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Yuri Kochiyama
i guess our other thread on yuri kochiyama has been archived, so i'll start a new one.
i just met yuri kochiyama at a dinner tonight, and, not surprisingly, she is also very inspirational in person. she made a brief speech about the injustice of the current imperialistic war. almost close to 80 years of age, she still speaks with clarity and strength. she also recently published a biography. please read below. QUOTE:
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Re: Yuri Kochiyama
That means in the mid 1940s she was in her 20s.
Did she give you any predictions for the future? CC |
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Re: Yuri Kochiyama
Passing It On.
Passing It On Wins Gustavus Myers Outstanding Book Award for 2004 Passing It On – A Memoir by renowned human rights activist Yuri Kochiyama recently received a Gustavus Myers Outstanding Book Award for 2004. The award honors "authors and books that challenge ways of thinking and acting, that allow the many faces and facets of bigotry to replicate over and over again," according to Loretta J. Williams, director of the Gustavus Myers Center for the Study of Bigotry and Human Rights. "Passing It On -- A Memoir" is the account of Kochiyama, 83, an extraordinary Japanese American woman who spoke out and fought shoulder-to-shoulder with African Americans, Native Americans, Latinos, Asian Americans and whites for social justice, civil rights, and prisoner and women's rights in the United States and internationally for more than half a century. A prolific writer and speaker on human rights, Kochiyama has spoken at more than 100 colleges, universities and high schools in the United States and Canada. The Gustavus Myers Center praised the book for offering "insight into social conditions for Japanese Americans, and into those alliance builders who chose to work for social justice for all who are oppressed." "The reader learns about the experiences and consequences for families torn away by the government's internment processes and camps in the 40s, about love and perseverance in raising socially conscious children in the midst of progressive movements of the mid- and latter-20th century, and about a stalwart activist's decades of work for political empowerment, racial justice, Puerto Rican independence, Third World liberation, working class equity, reparations, freedom for political prisoners, ethnic studies and more," the Gustavus Myers Center stated. . http://www.war-times.org/issues/4art11.html "It's Time to Work Together" Interview with Yuri Kochiyama * BY JOSINA MORITA Yuri Kochiyama has been a racial justice and human rights activist for more than four decades. She and her family were interned in 1942 with more than 120,000 other Japanese Americans during World War II. A close friend of Malcolm X, Kochiyama became politically active in the 1960s, while living in Harlem with her husband and six children. She has spent much of her life working across racial lines to build multiracial support for the end of South African apartheid and the war in Vietnam, and for redress for Japanese Americans, Puerto Rican independence and Cuban solidarity. Kochiyama, who recently moved to Oakland, Calif. from Harlem, currently works on political prisoner issues and regularly speaks out against the “war on terrorism.” Q: Do you think there are similarities between the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II and the mass detention of Arabs and Muslims today? There is great similarity. The United States has gained support for its wars by using media to whip up war hysteria. During World War II they demonized the Japanese; today they are demonizing Muslims and Arabs. And just as the war against Japan during World War II resulted in the racial profiling and internment of Japanese in America, the “war on terrorism” has resulted in the racial profiling and detainment of Arabs, Muslims, South Asians and all people of color living in the U.S. today. The government arrested over 1,300 Japanese immigrants in the first 48 hours after Pearl Harbor. My father was picked up hours after the bombing of Pearl Harbor. We didn’t know where they took my father. Today I think a lot of families don’t know whether their husbands, brothers and fathers have been detained or deported. Because we had been victimized years ago, we should be the ones in the front supporting in whatever way possible Muslims, Arabs and South Asians. Q: What do you think about the “war on terrorism”? The goal of the war is more than just getting oil and fuel. The United States is set on taking over the world. It’s important that we all understand that the main terrorist and the main enemy of the world’s people is the U.S. government. Racism has been a weakness of this country from the beginning. Throughout history, all people of color, and all people who don’t see eye to eye with the U.S. government have been subjected to American terror. U.S. intentions have been known for so long, but I feel that right now is a dangerous time for the whole world. Q: Why should Asian Americans oppose the “war on terrorism”? The “war on terrorism” has expanded into different areas including Asian countries. Already the U.S. has sent its military to the Philippines and it is threatening North Korea. And look what’s happening in South Asia, India, Pakistan and Afghanistan. Coalitions are very important. If you think about the Vietnam War, it was everybody working together that made that movement grow so fast and it was effective. More and more people are seeing that we have to work together. We must work together to define for ourselves what terrorism is and what resistance is. If ever there was a time when we needed to work together, now is the time. The future is certainly going to be challenging.
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Holy Orders Last edited by Faithless; 03-06-2005 at 08:50 AM. |
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Re: Yuri Kochiyama
My kid wanted to do a report on a woman minority.
The first person I could think of was Yuri. ![]()
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Holy Orders |
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Re: Yuri Kochiyama
Ended up reading Yuri's autobiography and a biography done by an Asian that added a bunch of political context.
It's amazing how she was able to become a behind-the-scenes player in the civil rights movement, and then to branch off into her own projects. Her theme had always been rights for "political prisoners", some more controversial than others. She lives in Oakland, CA, I understand, and it appears that a few folks I know have some association with her.
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Re: Yuri Kochiyama
QUOTE:
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#7
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Re: Yuri Kochiyama
QUOTE:
She used to drag her kids along to her political events.
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