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Blog archive

November 2024

October 2024

ARBORIST WALK: NOT FOR TREE HUGGERS ONLY!
10/29/2024

Bill Wishner: Visual Hunter
10/29/2024

Can a Village Group Fix Our Healthcare System?
10/29/2024

Community Board Directors Strengthen Village Board
10/29/2024

Connecting with Village Connections: The A, B, C, & D’s of Medicare @ 65+
10/29/2024

Grief is a Journey: Two Paths Taken
10/29/2024

Message from the President
10/29/2024

Promoting Informed & Involved Voters
10/29/2024

What Will Be Your Legacy?
10/29/2024

1619, Approaching the Election...
10/27/2024

Beyond and Within the Village - A Star is Born
10/17/2024

Happiness by Priscilla Leonard
10/11/2024

Those Winter Sundays by Robert Hayden
10/11/2024

Unpainted Door by Louise Gluck
10/11/2024

In the Evening by Billy Collins
10/10/2024

Wild Geese by Mary Oliver
10/10/2024

Betty Kilby, A Family History
10/01/2024

Betty Kilby, A Family History
10/01/2024

Betty Kilby, A Family History
10/01/2024

September 2024

August 2024

1619 Wide Ranging Interests
08/19/2024

1619 Wide Ranging Interests
08/19/2024

First Anniversary
08/19/2024

Alexandra Leaving by Leonard Cohen
08/16/2024

Muse des Beaux Arts by W. H. Auden
08/16/2024

The God Abandons Antony by Constantinos P. Cavafy
08/16/2024

Ch – Ch – Ch –Changes
08/15/2024

Cultural Activities Team offers an ‘embarrassment of riches’
08/15/2024

Engaging in Pasadena Village
08/15/2024

Future Housing Options
08/15/2024

Message from the President
08/15/2024

There Are Authors Among Us
08/15/2024

Villagers Welcome New Members at the Tournament Park Picnic
08/15/2024

Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night by Dylan Thomas
08/14/2024

A narrow Fellow in the Grass by Emily Dickinson
08/13/2024

Haikus
08/13/2024

One Art by Elizabeth Bishop
08/13/2024

Poem 20 by Pablo Neruda
08/13/2024

Still I Rise by Maya Angelou
08/13/2024

Trees by Joyce Kilmer
08/13/2024

July 2024

June 2024

May 2024

Emergency Preparedness: Are You Ready?
05/28/2024

Farewell from the 2023/24 Social Work Interns
05/28/2024

Gina on the Horizon
05/28/2024

Mark Your Calendars for the Healthy Aging Research California Virtual Summit
05/28/2024

Meet Our New Development Associate
05/28/2024

Putting the Strategic Plan into Practice
05/28/2024

Washington Park: Pasadena’s Rediscovered Gem
05/28/2024

Introducing Civil Rights Discussions
05/22/2024

Rumor of Humor #2416
05/14/2024

Rumor of Humor #2417
05/14/2024

Rumor of Humor #2417
05/14/2024

Rumor of Humor #2418
05/14/2024

Springtime Visitors
05/07/2024

Freezing for a Good Cause – Credit, That Is
05/02/2024

No Discussion Meeting on May 3rd
05/02/2024

An Apparently Normal Person Author Presentation and Book-signing
05/01/2024

Flintridge Center: Pasadena Village’s Neighbor That Changes Lives
05/01/2024

Pasadena Celebrates Older Americans Month 2024
05/01/2024

The 2024 Pasadena Village Volunteer Appreciation Lunch
05/01/2024

Woman of the Year: Katy Townsend
05/01/2024

April 2024

March 2024

February 2024

January 2024

MYSTERY AFTER MANZANAR

By Blog Master
Posted: 01/31/2022
Tags:

MYSTERY AFTER MANZANAR

Of all the significant events to befall our world during the twentieth century, World War II was one of the most tragic. This war brought devastation and death to many parts of the world, mostly in Europe and the Pacific. Many of these events have been well-documented. Perhaps not as well-known are the horrors that took place right within our own borders. One of these was the US Government’s imprisonment of people of Japanese ancestry in detention centers. Mystery writer Naomi Hirahara has cast some light on this dark period of our history in her first historical novel, Clark and Division.  


Naomi, a resident of Altadena, is an Edgar Award-winning author of multiple traditional mystery series and noir short stories. Her Mas Arai mysteries, published in Japanese, Korean, and French, as well as English, feature a Los Angeles gardener and Hiroshima survivor who solves crimes.


Clark and Division follows a Japanese American family’s move to Chicago in 1944 after their release from a California wartime detention center. The idea for the book came as a result of research done for her 2018 non-fiction book Life After Manzanar, co-written with Heather C. Lindquist.  Naomi learned that many people who had been living in California before their incarceration relocated in the mid-west after their release.


This past month, Naomi gave an engaging talk on the writing of her new book to Pasadena Village members and guests via Zoom. She shared details of her research and her writing process as she delved into the fictional lives of her characters. She made several trips to Chicago to visit the neighborhood near Clark and Division streets, which after the war was home to newly relocated Japanese Americans. She used several of the buildings that remain as locations for her fictional Japanese American family.


Naomi's main character is Aki Ito. Aki travels to Chicago to learn more about the death of her beloved sister, Rose, who died in a subway train accident near the Clark and Division station. Naomi found it difficult to give a “voice” to Aki. Naomi’s publisher pushed her to go deeper into Aki’s character. Eventually Naomi realized that what she needed was to overcome her own emotional and cultural blocks.


Nearly 40 participants attended Naomi's presentation, which she highlighted with photos of early Chicago and excerpts from her new novel. In addition to Village members, a number of Naomi's friends and acquaintances attended. After the talk, Naomi invited participants to share their memories of incarceration and relocation. A series of fascinating and very moving stories followed as attendees described the impact of being forcibly removed from their homes, watching their parents suffer discrimination and loss of livelihood, and witnessing the prejudice that persisted after the war.


Shizuko (Shizzie) Akasaki, Pasadena Village member and former Board President, recalled her experience. “My father had an import/export store in Long Beach. We were one of only two Japanese families in our local school and I was used to seeing and being with what I would call “other” people. But I didn’t know they were “other”. They were just people. I was 7 years old when we were first taken from our home to be housed in the stables at Santa Anita racetrack. When I first got to Santa Anita I saw that everyone was Japanese. I didn’t know there were so many people who looked like me. That’s when I knew that we were the ‘other.’”  Shizzie and her family were later moved to a camp at Jerome, Arkansas, followed by Gila River in Arizona. After the war, Shizzie’s family re-located to Boyle Heights. Shizzie grew up to graduate from UCLA and become an Assistant Superintendent in the LA Unified School District. “But my father, a college graduate, never got his business back. Due to discrimination he worked in jobs such as gardening, wholesale produce buyer, and he died fairly young. He and Mom never, never, never talked about the camps. I feel that keeping all of this inside himself is what shortened his life.”


Those of us who attended Naomi's presentation felt privileged to hear these first hand stories from the survivors of a dark period of our country’s history.

To watch the recording of the presentation and discussion, Click here


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