ディスカバー・ニッケイロゴ

https://www.discovernikkei.org/ja/users/

ニマ会

@oaamensore

カリフォルニア州ガーデナのアメリカ沖縄協会 (OAA) | 沖縄文化の保存、促進、継承 私たちとつながる: https://instagram.com/oaamensore https://facebook.com/oaamensore メール リストに登録する: https://tinyurl.com/oaa-email-list

アメリカ合衆国 カリフォルニア州 ガーデナ 2022年からニマ会員 最終ログイン: 4週間前
Tamilyn Ishida @tamilynt

2024年からニマ会員 最終ログイン: 9ヶ月前

今月のニマ

サイトへ貢献してくれているニマ会員をご紹介します。彼らにとってディスカバー・ニッケイの魅力とは何なのでしょうか。

Ava Sakura @sakurava

カナダ オンタリオ州 ミシサガ

Ava Sakura is a Gosei living in the Greater Toronto Area and an undergraduate at Humber College, where she studies writing. Though she grew up knowing very little about her Japanese heritage, a foray into her family’s genealogy led her down a rabbit hole about Japanese Canadian history and public education in Ontario. Since then, Japanese Canadian history has become a major focus of her work. Ava’s writing on Japanese Canadian heritage won an Excellence in Storytelling award earlier this year.

Ava is currently a volunteer Assistant Editor with Discover Nikkei, where she is gaining experience with many aspects of our project and writing a series on her journey through her Japanese Canadian heritage. Stay tuned as we publish her articles over the next few months! Ava is also keeping busy this summer as Heritage Research and Collections Assistant at Toronto’s Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre.

How did you learn about Discover Nikkei? Why did you decide to become a volunteer?

In the third year of my writing degree, I did a deep dive into Japanese Canadian history. I learned a lot through scholarly writing and books, but even more through Canadian Discover Nikkei writers, whose stories extended past history books and academic papers into real, tangible experiences. The next logical step was to dive into this community through writing and reading, and as a volunteer, I get to do both!

Why is it important to you to share Japanese Canadian history with a wider audience?

It’s important to me that when someone wonders why we don’t have a Little Tokyo, they think about it more deeply than brushing it off as a coincidence. We’re often told that Canada’s one of the most diverse and inclusive countries in the world, but we don’t look back on what Canada once was, what it was founded on, or how we got here. The echoes of Japanese Canadian internment ring loudly in the scattered communities across the country, in our elders’ reluctance to tell their stories, and in the Yonsei and Gosei left with little family history to cling to. Knowing where they originated from is just as crucial as hearing them.

Meet more Nima of the Month

Are you a Nima*?

Nima are members of Discover Nikkei’s global community called Nima-kai. Create an account and share your personal and community stories, events, and more related to the Nikkei experience. Connect with Nima around the world!
*「ニマ」は、「ニッケイ」と「仲間」を組み合わせた造語です。
アカウントの作成

ディスカバー・ニッケイからのお知らせ

ニッケイ物語 #14
ニッケイ・ファミリー2:ルーツを記憶し、レガシーを残す
ばあちゃん、グランパ、ティア、イルマオ・・・
ディスカバーニッケイのコミュニティへ名前についてのストーリーを共有してください。投稿の受付を開始しました!
20周年記念「20 for 20キャンペーン 」
ディスカバーニッケイでは、20周年を迎え「20の夢をつなぐキャンペーン」を実施中です。 私たちの活動を応援し、未来への架け橋となる夢をご支援ください。
SHARE YOUR MEMORIES
We are collecting our community’s reflections on the first 20 years of Discover Nikkei. Check out this month’s prompt and send us your response!