A Conversation with Terry Watada

Readers of The Bulletin and (previously) Nikkei Voice, have long enjoyed Terry Watada’s columns because they talk about Japanese Canadian life.

a journal of japanese canadian community, history + culture

a journal of japanese canadian community, history + culture

Readers of The Bulletin and (previously) Nikkei Voice, have long enjoyed Terry Watada’s columns because they talk about Japanese Canadian life.

Composer, recording artist, conductor, impresario, orchestral arranger, logger, timber cruiser, B.C. Electric systems analyst, teacher, ski instructor, musicologist, traveler, band leader, advocate for social justice and pioneer in the field of world music—Harry Aoki managed to squeeze several lifetimes worth of experience into his 91 years on this planet.

The best sessions must have been from around 2000 to 2005 or so when Harry was still in good health and had the energy to plan and execute the programs as he wished with the help of assistants who were happy to volunteer, I’m sure, inspired by Harry’s personality and work.

A Black man and a Japanese was not the most common sight on the road in those days and there was more than one instance of racism. Harry recalled “Once you got 100 miles inland from the coast, you were in Ku Klux Klan territory.” By and large, though, they were welcomed and the music they played was well received.

Harry came to live with us because he had wanted to go to the States as a ski instructor. He couldn’t work there because he wasn’t an American citizen. He kept trying to get different jobs but he always came back to live with us.

The Vancouver International Dance Festival returns to Vancouver stages March 2-23, promising…

Following their successful performances in 2012, pianist Oriana White and guitarist Ivan Tucakov will once again grace the stage of Vancouver’s Pyatt Hall for Vino & Forte, a unique concert experience where the audience can savour wine . . .

The most illustrious McKinley High School Hall of Honor inductee is Senator Daniel K. Inouye. The facts of his upbringing are rather straightforward. He was born on September 7, 1924 in Honolulu. His father was Hyotaro Inouye and his mother Kame (née Imanaga). It is interesting to note that his mother was a Nisei, though he is not considered a Sansei. He grew up in a Chinese American enclave within the Japanese American community of Mo’ili’ili in Honolulu.

Sitting next to me on the desk as I write this is…

Stan Fukawa first noticed Masako Shinde at a meeting of the UBC…

At a Symposium held on March 21, 2012, Dean Gage Averill announced…

On May 30, 2012, the University of British Columbia held an emotional…