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Nikkei View
The Little Exile is a terrific addition to the JA reading list
Gil Asakawa
The historical story of the Japanese American incarceration during World War II is still not well-known in mainstream American culture and literature. When it comes to books, there are only a handful of books that are based on Japanese Americans’ wartime experience. After the groundbreaking, angry No-No Boy by John Okada …
Nikkei View
The Legacy of the Sansei from a “Ni-hansei” perspective
Gil Asakawa
When I was a kid, I used to tell people who asked what generation I was, that I was “Ni-hansei,” or second-and-a-half. That’s because although my father was a Nisei born in Hawaii (technically a Kibei because his family moved to Japan in 1940 and he was stuck there during …
Nikkei View
NHK is Your Direct Line to Japanese News
Gil Asakawa
The recent 72nd anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima went by quietly on American news (in part because there’s just so much news to cover exploding out of our own White House). So on August 6, I turned to the one place I knew would give the commemoration of the …
Nikkei View
George Takei is the Energizer Bunny of the JA community
Gil Asakawa
Like many people, and especially many Japanese Americans, I’m a big fan of George Takei. I’ve followed his career since I first saw him in the role of Lieutenant Hikaru Sulu in the original 1960s television Star Trek series and as he reprised the character in subsequent Star Trek movies …
Nikkei View
Read Who, How and Why Japanese Settled in Colorado
Gil Asakawa
Most books about Japanese Americans focus on the West Coast because that’s where Japanese first arrived and settled on the US mainland.
Nikkei View
Funerals in the Japanese American community
Gil Asakawa
It’s a hackneyed cliché to say “death is part of life,” but like many clichés, just because it’s become trite doesn’t mean the phrase isn’t true. Especially for Buddhists, death is a natural part of the cycle of living in this world.
Nikkei View
Peachy: Changing Season Captures the Passing of a Family Farm from One Generation to the Next
Gil Asakawa
You’d think after a lifetime of growing and harvesting peaches, you’d get sick of eating them. But the Masumoto family still loves peaches and serves them up every way imaginable. David “Mas” Masumoto, 62, the farmer who has nurtured his parents’ peach groves, says “Actually no. I love peaches, almost …
Nikkei View
Cross-cultured leader keeps Asahi Foods’ promise of perfect sushi fish
Gil Asakawa
It’s cold outside, but it’s colder in Asahi Foods’ refrigerated cutting room, where stacks of cardboard and styrofoam boxes filled with giant fish await. The fish cutter is in early on a Saturday, wearing a white lab coat and heavy rubber gloves, various razor-sharp knives at the ready.