Descubra Nikkei

https://www.discovernikkei.org/pt/interviews/clips/1427/

On international marriages (Japanese)

(Japanese) I used to work on the fifth floor of the broadcasting station, and his office was on the sixth. Even at that, we’d always arrange to meet somewhere else. We were barely able to meet, though—and only at places where nobody would see us. I didn’t want to be like everyone else. There were a lot of Japanese women walking together with foreigners at that time, hanging off their hands and whatnot. I’ve never done that. When we walked through the streets of Tokyo, we walked apart, so that others wouldn’t find us out.

I didn’t want people to think that I was with him because I wanted things. But apparently, when I was working at the broadcasting station, my co-workers had a vague sense that I was together with a foreigner. At that time, we only met a tiny little bit, but everyone asked me, “What do you think about international marriages?” So, I told them. I said, “Personally, I am completely against it.” “Oh, really?” they asked back. Then, I said, “International marriages are for the most part dangerous, and now isn’t the time for it. I’m personally completely against it.” That’s what I told them then. Marriage might have been on my mind more and more at the time, though… The one thing I didn’t say to my co-workers was this: “But my case is different.” I wanted to tell them that, but I didn’t.


identidade pós-guerra Segunda Guerra Mundial

Data: January 26, 2012

Localização Geográfica: California, US

Entrevistado: John Esaki, Yoko Nishimura

País: Watase Media Arts Center, Japanese American National Museum

Entrevistados

Jean Hamako Schneider (née Amano) nasceu em 1925, em Yokohama. Em 1933, ela foi junto com seu pai, sr. Yoshitaro Amano, ao Panamá, onde ele tinha negócios. Após dois anos, a família retornou ao Japão, mas o sr.Yoshitaro permaneceu lá até 1942, quando retornou ao Japão no navio de troca de prisioneiros. Terminada a guerra, Hamako trabalhou numa emissora de rádio, quando conheceu Harry Schneider, membro do MIS (Serviço de Inteligência Militar) estacionado no Japão. Em 1948, casou-se com Harry no Japão e em 1950 chegou aos Estados Unidos como noiva de guerra. Nasceu-lhe uma filha e logo obteve cidadania americana. Mora atualmente em Encinitas, no estado da Califórnia. (Setembro de 2014)   

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