2024 Nima do Mês

Nima are members of our Discover Nikkei Nima-kai community. Our Nima of the Month are some of our most active participants. Learn more about them and what they like about Discover Nikkei.

Agosto 2024

sydhaupt (California, United States of America)

Syd Haupt is a recent graduate of UC Santa Barbara, where she majored in Communication and was an active member of the Nikkei Student Union. Syd grew up in Pasadena, California, but she’ll soon be heading for cooler climes as an incoming Master’s student at the University of Cambridge, where she will be working towards a MPhil in Health, Medicine and Society. Syd plans to study how race impacts access to fertility care, and hopes to become a professor and continue producing research inspired by her community.

Syd is a joint summer intern for Discover Nikkei and the Japanese Bar Association (JABA) this summer through the Nikkei Community Internship program. She has written several articles for Discover Nikkei as part of her internship and conducted a video interview with attorney Michael Yamaki. The interview and Syd’s reflection article will be added to Discover Nikkei later this month.

What do you like most about Discover Nikkei?

I love how Discover Nikkei creates a platform that emphasizes the diversity of our community. It is easy to believe that Japanese Americans are all one sort of homogenous person with the same background, but Discover Nikkei creates an opportunity for diaspora voices to tell their stories. The mere fact that Discover Nikkei publishes in English, Portuguese, Spanish, and Japanese shows me how much our amazing staff gives us the chance to tell our stories on our terms. I really wish I had found out about it earlier, particularly because being a multiracial Japanese American can be challenging, and I often felt alone growing up. Seeing more stories like mine on Discover Nikkei helps me feel at home, and shows me that our community has room for everyone!

What has been the most meaningful aspect of your internship?

The opportunity to connect with my community and engage with individuals who come from many different backgrounds! Growing up as a yonsei multiracial Japanese American in a predominantly white part of Los Angeles, I had not realized how many people have the opportunity to connect with their culture from a young age, particularly through opportunities such as Japanese American basketball and Buddhist churches. Being able to spend time with people who are so integrated into Japanese culture has given me an entirely new outlook on my identity and strengthened my bonds to the community. Thank you, Nikkei Community Internship!

Outubro 2024

Lee_Tonouchi (Hawaii)

Lee Tonouchi, also known as “Da Pidgin Guerrilla,” is an Okinawan Yonsei writer who lives in Hawai‘i. Lee is recognized for his work advocating for the acceptance of Pidgin (Hawai‘i Creole) as a legitimate language. In 2023, he received the American Association for Applied Linguistics Distinguished Public Service Award for his advocacy of Pidgin.

Lee is the author of a number of award-winning books, including Pidgin poetry collection Significant Moments in da Life of Oriental Faddah and Son: One Hawai‘i Okinawan Journal, winner of the Asian-America Studies Book Award in 2013; children's book Okinawan Princess: Da Legend of Hajichi Tattoos, winner of the Skipping Stones Honor Award in 2020; and Chiburu: Anthology of Hawai‘i Okinawan Literature. His monthly column for Discover Nikkei, “Much Mahalos,” uses Pidgin to interview Japanese and Okinawan Americans from Hawai‘i about their stories.

What do you like about Discover Nikkei?

As one Discover Nikkei contributor who wuz born and raise in Hawai‘i, I stay in one position for talk story with lotta really interesting Hawai‘i Japanese/Okinawan folks and it's kinda cool how I get for help introduce these amazing Local people to da world.

And I not exaggerating when I say da world, cuz Discover Nikkei get one onreal reach. I love it when da people I profile report back for tell me how so many readers from so many places said dey read their interview!

Why is it important to share your Much Mahalos series on Discover Nikkei?

People get lotta stereotypes about Hawai‘i. Dey tink everybody in Hawai‘i does hula and surfs all day long. I like for tink that my Much Mahalos column helps for eju-ma-cate people and show off da full spectrum of talented kine peoples we get living ova hea. So far I wen interview one poet, stand-up comedian, actor, sanshin player, storyteller, Pidgin linguist, muralist, comic strip artist, crafter, Okinawan language activist, graphic designer, clothing designer, with planny more occupations yet for come!

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