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"title": "Tulean Dispatch Vol. 5 No. 23 (April 16, 1943)",
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"title": "Postcard from Lily to Mitzi Naohara, October 31, 1944",
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"display_name": "Connie Thorson Chandler",
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"display_name": "Toyoko Okumura",
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"display_name": "Harry K. Yoshikawa",
"bio": "Nisei male. Born June 26, 1922, in Montebello, California. Grew up in California, spending a short time in Japan prior to World War II. After the bombing of Pearl Harbor, moved to Denver, Colorado, during the \"voluntary evacuation\" period designated by the U.S. government. Arrested after refusing to report for military service after being drafted. Tried and served two years at the Santa Catalina prison camp for draft resistance. After release, eventually returned to Los Angeles, California."
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"display_name": "Eddie M. Inaba",
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"display_name": "George Koshi",
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"title": "Letter to Yuri Domoto from Wakako Domoto",
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"title": "Peggy Yamato Mikuni Interview",
"description": "Sansei female. Born May 27, 1929, in Los Angeles, California. Grew up in the Boyle Heights area of Los Angeles. During World War II, removed to the Poston concentration camp, Arizona. Left camp for Denver, Colorado, and eventually returned to Los Angeles, California. Took over father's travel agency in Los Angeles.<p>(This material is based upon work assisted by a grant from the Department of the Interior, National Park Service. Any opinions, finding, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Department of the Interior.)",
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"display_name": "June Yasuno Aochi (Yamashiro) Berk",
"bio": "Nisei female. Born October 17, 1932, in Los Angeles, California. Grew up in Los Angeles, and was involved at an early age with traditional Japanese dancing and stage performance. During World War II, removed with family to the Santa Anita Assembly Center, California, and the Rohwer concentration camp, Arkansas. After leaving camp, family resettled in Denver, Colorado, for ten years before returning to California. After the war, pursued a career as a model and actor for a time, then got involved in numerous Japanese American community groups."
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"display_name": "Nobuko Miyake-Stoner",
"bio": "Japanese female. Born Feburary 10, 1952, in Hiroshima, Japan. Descendant of survivors of the atomic bombing in 1945. Father was a kamikaze pilot during World War II who was unable to fulfill his mission due to the war's end. Nobuko attended the Hiroshima Jogakuin, a missionary school established for young women. Graduated with an M.A. in Religious Education from the Iliff School of Theology in Denver, Colorado, and then a Master of Divinity and Doctor of Ministry from the School of Theology at Claremont, California. Served as minister in a number of United Methodist churchs in California and Colorado, then served as Senior Pastor at the Harris United Methodist Church in Honolulu, Hawaii, from 2005-2016. After retiring, launched \"House for All,\" a program for underprivileged latch-key children in Hiroshima, Japan."
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"title": "Margaret Junko Morita Hiratsuka Interview",
"description": "Nisei female. Born July 22, 1928, in Seattle, Washington. Father ran a prominent hotel which was frequently patronized by visiting Japanese dignitaries. Father was picked up by the FBI on December 7, 1941. During the war, removed with family to the Puyallup Assembly Center, Washington, and the Minidoka concentration camp, Idaho. After leaving camp, moved to Denver, Colorado, eventually settling in Chicago, Illinois.<p>(This material is based upon work assisted by a grant from the Department of the Interior, National Park Service. Any opinions, finding, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Department of the Interior.)",
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],
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],
"persons": [
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"namepart": "Morita, Margaret Junko"
}
],
"contributor": "Densho",
"rights": "cc",
"genre": "interview",
"location": "Skokie, Illinois",
"creation": "June 15, 2011",
"status": "completed",
"search_hidden": "Margaret Junko Morita Hiratsuka narrator \nTom Ikeda interviewer \nDana Hoshide videographer Morita, Margaret Junko 88922nr005sm0d",
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},
{
"id": "ddr-densho-1000-93",
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"thumb": "http://ddrmedia.local/media/ddr-densho-1000/denshovh-tchiye-01-a.jpg"
},
"title": "Chiye Tomihiro Interview",
"description": "Nisei female. Born December 20, 1924, in Portland, Oregon. Incarcerated at the Portland Assembly Center, Oregon, and Minidoka concentration camp, Idaho. Resettled first in Denver, Colorado and later in Chicago, Illinois. Former witness chair for Chicago area hearings of the Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civilians (CWRIC) and former chairperson of the JACL Chicago chapter's redress committee.<p>(This interview was conducted at the Voices of Japanese American Redress Conference, held on the UCLA campus and sponsored by the UCLA Asian American Studies Center and the UCLA School of Public Policy and Social Research. Because of the full conference schedule, our interviews were limited to one hour. The interviews therefore focused primarily on a single topic, namely, the narrator's role in the redress movement.)",
"extent": "00:41:11",
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{
"role": "interviewer",
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},
{
"role": "videographer",
"namepart": "Matt Emery"
}
],
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],
"persons": [
{
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"namepart": "Tomihiro, Chiye"
}
],
"contributor": "Densho",
"rights": "cc",
"genre": "interview",
"location": "University of CA, Los Angeles",
"creation": "September 11, 1997",
"status": "completed",
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{
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"thumb": "http://ddrmedia.local/media/ddr-densho-1010/denshovh-ieddie-01-a.jpg"
},
"title": "Eddie M. Inaba Interview",
"description": "Nisei male. Born May 9, 1917, in Walnut Grove, California. Parents worked at Canal Ranch, an agricultural community, where they grew produce for Libby, McNeill & Libby. Parents also owned and ran a bar in Walnut Grove. After the bombing of Pearl Harbor, removed to the Merced Assembly Center, California, and Granada (Amache) concentration camp, Colorado. After leaving camp, lived in Chicago and Denver before returning to Walnut Grove. Established a successful Japanese import business, opening grocery stores all over the West Coast.<p>(This material is based upon work assisted by a grant from the Department of the Interior, National Park Service. Any opinions, finding, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Department of the Interior.)",
"extent": "00:59:53",
"links_children": "ddr-densho-1010-6",
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{
"role": "narrator",
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{
"role": "interviewer",
"namepart": "Tom Ikeda"
},
{
"role": "interviewer",
"namepart": "Jill Shiraki"
},
{
"role": "videographer",
"namepart": "Dana Hoshide"
}
],
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],
"persons": [
{
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}
],
"contributor": "Preserving California's Japantowns Collection",
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"location": "Sacramento, California",
"creation": "December 11, 2009",
"status": "completed",
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{
"id": "ddr-csujad-29-60",
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},
"title": "An Oral History with Sumiye Takeno, Part II",
"description": "An oral history with Sumiye Takeno, a current resident of Denver, Colorado. This interview was conducted for the Japanese American Oral History Project by California State University, Fullerton. The purpose of this interview was to gather information regarding Takeno's incarceration and resettlement experience during World War II. Specifically, the interview covers her childhood in Florin, California, her experiences in church and sewing school; her experiences as a nurse's aide at the Manzanar incarceration camp in 1942, detailing camp life, close friends, and recreation; talks about her arranged marriage to her husband, Roy, in 1943 while incarcerated, their engagement party; her Methodist upbringing and faith, her involvement in the Japanese American Citizens League (JACL) in the early 1940s; her feelings on \"baishakunin\" or what is known as arranged marriage; her family's roles and actions while living at the camp, her attitude and equipment on and about the camp; comments on her relationship between her husband and herself, her husband's family and their background in Japan, his background living in Fresno, California, size and impact of Roy's family, and change that emanates when a Japanese woman marries into another family; details the importance that medical practicing had on her family life, her husband's health and career in the 1960s while writing as a journalist and acting as an organizer for the JACL; she describes her husband's jobs for such newspapers like the Denver Post and Rocky Jiho; comments on her social circle after the camp in Manzanar, her husband's local fame as a journalist and for his involvement with JACL; she talks about Roy's leadership position in JACL and his roles in the organization in the early 1950s, her feeling about all the letters of support she received when Roy passed away; explains her move to Denver with Roy in the late 1940s due to his new job as a journalist at the Rocky Shimpo, her housing situations between the late 1940s and 1950s in Denver; discusses the location of the newspaper office, Rocky Shimpo, the restaurants and stores that surrounded the newspaper office, the location of the JACL office in 1946; she describes the JACL administration with Min Yasui's leadership in 1946, her feelings about the name change from \"Denver JACL\" to the Mile High Chapter of the JACL in Denver; discusses her family's frugal techniques, simple life, and forms of transportation post-war; her feelings on the incarceration and its effects on the Japanese American community on a national level, the impact the camps had on the communities after the war; how suburbanization impacted her family starting in 1952, the general neighborhoods in Denver that had the largest Japanese American populations; the experiences that JACL gave her, the social and legislative activities she participated in, and the change to civil rights activism in JACL in the 1960s; her feelings on the issue of redress for the Japanese Americans who were interned during the war, and her official active role in the organization in 1987; talks briefly about Min Yasui and his civil rights activism, and about James (Jim) Omura's leadership when he took over the Rocky Shimpo newspaper in 1947; and her description between the Issei and Nisei Japanese Americans. Transcript is found in item: csufccop_jaoh_0047. See this object in the California State Universities Japanese American Digitization project site: <a href=\"http://cdm16855.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16855coll4/id/565\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\">5282.2_T01</a>",
"extent": "1:22:39",
"links_children": "ddr-csujad-29-60",
"creators": [
{
"role": "narrator",
"id": 343,
"namepart": "Sumiye Takeno"
},
{
"role": "interviewer",
"namepart": "Hansen, Arthur A."
},
{
"role": "publisher",
"namepart": "California State University, Fullerton. Center for Oral and Public History"
}
],
"topics": [
{
"term": "Activism and involvement",
"id": "120"
},
{
"term": "Community activities -- Associations and organizations",
"id": "16"
},
{
"term": "World War II -- Japanese American Citizens League activities",
"id": "400"
},
{
"term": "World War II -- Concentration camps -- Impact of incarceration",
"id": "78"
},
{
"term": "World War II -- Leaving camp -- \"Resettlement\"",
"id": "104"
},
{
"term": "World War II -- Military service",
"id": "88"
},
{
"term": "Religion and churches",
"id": "29"
},
{
"term": "Reflections on the past",
"id": "118"
},
{
"term": "Redress and reparations",
"id": "110"
},
{
"term": "Geographic communities -- Colorado",
"id": "275"
},
{
"term": "World War II -- Concentration camps -- Living conditions",
"id": "67"
},
{
"term": "World War II -- Concentration camps -- Social and recreational activities",
"id": "195"
},
{
"term": "World War II -- Temporary Assembly Centers -- Social relations",
"id": "532"
},
{
"term": "World War II -- Concentration camps -- Weddings",
"id": "196"
},
{
"term": "World War II -- Mass removal (\"evacuation\") -- Aftermath",
"id": "191"
},
{
"term": "Activism and involvement -- Civil rights",
"id": "234"
},
{
"term": "Redress and reparations -- Civil Liberties Act of 1988",
"id": "525"
},
{
"term": "Geographic communities -- California",
"id": "271"
}
],
"format": "vh",
"language": [
"eng"
],
"contributor": "CSU Fullerton Center for Oral and Public History",
"rights": "nocc",
"genre": "interview",
"location": "Florin, California; Manzanar, California; Denver, Colorado",
"facility": [
{
"term": "Manzanar",
"id": "7"
}
],
"creation": "11/10/2001",
"status": "completed",
"search_hidden": "Sumiye Takeno narrator \nHansen, Arthur A. interviewer \nCalifornia State University, Fullerton. Center for Oral and Public History publisher",
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},
{
"id": "ddr-csujad-29-59",
"model": "entity",
"index": "18 93/{'value': 102, 'relation': 'eq'}",
"links": {
"html": "https://ddr.densho.org/ddr-csujad-29-59/",
"json": "https://ddr.densho.org/api/0.2/ddr-csujad-29-59/",
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"thumb": "http://ddrmedia.local/media/ddr-csujad-29/ddr-csujad-29-59-1-mezzanine-cdbb83b7a8-a.jpg"
},
"title": "An Oral History with Sumiye Takeno, Part I",
"description": "An oral history with Sumiye Takeno, a current resident of Denver, Colorado. This interview was conducted for the Japanese American Oral History Project by California State University, Fullerton. The purpose of this interview was to gather information regarding Takeno's incarceration and resettlement experience during World War II. Specifically, the interview covers her childhood in Florin, California, her experiences in church and sewing school; her experiences as a nurse's aide at the Manzanar incarceration camp in 1942, detailing camp life, close friends, and recreation; talks about her arranged marriage to her husband, Roy, in 1943 while incarcerated, their engagement party; her Methodist upbringing and faith, her involvement in the Japanese American Citizens League (JACL) in the early 1940s; her feelings on \"baishakunin\" or what is known as arranged marriage; her family's roles and actions while living at the camp, her attitude and equipment on and about the camp; comments on her relationship between her husband and herself, her husband's family and their background in Japan, his background living in Fresno, California, size and impact of Roy's family, and change that emanates when a Japanese woman marries into another family; details the importance that medical practicing had on her family life, her husband's health and career in the 1960s while writing as a journalist and acting as an organizer for the JACL; she describes her husband's jobs for such newspapers like the Denver Post and Rocky Jiho; comments on her social circle after the camp in Manzanar, her husband's local fame as a journalist and for his involvement with JACL; she talks about Roy's leadership position in JACL and his roles in the organization in the early 1950s, her feeling about all the letters of support she received when Roy passed away; explains her move to Denver with Roy in the late 1940s due to his new job as a journalist at the Rocky Shimpo, her housing situations between the late 1940s and 1950s in Denver; discusses the location of the newspaper office, Rocky Shimpo, the restaurants and stores that surrounded the newspaper office, the location of the JACL office in 1946; she describes the JACL administration with Min Yasui's leadership in 1946, her feelings about the name change from \"Denver JACL\" to the Mile High Chapter of the JACL in Denver; discusses her family's frugal techniques, simple life, and forms of transportation post-war; her feelings on the incarceration and its effects on the Japanese American community on a national level, the impact the camps had on the communities after the war; how suburbanization impacted her family starting in 1952, the general neighborhoods in Denver that had the largest Japanese American populations; the experiences that JACL gave her, the social and legislative activities she participated in, and the change to civil rights activism in JACL in the 1960s; her feelings on the issue of redress for the Japanese Americans who were interned during the war, and her official active role in the organization in 1987; talks briefly about Min Yasui and his civil rights activism, and about James (Jim) Omura's leadership when he took over the Rocky Shimpo newspaper in 1947; and her description between the Issei and Nisei Japanese Americans. Transcript is found in item: csufccop_jaoh_0047. See this object in the California State Universities Japanese American Digitization project site: <a href=\"http://cdm16855.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16855coll4/id/605\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\">5282.1_T01</a>",
"extent": "2:11:02",
"links_children": "ddr-csujad-29-59",
"creators": [
{
"role": "narrator",
"id": 343,
"namepart": "Sumiye Takeno"
},
{
"role": "interviewer",
"namepart": "Hansen, Arthur A."
},
{
"role": "publisher",
"namepart": "California State University, Fullerton. Center for Oral and Public History"
}
],
"topics": [
{
"term": "Activism and involvement",
"id": "120"
},
{
"term": "Community activities -- Associations and organizations",
"id": "16"
},
{
"term": "World War II -- Japanese American Citizens League activities",
"id": "400"
},
{
"term": "World War II -- Concentration camps -- Impact of incarceration",
"id": "78"
},
{
"term": "World War II -- Leaving camp -- \"Resettlement\"",
"id": "104"
},
{
"term": "World War II -- Military service",
"id": "88"
},
{
"term": "Religion and churches",
"id": "29"
},
{
"term": "Reflections on the past",
"id": "118"
},
{
"term": "Redress and reparations",
"id": "110"
},
{
"term": "Geographic communities -- Colorado",
"id": "275"
},
{
"term": "World War II -- Concentration camps -- Living conditions",
"id": "67"
},
{
"term": "World War II -- Concentration camps -- Social and recreational activities",
"id": "195"
},
{
"term": "World War II -- Temporary Assembly Centers -- Social relations",
"id": "532"
},
{
"term": "World War II -- Concentration camps -- Weddings",
"id": "196"
},
{
"term": "World War II -- Mass removal (\"evacuation\")",
"id": "57"
},
{
"term": "World War II -- Mass removal (\"evacuation\") -- Aftermath",
"id": "191"
},
{
"term": "Activism and involvement -- Civil rights",
"id": "234"
},
{
"term": "Redress and reparations -- Civil Liberties Act of 1988",
"id": "525"
},
{
"term": "Geographic communities -- California",
"id": "271"
}
],
"format": "vh",
"language": [
"eng"
],
"contributor": "CSU Fullerton Center for Oral and Public History",
"rights": "nocc",
"genre": "interview",
"location": "Florin, California; Manzanar, California; Denver, Colorado",
"facility": [
{
"term": "Manzanar",
"id": "7"
}
],
"creation": "11/9/2001",
"status": "completed",
"search_hidden": "Sumiye Takeno narrator \nHansen, Arthur A. interviewer \nCalifornia State University, Fullerton. Center for Oral and Public History publisher",
"download_large": "ddr-csujad-29-59-1-mezzanine-cdbb83b7a8-a.jpg"
},
{
"id": "ddr-densho-400-10",
"model": "entity",
"index": "19 94/{'value': 102, 'relation': 'eq'}",
"links": {
"html": "https://ddr.densho.org/ddr-densho-400-10/",
"json": "https://ddr.densho.org/api/0.2/ddr-densho-400-10/",
"img": "https://ddr.densho.org/media/ddr-densho-400/ddr-densho-400-10-1-mezzanine-d7276a7a7d-a.jpg",
"thumb": "http://ddrmedia.local/media/ddr-densho-400/ddr-densho-400-10-1-mezzanine-d7276a7a7d-a.jpg"
},
"title": "Frances Kaji Interview",
"description": "Frances Kaji was born on April 30, 1928, in Gardena, California. She grew up in Gardena as the daughter of pioneer physician Kikuwo Tashiro. She remembers Gardena as it changed from a rural to suburban community. During World War II, her family moved to Fresno to avoid incarceration but was eventually imprisoned at the concentration camp at Poston concentration camp, Arizona. After leaving camp, Kaji endured primitive conditions at a Colorado sugar beet farm and moved to Denver. After the war, her family resettled in Boyle Heights where she married Bruce Kaji and moved back to Gardena. She and her husband became involved in civic activities, including the sister city programs. They also helped found the Japanese American National Museum in Los Angeles' Little Tokyo.\r\n\r\nThis interview is part of the South Bay History Project created by the South Bay Chapter of the Japanese American Citizens League.",
"extent": "1:12:44",
"links_children": "ddr-densho-400-10",
"creators": [
{
"role": "narrator",
"id": 412,
"namepart": "Frances Midori Tashiro Kaji"
},
{
"role": "interviewer",
"namepart": "Midori Kamei"
}
],
"format": "vh",
"language": [
"eng"
],
"contributor": "Densho",
"rights": "cc",
"genre": "interview",
"location": "California",
"facility": [
{
"term": "Poston (Colorado River)",
"id": "2"
}
],
"creation": "September 22, 2003",
"status": "completed",
"search_hidden": "Frances Midori Tashiro Kaji narrator \nMidori Kamei interviewer",
"download_large": "ddr-densho-400-10-1-mezzanine-d7276a7a7d-a.jpg"
},
{
"id": "ddr-densho-1000-278",
"model": "entity",
"index": "20 95/{'value': 102, 'relation': 'eq'}",
"links": {
"html": "https://ddr.densho.org/ddr-densho-1000-278/",
"json": "https://ddr.densho.org/api/0.2/ddr-densho-1000-278/",
"img": "https://ddr.densho.org/media/ddr-densho-1000/denshovh-yharry-01-a.jpg",
"thumb": "http://ddrmedia.local/media/ddr-densho-1000/denshovh-yharry-01-a.jpg"
},
"title": "Harry K. Yoshikawa Interview",
"description": "Nisei male. Born June 26, 1922, in Montebello, California. Grew up in California, spending a short time in Japan prior to World War II. After the bombing of Pearl Harbor, moved to Denver, Colorado, during the \"voluntary evacuation\" period designated by the U.S. government. Arrested after refusing to report for military service after being drafted. Tried and served two years at the Santa Catalina prison camp for draft resistance. After release, eventually returned to Los Angeles, California.<p>(Due to technical difficulties during the taping of this interview, the interviewer's voice is considerably louder than the narrator's. This material is based upon work assisted by a grant from the Department of the Interior, National Park Service. Any opinions, finding, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Department of the Interior.)",
"extent": "02:26:15",
"links_children": "ddr-densho-1000-278",
"creators": [
{
"role": "narrator",
"oh_id": 481,
"namepart": "Harry K. Yoshikawa"
},
{
"role": "interviewer",
"namepart": "Martha Nakagawa"
},
{
"role": "videographer",
"namepart": "Tani Ikeda"
}
],
"format": "vh",
"language": [
"eng"
],
"contributor": "Densho",
"rights": "cc",
"genre": "interview",
"location": "Los Angeles, California",
"creation": "April 14, 2010",
"status": "completed",
"search_hidden": "Harry K. Yoshikawa narrator \nMartha Nakagawa interviewer \nTani Ikeda videographer",
"download_large": "denshovh-yharry-01-a.jpg"
},
{
"id": "ddr-csujad-29-60-1",
"model": "segment",
"index": "21 96/{'value': 102, 'relation': 'eq'}",
"links": {
"html": "https://ddr.densho.org/ddr-csujad-29-60-1/",
"json": "https://ddr.densho.org/api/0.2/ddr-csujad-29-60-1/",
"img": "https://ddr.densho.org/media/ddr-csujad-29/ddr-csujad-29-60-1-mezzanine-bad4050dc6-a.jpg",
"thumb": "http://ddrmedia.local/media/ddr-csujad-29/ddr-csujad-29-60-1-mezzanine-bad4050dc6-a.jpg"
},
"title": "An Oral History with Sumiye Takeno, Part II - Segment 1",
"description": "An oral history with Sumiye Takeno, a current resident of Denver, Colorado. This interview was conducted for the Japanese American Oral History Project by California State University, Fullerton. The purpose of this interview was to gather information regarding Takeno's incarceration and resettlement experience during World War II. Specifically, the interview covers her childhood in Florin, California, her experiences in church and sewing school; her experiences as a nurse's aide at the Manzanar incarceration camp in 1942, detailing camp life, close friends, and recreation; talks about her arranged marriage to her husband, Roy, in 1943 while incarcerated, their engagement party; her Methodist upbringing and faith, her involvement in the Japanese American Citizens League (JACL) in the early 1940s; her feelings on \"baishakunin\" or what is known as arranged marriage; her family's roles and actions while living at the camp, her attitude and equipment on and about the camp; comments on her relationship between her husband and herself, her husband's family and their background in Japan, his background living in Fresno, California, size and impact of Roy's family, and change that emanates when a Japanese woman marries into another family; details the importance that medical practicing had on her family life, her husband's health and career in the 1960s while writing as a journalist and acting as an organizer for the JACL; she describes her husband's jobs for such newspapers like the Denver Post and Rocky Jiho; comments on her social circle after the camp in Manzanar, her husband's local fame as a journalist and for his involvement with JACL; she talks about Roy's leadership position in JACL and his roles in the organization in the early 1950s, her feeling about all the letters of support she received when Roy passed away; explains her move to Denver with Roy in the late 1940s due to his new job as a journalist at the Rocky Shimpo, her housing situations between the late 1940s and 1950s in Denver; discusses the location of the newspaper office, Rocky Shimpo, the restaurants and stores that surrounded the newspaper office, the location of the JACL office in 1946; she describes the JACL administration with Min Yasui's leadership in 1946, her feelings about the name change from \"Denver JACL\" to the Mile High Chapter of the JACL in Denver; discusses her family's frugal techniques, simple life, and forms of transportation post-war; her feelings on the incarceration and its effects on the Japanese American community on a national level, the impact the camps had on the communities after the war; how suburbanization impacted her family starting in 1952, the general neighborhoods in Denver that had the largest Japanese American populations; the experiences that JACL gave her, the social and legislative activities she participated in, and the change to civil rights activism in JACL in the 1960s; her feelings on the issue of redress for the Japanese Americans who were interned during the war, and her official active role in the organization in 1987; talks briefly about Min Yasui and his civil rights activism, and about James (Jim) Omura's leadership when he took over the Rocky Shimpo newspaper in 1947; and her description between the Issei and Nisei Japanese Americans. Transcript is found in item: csufccop_jaoh_0047. See this object in the California State Universities Japanese American Digitization project site: <a href=\"http://cdm16855.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16855coll4/id/565\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\">5282.2_T01</a>",
"extent": "1:22:39",
"links_children": "ddr-csujad-29-60-1",
"creators": [
{
"role": "narrator",
"id": 343,
"namepart": "Sumiye Takeno"
},
{
"role": "interviewer",
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"title": "An Oral History with Sumiye Takeno, Part I - Segment 1",
"description": "An oral history with Sumiye Takeno, a current resident of Denver, Colorado. This interview was conducted for the Japanese American Oral History Project by California State University, Fullerton. The purpose of this interview was to gather information regarding Takeno's incarceration and resettlement experience during World War II. Specifically, the interview covers her childhood in Florin, California, her experiences in church and sewing school; her experiences as a nurse's aide at the Manzanar incarceration camp in 1942, detailing camp life, close friends, and recreation; talks about her arranged marriage to her husband, Roy, in 1943 while incarcerated, their engagement party; her Methodist upbringing and faith, her involvement in the Japanese American Citizens League (JACL) in the early 1940s; her feelings on \"baishakunin\" or what is known as arranged marriage; her family's roles and actions while living at the camp, her attitude and equipment on and about the camp; comments on her relationship between her husband and herself, her husband's family and their background in Japan, his background living in Fresno, California, size and impact of Roy's family, and change that emanates when a Japanese woman marries into another family; details the importance that medical practicing had on her family life, her husband's health and career in the 1960s while writing as a journalist and acting as an organizer for the JACL; she describes her husband's jobs for such newspapers like the Denver Post and Rocky Jiho; comments on her social circle after the camp in Manzanar, her husband's local fame as a journalist and for his involvement with JACL; she talks about Roy's leadership position in JACL and his roles in the organization in the early 1950s, her feeling about all the letters of support she received when Roy passed away; explains her move to Denver with Roy in the late 1940s due to his new job as a journalist at the Rocky Shimpo, her housing situations between the late 1940s and 1950s in Denver; discusses the location of the newspaper office, Rocky Shimpo, the restaurants and stores that surrounded the newspaper office, the location of the JACL office in 1946; she describes the JACL administration with Min Yasui's leadership in 1946, her feelings about the name change from \"Denver JACL\" to the Mile High Chapter of the JACL in Denver; discusses her family's frugal techniques, simple life, and forms of transportation post-war; her feelings on the incarceration and its effects on the Japanese American community on a national level, the impact the camps had on the communities after the war; how suburbanization impacted her family starting in 1952, the general neighborhoods in Denver that had the largest Japanese American populations; the experiences that JACL gave her, the social and legislative activities she participated in, and the change to civil rights activism in JACL in the 1960s; her feelings on the issue of redress for the Japanese Americans who were interned during the war, and her official active role in the organization in 1987; talks briefly about Min Yasui and his civil rights activism, and about James (Jim) Omura's leadership when he took over the Rocky Shimpo newspaper in 1947; and her description between the Issei and Nisei Japanese Americans. Transcript is found in item: csufccop_jaoh_0047. See this object in the California State Universities Japanese American Digitization project site: <a href=\"http://cdm16855.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16855coll4/id/605\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\">5282.1_T01</a>",
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