Digital storytelling in our community

Not too long ago, I sat down with my grandparents for dinner.…

a journal of japanese canadian community, history + culture

a journal of japanese canadian community, history + culture

Not too long ago, I sat down with my grandparents for dinner.…

Sexual violence, like any abuse of power, only stops when we expose it and commit to effective prevention and response practices. When we say, "We take this very seriously," survivors want to know what we will actually do to ensure no one else suffers this way. We need to share information about safe church efforts and ask what actions would further communicate our commitment to justice, making amends and preventing harm.

Born in Vancouver in 1936, Ken is the eldest son of Frank Genichiro Yada and Kuniye Yada (nee Uyesugi). In 1942, following the bombing or Pearl Harbor, when Ken was six, the family relocated to the Bridge River self-supporting camp and then to Devine, BC, where they remained until the wartime restrictions were lifted.

On May 31, 2015, the Ottawa Japanese Community Association (OJCA) and the National Association of Japanese Canadians (NAJC) joined the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) of Canada, Reconciliation Canada, dignitaries, public leaders and thousands of Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal peoples in the Walk for Reconciliation.

Hitoko Okada started out in the fashion industry working for a milliner…

When I re-read Steinbeck’s Grapes of Wrath in my thirties, I found…

On Sunday, April 26, 2015, over 200 people gathered at Hastings Park…

For nearly a century, Yozaemon Kondo remained unidentified in the first known Vancouver Asahi team photo taken in 1915. The photo was on display at the Hikone City Hall in 2011 on the occasion of the Japanese Canadian delegation’s visit to Hikone City in Shiga Prefecture.

What kind of a country is Ireland? Generations of people migrating to…

On Monday, June 15, 2015, community members gathered in the hall of the Vancouver Japanese Language School to hear an apology from the Anglican Church of Canada to all members of the Japanese Canadian Community affected by the sexual abuse perpetrated by the late Goichi Gordon Nakayama, past minister of the Anglican Church. The abuse, perpetrated primarily upon Japanese Canadians boys, spanned fifty years and affected an unknown number of victims.

by Bryan Tsuyuki Tomlinson It is with great pleasure that I announce…

Actively try to create these “once in a lifetime” encounters and connect with people. You never know when the ‘one-time, one meeting’ from volunteering will lead to a full time position or lead you onto a career path you actually want.