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Book Review: Looking Like The Enemy
Norm Masaji Ibuki
“When I was seventy-four years old, I was invited to participate in a writing class and began writing about those war years. The damn broke loose when those emotions and tears I repressed for decades broke through, at times seemingly uncontrollable. At last, I was telling my story – a …
Raymond Moriyama's Sakura Ball Speech - Part 3
Norm Masaji Ibuki
Read Part 2 >>CHAPTER FOUR—AS A MAN DOING THINGS OTHER THAN ARCHITECTURESachi and I have covered the Seven Continents. What is the most important thing we were learning??? To listen to the world and know it is alive, not inanimate and dead to be exploited for Homo sapiens’ selfish benefit. Sachi and …
Raymond Moriyama's Sakura Ball Speech - Part 2
Norm Masaji Ibuki
Read Part 1 >>CHAPTER TWO—AS A YOUTH 12/13 AND 18War is hell! Physically facing an enemy is hell! It is even more of a psychological hell when your own country, the country of your birth, without warning, insensitively and officiously stamps you an “enemy alien,” disowns you and expels you …
Raymond Moriyama's Sakura Ball Speech - Part 1
Norm Masaji Ibuki
One of the most famous Canadian Nisei names is that of Raymond Moriyama, the internationally renowned architect of the Canadian Embassy in Tokyo, the new Canadian War Museum in Ottawa and the Bata Shoe Museum in Toronto.
NAJC President Terumi Kuwada Interview
Norm Masaji Ibuki
Come this fall, Terumi Kuwada, 63, the current National Association of Japanese Canadians (NAJC) will be stepping down to make way for her successor.
My Aunt Hiroko Nagaike Sensei - Part 2
Norm Masaji Ibuki
Read Part 1 >>Sensei’s eldest son, Fumiyasu, 61, is now the official head of the clinic, carrying on in traditional fashion. Her two other sons are also doctors: Yasuo is a dentist in Tokyo and Hiroshi has his own clinic in Saitama. However, the future of the women’s clinic is …
My Aunt Hiroko Nagaike Sensei - Part 1
Norm Masaji Ibuki
One of the greatest laments that I have for the pre-WW2 immigrant generation is that our connections with Japan have largely disappeared.
Remembering Thomas Makiyama Sensei
Norm Masaji Ibuki
Whenever I go back to Japan these days, it is really with more of a sense of mission, reevaluating my relationship with Japan and my identity of which being Nikkei is significant.
“I am an American first and foremost and I am black” -- American Enka singer Jero
Norm Masaji Ibuki
Today, in the uniquely traditional world of Japanese enka, there is no bigger new name than Jero.