Joe Takehara Interview Segment 19
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PARTNER
Japanese American Service Committee (JASC) and Chicago Japanese American Historical Society (CJAHS) Oral History Project Collections
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SEGMENT ID
ddr-chi-1-15-19 ()
SEGMENT DESCRIPTION
Reflections: Being called racist names by other kids
0:07:50 — Segment 19 of 19
PARENT COLLECTION
FACILITY
PERSONS/ORGANIZATIONS
CONTRIBUTOR
Japanese American Service Committee (JASC) and Chicago Japanese American Historical Society (CJAHS)
PREFERRED CITATION
Courtesy of the Japanese American Service Committee (JASC) and Chicago Japanese American Historical Society (CJAHS)
RIGHTS
Copyright restricted
PARTNER
Japanese American Service Committee (JASC) and Chicago Japanese American Historical Society (CJAHS) Oral History Project Collections
Visit partner
INTERVIEW ID
ddr-chi-1-15
NARRATOR
INTERVIEW TITLE
Joe Takehara Interview
1:33:51 — 19 segments
DATE
November 15, 2017
LOCATION
DESCRIPTION
Nisei male. Born April 2, 1932, in San Diego, California. Prior to World War II, father worked as a fisherman and mother worked in a fish cannery. Father passed away at an early age, leaving mother to raise eight children. After the bombing of Pearl Harbor, temporarily moved to Sunnydale, California, before being sent to the Santa Anita Assembly Center, California, and the Poston concentration camp, Arizona. After leaving camp, resettled in Chicago, Illinois, where Joe became active in martial arts.
PRODUCTION
Anna Takada, interviewer
TOPICS
FACILITY
PERSONS/ORGANIZATIONS
CONTRIBUTOR
Japanese American Service Committee (JASC) and Chicago Japanese American Historical Society (CJAHS)
PREFERRED CITATION
Courtesy of the Japanese American Service Committee (JASC) and Chicago Japanese American Historical Society (CJAHS)
RIGHTS
Copyright restricted