Denshō
@denshoDenshō: O Projeto Legado Nipo-Americano, localizado em Seattle, WA, é uma organização participante do Discover Nikkei desde fevereiro de 2004. Sua missão é preservar os testemunhos pessoais de nipo-americanos que foram encarcerados injustamente durante a Segunda Guerra Mundial, antes que suas memórias se extinguam. Esses relatos insubstituíveis em primeira mão, juntamente com imagens históricas, entrevistas relacionadas e recursos para professores, são fornecidos no site Denshō para explorar os princípios da democracia e promover a tolerância e a justiça igual para todos.
Atualizado em novembro de 2006
Stories from This Author
International Lives: The Horiuchi Interviews
13 de Janeiro de 2010 • Denshō
“The Nikkei I knew that were involved in the occupation…they were able to work more closely with the Japanese because the Japanese looked upon them as someone that could understand their culture, their history, and their motivation.”—Lucius Horiuchi Last year Densho interviewed Maynard and Lucius Horiuchi in Sonoma, California. With a generous grant from the Tateuchi Foundation, their interviews became the first in the Densho collection to be translated into Japanese. Their bilingual presence in the Digital Archive is utterly …
Profile in Courage: George Sakato and a Belated Medal of Honor
11 de Novembro de 2009 • Denshō
“I’m no hero, but I wear it for the guys that didn’t come back.” — George “Joe” Sakato George T. Sakato is the great-great-great-grandson of a samurai. Perhaps that explains his father’s choice of a birth name. Sakato says, “Dad wanted to call me Jyotaro Sakato, after a sword-bearer for Musashi samurai.” But when the doctor submitted the vital statistics for the baby, “Jyotaro” became “George.” An unassuming man, Densho’s interviewee says simply, “All my life I’ve been called Joe.” …
Freeing Testimonies: The Redress Hearings
10 de Outubro de 2007 • Denshō
"I am very happy that the government of America is looking into the past. I think it takes a great country to admit its mistakes and make proper restitution."--Masao Takahashi In retrospect, the success of the Japanese American redress movement seems like a historical inevitability. In reality, the struggle for justice stretched over three decades and was anything but assured. Just as the mass removal and incarceration of 120,000 Japanese Americans without charge or trial was itself not inevitable,1 the …
World War II Volunteers
8 de Novembro de 2006 • Denshō
The nisei veterans have been called everything from heroes to cultural icons to saviors of the Japanese American community. Stories of the rescue of the "Lost Battalion" and the breaking of the Gothic Line are so harrowing and so poignant that it is easy to see why they hold an iconic status in our community. Yet, if we go back to 1943 – in the weeks following an announcement by the U.S. Government that opened the military to Japanese Americans …