Memory

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In this segment, Sho Yamagushiku discusses how the Canadian and Japanese gender norms may shape

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Bringing together young activists from across Canada, the Centennial Youth Conference in 1977 marked the 100 year anniversary of the first Japanese immigrant’s arrival in Canada.

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Here, a Japanese Canadian activist, Glen Nagano, speaks on the difficulty of mobilizing his friends to join the Asian Canadian activist movement

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In this segment, Japanese Canadian activist Glen Nagano speaks on the relationship between the past and our identities.

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In this segment, Izumi Sakamoto and activist Glen Nagano discuss shikata ga nai (“it can’t be helped”) sentiments and the loss of family history.

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Content Warning: a derogatory term for Vietnamese people (“g**k”) commonly used during the War is spoken. While we have not censored the clip for the historical accuracy of the story, please use your judgement before listening as it may be offensive to hear.

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In the early 70s Japanese Canadian activists began to gather together at conferences and art exhibits to promote the growing Asian Rights Movement in Canada.   

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Before the rise of social media, activists had to come up with creative solutions to reach others in their community.

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Mainstream arts communities have often excluded artists from minority groups, and Asian Canadian artists are no different. However, this position of being outside of the mainstream gives them a unique view from which they can comment on mainstream ideas and social structures.

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In 1972, the Asian Canadian Experience Conference brought together young Asian Canadians from across Canada.

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In this segment, playwright Rick Shiomi discusses the founding of Asian American theatre company Theatre Mu. 

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In this clip, two Sansei women involved in the organization of the first-ever Powell Street Festival discuss the slide tape that they created, which captured Japanese Canadian history.

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Incarceration camp bus tours take Japanese Canadians to former WWII incarceration camp sites in the interior of BC.

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After the war, survivors of mass incarceration were scattered across Canada. For many, the trauma of incarceration led them to resist forming place-based community with other