The Tashme Project: The Living Archives

When Julie Tamiko Manning and Matt Miwa first in 2009 as members…

a journal of japanese canadian community, history + culture

a journal of japanese canadian community, history + culture

When Julie Tamiko Manning and Matt Miwa first in 2009 as members…

Being Japanese Canadian: reflections on a broken world, a new exhibit at…

by Paul Kariya I grew up here as a child and spent…

by Laura Saimoto & Rory Lindsay, past president of the Slocan Valley…

Junko Tabei was born in Miharu, north of Tokyo, in 1939. A…

On Sunday, December 9, 2018, Tonari Gumi played host to a celebration…

He went up, up, up, like one of his beautiful balloons. Then…

The JCCA is you and I and all those others whose interests…

This article was originally published in Ricepaper Magazine. December 13th, 2018 marks…

On September 29, I joined two dozen other taiko players in the…

The Bulletin is proud to sponsor It’s Boring Here, Pick Me Up by…

Consider how your family’s journey has shaped who you are today” is the request shared at the base of the large velvet red banner at the entrance to the small gallery coated in black paint. Framed photos in birch hang in neat disorder, like the way a family would hang a mass of images in their living room. Voices emit a combination of anger, hope and sadness in the background, while fragments of their lives flash across a projected screen.