
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
2010.9 September Archive
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Nikkei Internment Memorial Centre Receives National Historic Site Status
Posted on September 3, 2010 | No CommentsOn July 31, the Nikkei Internment Memorial Centre in New Denver, BC, was officially given National Historic Site status, a process that was several years in the making. A public... -
More Young Females Leaving Japan For Konkatsu (Marriage Partner Seeking Activities) Abroad
Posted on September 3, 2010 | 1 Comment“Many people set age 30 as a kind of time limit by when they want to acquire a skill and find a job,” said a can-do type from Osaka who worked as an office data processor to save money and came to Canada. Finding a “partner for life” by age 30 if possible, would be a reasonably natural objective for a woman—or a man. But such a crucial encounter, alas, cannot be planned the way acquiring English and other skills and finding a job can be. But at the very least, the pro-active drive with which these members of the once-upon-a- time “weaker sex” pursue their various possibilities deserves respect. -
SPAM Sushi at the Powell Street Festival
Posted on September 3, 2010 | 2 CommentsAccording to Wikipedia, residents of Hawaii, Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands consume the most SPAM per capita in the United States. SPAM was introduced into these areas, as well as other islands in the Pacific such as Okinawa and the Philippines, during the US military occupation during World War Two. Since fresh meat was difficult to get to the soldiers on the front, World War II saw the largest use of SPAM. GIs started eating it for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. Surpluses of SPAM from the soldiers' supplies made their way into native diets. Consequently, SPAM is a unique part of the history and effects of US influence in the Pacific. -
Community Kitchen
Posted on September 3, 2010 | No CommentsLast month we attended a funeral service for Mrs. Masa Kitagawa (103 years old), a remarkable lady. She used to go for a daily walk into her mid-nineties and she looked 80. She was fairly alert for her age and not very wrinkled. Amazing! She was the oldest person that I ever knew. She spent her last four years at Rosewood Manor and since it is fairly close to our home, I was able to visit with her frequently and she was always so grateful! -
Japonica – fish: healthy eating
Posted on September 3, 2010 | No CommentsJapanese people who eat salmon are healthiest and live longest according to an American researcher, Dr. David Williams, who tracks the world for latest studies in health and medical matters.... -
President’s Message
Posted on September 3, 2010 | No CommentsHi everyone! The Greater Vancouver Japanese Canadian Citizens’ Association would like to extend congratulations to the National Nikkei Museum & Heritage Centre on its 10th Anniversary. The National Nikkei Heritage... -
Hastings Park/PNE Master Plan
Posted on September 3, 2010 | 1 CommentOver the spring and summer of 2010, information about the Hastings Park/PNE Master Plan has been presented at public consultation and information-sharing events within the City of Vancouver. A final... -
Go Fish
Posted on September 3, 2010 | No CommentsIn the 2007 book, Nikkei Fishermen on the BC Coast, Their Biographies and Photographs (Harbour Publishing), over 3600 Nikkei fishermen are listed, going back to the late 1800s. How many women are on that list? Exactly one. There are admittedly, more women involved in recreational fishing, but they are still vastly outnumbered by the men. Happily, my wife Amy is one of those exceptions to the rule. She grew up in a family of recreational fishermen and can not only catch fish with the best of them, she can clean and filet them with a surgeon’s precision, all good qualities in a mate, as far as I’m concerned. -
Justin & Lea Ault . . . eat, play, live: raising a family @ the interracial divide
Posted on September 3, 2010 | No CommentsWe figured, if they were going to be going to a preschool for a couple years before they started kindergarten, then why not get some language benefit out of it. I wouldn’t have been unhappy if they took Mandarin even. It’s not like it’s an effort for the kids. I know that I got a real economic boost in my life from having a second language. While I was going to UBC, I worked as a bellman at the Waterfront Centre Hotel. I would have never got that job if I didn’t speak the basic Japanese I did at the time—there were just too many other nice, personable guys out there. It was a great job and I’d never have got it if I didn’t have that language component.







