
Upcoming Events
- Vancouver International Dance Festival
29 February 2012 5:52 PM | No Comments - One Year Later: Shaken But Not Broken
29 February 2012 5:45 PM | No Comments - The Nekaa Room: Dark Matter
29 February 2012 5:41 PM | No Comments - WORLD TELEVISION PREMIERE: STOLEN MEMORIES
29 February 2012 5:37 PM | No Comments - Community Calendar
10 February 2012 11:41 AM | No Comments - First Anniversary of Tohoku Earthquake/tsunami
10 February 2012 11:36 AM | No Comments - Notice of Special General Meeting
10 February 2012 11:19 AM | 1 Comment - Cinema Kabuki Returns to Vancouver after Sold-Out Run
10 February 2012 11:01 AM | No Comments - Changing Tides: A Collective Photo Exhibit of Tohoku
14 January 2012 9:30 AM | No Comments - chelfitsch: cutting-edge Japanese theatre at the Push Festival
13 January 2012 9:13 PM | No Comments
- Vancouver International Dance Festival
Back Issues by Month
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- Mixed Match: a matter of race
02 April 2012 2:16 PM | No Comments - Susan Aihoshi: on family, history + finding a new voice
02 April 2012 12:31 PM | No Comments - Addressing Injustice: UBC’s Response to the Internment
02 April 2012 12:21 PM | No Comments - Mary Kitagawa: Speech to UBC symposium, march 21
31 March 2012 1:53 PM | No Comments - A Degree of Justice (video)
27 March 2012 12:00 PM | No Comments - Fumiko Greenaway: a son remembers
29 February 2012 6:09 PM | No Comments - Vancouver International Dance Festival
29 February 2012 5:52 PM | No Comments - Return to Matsuyama
29 February 2012 5:49 PM | No Comments - One Year Later: Shaken But Not Broken
29 February 2012 5:45 PM | No Comments - Profile: Nathan Hirayama
10 February 2012 11:12 AM | No Comments
- Mixed Match: a matter of race
02 April 2012 2:16 PM | No Comments - The Difference Between Travelling Solo and Travelling Alone
02 April 2012 2:10 PM | No Comments - a matter of identity
02 April 2012 2:10 PM | No Comments - President’s Message
02 April 2012 2:08 PM | No Comments - Community Kitchen
02 April 2012 2:07 PM | No Comments - Susan Aihoshi: on family, history + finding a new voice
02 April 2012 12:31 PM | No Comments - Addressing Injustice: UBC’s Response to the Internment
02 April 2012 12:21 PM | No Comments - Mary Kitagawa: Speech to UBC symposium, march 21
31 March 2012 1:53 PM | No Comments - A Degree of Justice (video)
27 March 2012 12:00 PM | No Comments - Guest Post – WATCH: Japan, One Year Later
12 March 2012 9:49 AM | No Comments
- Solidarity Spring Roars
Mary Kitagawa: a degree of justice - Stan Fukawa
JCCA - lyndsay
Community Kitchen Classic - Sally Ito
memories of my mother - Dan Tokawa
Notice of Special General Meeting - nilam
REVIEW: School Days With A Pig - Kagan Goh
JCCA
Art Miki cartoon Chibi Taiko Community Kitchen with Satoye Kita Dream of Justice Achieved Editorial by John Endo Greenaway fishing Giorgio Magnanensi hapa Human Rights Committee January 2008 Japantown Multicultural Neighbourhood Celebration Jeff Chiba Stearns Katari Taiko Kyowakai Society Letter to the Editor Marginalia Masaki Watanabe Masako Fukawa milestones multi-cultural New Denver Nikkei Fishermen on the BC coast: Their Biographies and Nikkei Internment Memorial Centre O-shogatsu obituaries Oppenheimer Park Powell Grounds Powell Street Festival Redress Redress Settlement Roy Kiooka Roy Kiyooka Roy Miki The Bulletin turkey soup Uzume Taiko Vancouver Folk Music Festival Vancouver Moving Theatre Vancouver New Music Vancouver New Music Society VIFF wakumi Yellow Sticky Notes yosenabe - Mixed Match: a matter of race
Links
- Chibi Taiko
- Discover Nikkei
- ExplorAsian
- Gung Haggis Fat Choy
- Japanese Canadian National Museum
- Japanese Canadian Timeline
- Japanese Canadians Then and Now
- JC History.net
- National Association of Japanese Canadians
- Nikkei Place
- Powell Street Festival
- The Politics of Racism
- Vancouver Japanese Language School
Tags
Art Miki cartoon Chibi Taiko Community Kitchen with Satoye Kita Dream of Justice Achieved Editorial by John Endo Greenaway fishing Giorgio Magnanensi hapa Human Rights Committee January 2008 Japantown Multicultural Neighbourhood Celebration Jeff Chiba Stearns Katari Taiko Kyowakai Society Letter to the Editor Marginalia Masaki Watanabe Masako Fukawa milestones multi-cultural New Denver Nikkei Fishermen on the BC coast: Their Biographies and Nikkei Internment Memorial Centre O-shogatsu obituaries Oppenheimer Park Powell Grounds Powell Street Festival Redress Redress Settlement Roy Kiooka Roy Kiyooka Roy Miki The Bulletin turkey soup Uzume Taiko Vancouver Folk Music Festival Vancouver Moving Theatre Vancouver New Music Vancouver New Music Society VIFF wakumi Yellow Sticky Notes yosenabe
09.11 November 09 Archive
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inReview: Vancouver International Film Festival
Posted on November 4, 2009 | 3 CommentsThis ambitious first feature by Mariko Tetsuya interweaves manga with the story of a budding boxer to create a double world, half fantasy, half reality. Tetsuya has a talent for creating heart-pounding suspense. -
Honouring Our People: stories of the internment
Posted on November 4, 2009 | 2 CommentsMy name is Seichi Bill Tahara, a depression-born Nisei. My birth certificate indicates I was born at 143 Dunlevy Street in the heart of Japantown some 80 years ago. Today, enjoying RETIREMENT in one of THE best places to live, Victoria. I am delighted to have the opportunity to attend this weekend's conference with you to share a few memories of some of my personal experiences, thoughts and recollections growing up during a very unsettling wartime & internment years during the early 1940s. -
PUMPKIN TSUKEMONO
Posted on November 4, 2009 | No CommentsYour recipe in the latest Bulletin brought back memories of going to the beach with my mother, She didn’t go just to enjoy the sunshine and the water but was always on the lookout for the perfect “daikon ishi” which I would have to carry home. During the war years she would pickle some strange stuff. Watermelon comes to mind. She would peel the rind, cut off any remaining flesh which left the rind about a quarter of an inch thick. She would slice these to about three inches long and layer them in a plate, salting each layer, cover with a saucer and top it with our “ishi”. -
President’s Message
Posted on November 4, 2009 | No CommentsHi everyone! By the time the Bulletin gets out this month, I hope that many of you will have had an opportunity to take in the 6th Annual Downtown Eastside... -
Letter to the Editor
Posted on November 4, 2009 | No CommentsOne woman told of being an expatriate to Japan and all the hardship she faced when she lived there just after the war. Others told of moving from place to place like vagabonds. Many discovered connections with others in the group. -
Rather a TCK than a Kikokushijo
Posted on November 4, 2009 | 1 CommentThe choice between becoming Canadian (or American) and going back to being Japanese has to have been the critical decision faced by some elements of the Japanese immigrant communities in North America from the time they started coming over around the turn of the 20th century. -
POWER 2: interview with Kaoru Matsushita
Posted on November 4, 2009 | No CommentsI personally leave rehearsals deep in thought, recalling my past and things that I forgot about society and other people's lives. Then I get motivated. It's similar to when I hear good music or sound and something sparks in my brain. -
after the quake
Posted on November 4, 2009 | 1 CommentDuring the writing of The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle, Japan was shaken by the twin traumas of the Kobe earthquake and the Aum Shinrikyo sarin gas attack. In the aftermath of these events, he returned to Japan and published his first work of non-fiction, Underground, and the short story collection after the quake. This month, Pi Theatre and Rumble Productions team up to present after the quake at Studio 16. Running November 19 to December 5, after the quake is an adaptation of two stories from the book of short stories by the same name . . . -
Editorial: A Day for Remembrance
Posted on November 4, 2009 | No CommentsIn the face of death, life goes on, and it is the living who shoulder the burdens (and the joys) of daily living. Still, watching my three children come into their own as teens and young adults, somehow the burden grows lighter, if that makes any sense.








