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Nació en San Juan, Puerto Rico. Su abuelo paterno es Makino Honda Ushida, nacido en 1883, Osaka, Japón, nacido en 1964, San Juan, Puerto Rico. Su bisabuelo paterno es Tadao Honda, nacido en Japón y de ascendencia desconocida. Se cree que Makino Honda emigró de Japón con otros cinco miembros de su familia, incluida su madre, a principios del siglo XX. Es posible que Makino haya vivido en Alemania u otros países europeos y, muy probablemente, en Brasil antes de entrar en los Estados Unidos. En 1923 se mudó de Nueva York, EE. UU., a Caguas, Puerto Rico, para reparar y mantener una planta de hielo. Allí se casó con Consuelo Torrent Llera. Tuvieron 4 hijos: Gloria, Virginia, Margarita y Naomi, mi padre. Mis primos, mis hijos y yo estamos muy interesados en reconectarnos y colaborar con los Honda en Brasil, ya que creemos que estamos relacionados y en compartir historias familiares. Pueden contactarme en erhonda56@gmail.com



Icho Daiko fue fundado en septiembre de 2003 por el Dr. Roy y su esposa, y por Aiko Ebihara, de Oberlin, Ohio. El nombre del grupo se debe a los árboles de ginkgo que bordean la calle principal de Oberlin. El grupo construye sus propios tambores, incluidos los tambores shime, chudaiko y okedo. Nuestra misión es fortalecer las comunidades asiático-americanas inculcando orgullo y conciencia cultural, y construir puentes entre los asiático-americanos y otros grupos a través de la expresión cultural dinámica del taiko.

Los Ángeles, California, Estados Unidos
Kristopher Kato was born in Saitama, Japan, and raised in Southern California. He currently lives around the corner from Discover Nikkei’s office in Los Angeles’ Little Tokyo neighborhood, with his cat, Mickey Meowse! He is a cum laude graduate from California State University of Fullerton and has worked as a data analyst in the banking and entertainment industries for over 10 years.
Kristopher became a Discover Nikkei volunteer in 2023. He’s written several articles and helps us out with data analytics, too. When he’s not working or volunteering his time, Kristopher enjoys visiting theme parks. He even worked as Jungle Cruise Skipper at Disneyland during college! Kristopher is also an avid Dodger fan and a collector of movie and sports memorabilia.
What do you like most about volunteering for Discover Nikkei?
Volunteering for Discover Nikkei has allowed me to get in touch with my Japanese heritage. Specifically, it has allowed me to better understand and appreciate the hardships, achievements, and contributions of Nikkei, both past and present. Through Discover Nikkei, I have been able to see the growth of the Nikkei community through the site’s numerous shared stories and by assisting with the site’s data analytics. Lastly, volunteering for Discover Nikkei has allowed me to connect with like-minded Nikkei who also enjoy learning about and preserving Nikkei history.
How do you connect to your Nikkei identity?
My first true connection to my Nikkei identity occurred when my grandmother, Rose Watanabe, and mother, Diane Kato, took me to the Japanese American National Museum in the 1990s. At the time, I was still in elementary school and relatively unaware of the incarceration of 120,000-plus people of Japanese ancestry during World War 2. However, when my elementary school assigned us a history project around the topic “Conflict and Compromise,” it was an easy decision to focus my project on the “conflict” of the Japanese concentration camps and the paltry “compromise” of the Civil Liberties Act of 1988.
Through that project, I had many discussions with my grandparents and other family of that generation who also provided me with numerous family heirlooms related to their experience in camp. The combination of their stories and family heirlooms allowed me to create a project that I presented at Los Angeles County’s “History Day L.A.” competition. Medaling at that competition provided me the opportunity to showcase the project at the Constitutional Rights Foundation’s 33rd annual dinner.
In more recent years, I have connected to my Nikkei identity by working with organizations including Discover Nikkei to ensure that the stories of previous generations are never forgotten. In 2019, I loaned the hand carved and painted animal pins created by my great uncle, Lui Kodama, and great aunt, Aki Narahara, to Anaheim’s Muzeo Museum and Cultural Center for their I Am an American: Japanese Incarceration in a Time of Fear exhibition.
Lastly, moving to Los Angeles’ Little Tokyo district has allowed me to connect with my Nikkei identity as I get to regularly enjoy the numerous cultural events and dine at the many delicious restaurants. Living so close to the Japanese American National Museum led me to volunteer for both the museum and Discover Nikkei, and has allowed me to find and be proud of my Nikkei identity.
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