuáqueros otorgó a Grace una beca para estudiar en la Universidad de Redlands, convirtiéndose así en la primera estudiante universitaria americana japonesa en regresar a California, graduándose con honores. Un día después de su graduación, comenzó su carrera docente en el Distrito Escolar de Pasadena, convirtiéndose en la primera americana japonesa en ser contratada. Finalmente, obtuvo dos Maestrías y continúo la carrera de Educación y Bellas Artes. Está casada con Yosh Nakamura, un profesor universitario de arte con quien tiene tres hijos. (Septiembre de 2012)

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