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Japanese Canadians

Japanese Canadians (日系カナダ人, Nikkei Kanadajin, French: Canadiens japonais) are Canadian citizens of Japanese ancestry. Japanese Canadians are mostly concentrated in Western Canada, especially in the province of British Columbia, which hosts the largest Japanese community in the country with the majority of them living in and around Vancouver. In 2016, there were 121,485 Japanese Canadians throughout Canada.[2]

Japanese Canadians
日系カナダ人
Nikkei Kanadajin
Total population
2001 Census: 85,000 (by ancestry, 77% native born)[1]
2016 Census: 121,485 (by ancestry)[2]
Regions with significant populations
Vancouver, Burnaby, Richmond, Lethbridge
Languages
English, French and Japanese
Religion
Irreligion (46%), Protestant (24%), Buddhism (16%), Catholic (9%) and other (5%)[3]
Related ethnic groups
Japanese, Japanese Americans, Japanese Brazilians, Japanese Peruvians, Japanese Mexicans

Generations edit

The term Nikkei (日系) was coined by sociologists and encompasses all of the world's Japanese immigrants across generations. Japanese descendants living overseas have special names for each of their generations. These are formed by combining one of the Japanese numerals with the Japanese word for generation (sei, 世):

  • Issei (一世) – The first generation of immigrants, born in Japan before moving to Canada.
  • Nisei (二世) – The second generation, born in Canada to Issei parents not born in Canada.
  • Sansei (三世) – The third generation, born in Canada to Nisei parents born in Canada.
  • Yonsei (四世) – The fourth generation, born in Canada to Sansei parents born in Canada.
  • Gosei (五世) – The fifth generation, born in Canada to Yonsei parents born in Canada.

History edit

Early years edit

The first Japanese settler in Canada was Manzo Nagano, who lived in Victoria, British Columbia in 1877 (a mountain in the province was named after him in 1977). The first generation or Issei, mostly came to Vancouver Island, the Fraser Valley and Rivers Inlet from fishing villages on the islands of Kyūshū and Honshū between 1877 and 1928. A Japanese community newspaper for Vancouver residents was first launched in 1897. Around the same time, the Fraser River Japanese Fishermen’s Association Hospital in Steveston was established after the local hospital refused to admit and treat Japanese immigrants.[4]

In 1907, the Asiatic Exclusion League was established in Vancouver and, by September of that year, led a mob of rioters who vandalized both Chinese and Japanese neighbourhoods.[5] In 1908, Canada enacted a Gentlemen's Agreement intended to curb further Japanese immigration to Canada.[6]

Influenced by the American Immigration Act of 1924, members of the British Columbia parliament pushed for a total federal ban on immigration in the 1920s. After several years of negotiations, Japan eventually agreed to reduce its immigration quota under the Gentleman's Agreement to only 150 persons per year.[7]

Internment edit

In 1942, the Canadian government used the War Measures Act to brand Japanese-Canadians enemy aliens and to categorize them as security threats. There were 20,881 Japanese placed in internment camps and road camps in British Columbia, and prisoner-of-war camps in Ontario. Families were also sent as forced labourers to farms throughout the prairies. Three quarters of them were already citizens in Canada. A parallel situation occurred in the United States, the Japanese American internment.[8]

The property and homes of Japanese Canadians living in the province of British Columbia were seized and sold off without their consent in 1943. The funds were used to pay for their internment. They also had to "pay rent" for living in the internment shacks that they were assigned. In 1945, after the war, as part of the continued effort to remove all Japanese Canadians from British Columbia, Prime Minister William Lyon MacKenzie King had his cabinet pass Orders-in-Council to extend the powers of the War Measures Act and give Japanese Canadians two "options": to be relocated to another province "East of the Rockies" or to go "back" to Japan though most were born in Canada and had never been to Japan. After organized protests by against their treatment, they were finally given the right to vote in 1949. Mobility restrictions were lifted in 1949.

After World War II edit

Until 1948, Japanese-Canadians, both Issei and Canadian-born Nisei, were denied the right to vote. Those born in the 1950s and 1960s in Canada are mostly Sansei, the third generation. Sansei usually have little knowledge of the Japanese language. Over 75% of the Sansei have married non-Japanese. Nisei and Sansei generally identify themselves not as fully Japanese but as Canadians first who happen to have Japanese ancestry.

Since 1967, the second wave of immigrants were usually highly educated and resided in urban areas.[9]

In the late 1970s and the 1980s, documents on the Japanese Canadian internment were released, and redress was sought by the National Association of Japanese Canadians, an organization representing Japanese Canadians nationally that was headed by Art Miki from Winnipeg. In 1986, it was shown that Japanese Canadians had lost $443 million during the internment. There were 63% of Canadians who supported redress and 45% who favoured individual compensation. On September 22, 1988, the National Association of Japanese Canadians succeeded in negotiating a redress settlement with the government at the time, under the leadership of Prime Minister Brian Mulroney. The settlement included $21,000 for each individual directly affected, which was by 1993 almost 18,000 survivors. The federal government also provided a community endowment fund to assist in rebuilding the community, which is run by the National Association of Japanese Canadians. In addition, to address the more systemic racism that led to the plan and later justifications of the effort to remove "all people of Japanese racial origin" from Canadian territory, the redress settlement included the establishment of the Race Relations Foundation and challenges to the War Measures Act. The Prime Minister also offered a formal apology in the House of Commons and the certificate of acknowledgement of injustices of the past, which was sent to each Japanese Canadian whose rights had been stripped, incarcerated, dispossessed and forcibly displaced.

The younger generation of Japanese-Canadians born in the late 20th century are mostly Yonsei, the fourth generation. Many Yonsei are of mixed racial descent. According to Statistics Canada's 2001 census of population information, Japanese-Canadians were the Canadian visible minority group most likely to have a formal or common-law marriage with a non-Japanese partner. Out of the 25,100 couples in Canada in 2001 that had at least one Japanese person, in only 30% of them were both partners of Japanese descent. As of 2001, 65% of Canada's Japanese population was born in Canada.

Education edit

 
 
Vancouver
 
Calgary
 
Edmonton
 
Halifax
 
London
 
Ottawa
 
Saskatoon
class=notpageimage|
Locations of hoshū jugyō kō in Canada

Hoshū jugyō kō (Japanese supplementary schools) for instruction of the Japanese language include those in Calgary, Edmonton, Halifax, London, Montreal, Ottawa, Saskatoon, Toronto, and Vancouver.[10]

With teachers from Japan:

  • Toronto Japanese School
  • Vancouver Japanese School (バンクーバー補習授業校, Bankūbā Hoshū Jugyō Kō) - Established on April 7, 1973 (Showa Year 48).[11]

Without teachers from Japan:[10]

  • Alberta
    • Calgary Hoshuko Japanese School Association (カルガリー補習授業校 Karugarī Hoshū Jugyō Kō)[12]
    • Metro Edmonton Japanese Community School (MEJCS; エドモントン補習校 Edomonton Hoshūkō)[13]
  • Nova Scotia
    • Japanese School of Halifax (ハリファックス補習授業校 Harifakkusu Hoshū Jugyō Kō)
  • Ontario
    • London (CA) Japanese School (ロンドン(CA)補習授業校 Rondon Hoshū Jugyō Kō)
    • The Ottawa Hoshuko (オタワ補習校 Otawa Hoshūkō)[14]
  • Quebec
  • Saskatchewan
    • Saskatoon Japanese Language School (サスカトーン補習授業校 Sasukatōn Hoshū Jugyō Kō)

Demographics edit

Historical population
YearPop.±%
19014,738—    
19119,067+91.4%
192115,868+75.0%
193123,342+47.1%
194123,149−0.8%
195121,663−6.4%
196129,157+34.6%
197137,260+27.8%
198140,995+10.0%
198654,505+33.0%
199165,680+20.5%
199677,130+17.4%
200185,225+10.5%
200698,905+16.1%
2011109,740+11.0%
2016121,485+10.7%
2021129,425+6.5%

Japanese Canadians by province or territory edit

Japanese Canadian population by province and territory in Canada in 2021 according to Statistics Canada:

Province or territory Japanese Canadians Percentage
  Canada 129,425 0.4%
  British Columbia 54,640 1.1%
  Ontario 42,250 0.3%
  Alberta 18,605 0.4%
  Quebec 7,460 0.1%
  Manitoba 2,770 0.2%
  Saskatchewan 1,295 0.1%
  Nova Scotia 1,125 0.1%
  New Brunswick 440 0.1%
  Yukon 275 0.7%
  Prince Edward Island 250 0.2%
  Newfoundland and Labrador 150 0.0%
  Northwest Territories 145 0.4%
  Nunavut 15 0.0%

Gallery edit

Notable people edit

Academics

Activists

Architects

Athletes

Film and broadcasting

Musicians

Politicians and government officials

Visual artists

Writers and authors

Other

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "The Japanese Community in Canada". Statistics Canada. 2007.
  2. ^ a b Statistics Canada. "2011 National Household Survey: Data tables". Retrieved 11 February 2014.
  3. ^ "The Japanese Community in Canada".
  4. ^ Tanaka, Yusuke (October 23, 2020). "Waves of Pandemics and the Prewar Japanese Canadian Community". Discover Nikkei.
  5. ^ Baker, Rafferty (November 17, 2019), "Riot Walk tour recounts dark moment in Vancouver's history", CBC News
  6. ^ Lee, Erika (2007). "The "Yellow Peril" and Asian Exclusion in the Americas". Pacific Historical Review. 76 (4): 551. doi:10.1525/phr.2007.76.4.537.
  7. ^ Robinson, Greg (2009). A Tragedy of Democracy: Japanese Confinement in North America. Columbia University Press. p. 24. ISBN 978-0231129220.
  8. ^ Ann Gomer Sunahara, The politics of racism: The uprooting of Japanese Canadians during the Second World War (James Lorimer & Co, 1981)
  9. ^ Ken Adachi, The enemy that never was: A history of the Japanese Canadians (McClelland & Stewart, 1976)
  10. ^ a b "." () MEXT. Retrieved on May 5, 2014.
  11. ^ Home page. Vancouver Japanese School. Retrieved on April 2, 2015.
  12. ^ "トップページ." Calgary Hoshuko Japanese School Association. Retrieved on February 15, 2015.
  13. ^ "Time/Location." Metro Edmonton Japanese Community School. Retrieved on February 15, 2015.
  14. ^ "Contact." The Ottawa Hoshuko. Retrieved on February 15, 2015. "日本大使館 領事班 オタワ補習校事務局  (住所)255 Sussex Dr., Ottawa, ON"

Further reading edit

  • Adachi, Ken. The enemy that never was: A history of the Japanese Canadians (McClelland & Stewart, 1976)
  • Sunahara, Ann Gomer. The politics of racism: The uprooting of Japanese Canadians during the Second World War (James Lorimer & Co, 1981)
  • Ward, W. Peter, The Japanese in Canada (Canadian Historical Association Booklets, 1982) online 21pp

External links edit

  • images in the BC Multicultural Photograph Collection and digitized issues of The New Canadian (Japanese-Canadian newspaper) and Tairiku Jiho (The Continental Times)
  • Japanese Canadians Photograph Collection – A photo album from the UBC Library Digital Collections chronicling the treatment of Japanese Canadians in British Columbia during World War II
  • Tairiku Nippō – Japanese-Canadian newspaper published between 1907 and 1941, and now digitized by the UBC Library Digital Collections

japanese, canadians, 日系カナダ人, nikkei, kanadajin, french, canadiens, japonais, canadian, citizens, japanese, ancestry, mostly, concentrated, western, canada, especially, province, british, columbia, which, hosts, largest, japanese, community, country, with, majo. Japanese Canadians 日系カナダ人 Nikkei Kanadajin French Canadiens japonais are Canadian citizens of Japanese ancestry Japanese Canadians are mostly concentrated in Western Canada especially in the province of British Columbia which hosts the largest Japanese community in the country with the majority of them living in and around Vancouver In 2016 there were 121 485 Japanese Canadians throughout Canada 2 Japanese Canadians日系カナダ人 Nikkei KanadajinTotal population2001 Census 85 000 by ancestry 77 native born 1 2016 Census 121 485 by ancestry 2 Regions with significant populationsVancouver Burnaby Richmond LethbridgeLanguagesEnglish French and JapaneseReligionIrreligion 46 Protestant 24 Buddhism 16 Catholic 9 and other 5 3 Related ethnic groupsJapanese Japanese Americans Japanese Brazilians Japanese Peruvians Japanese Mexicans Contents 1 Generations 2 History 2 1 Early years 2 2 Internment 2 3 After World War II 3 Education 4 Demographics 4 1 Japanese Canadians by province or territory 5 Gallery 6 Notable people 6 1 Academics 6 2 Activists 6 3 Architects 6 4 Athletes 6 5 Film and broadcasting 6 6 Musicians 6 7 Politicians and government officials 6 8 Visual artists 6 9 Writers and authors 6 10 Other 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksGenerations editThe term Nikkei 日系 was coined by sociologists and encompasses all of the world s Japanese immigrants across generations Japanese descendants living overseas have special names for each of their generations These are formed by combining one of the Japanese numerals with the Japanese word for generation sei 世 Issei 一世 The first generation of immigrants born in Japan before moving to Canada Nisei 二世 The second generation born in Canada to Issei parents not born in Canada Sansei 三世 The third generation born in Canada to Nisei parents born in Canada Yonsei 四世 The fourth generation born in Canada to Sansei parents born in Canada Gosei 五世 The fifth generation born in Canada to Yonsei parents born in Canada History editEarly years edit The first Japanese settler in Canada was Manzo Nagano who lived in Victoria British Columbia in 1877 a mountain in the province was named after him in 1977 The first generation or Issei mostly came to Vancouver Island the Fraser Valley and Rivers Inlet from fishing villages on the islands of Kyushu and Honshu between 1877 and 1928 A Japanese community newspaper for Vancouver residents was first launched in 1897 Around the same time the Fraser River Japanese Fishermen s Association Hospital in Steveston was established after the local hospital refused to admit and treat Japanese immigrants 4 In 1907 the Asiatic Exclusion League was established in Vancouver and by September of that year led a mob of rioters who vandalized both Chinese and Japanese neighbourhoods 5 In 1908 Canada enacted a Gentlemen s Agreement intended to curb further Japanese immigration to Canada 6 Influenced by the American Immigration Act of 1924 members of the British Columbia parliament pushed for a total federal ban on immigration in the 1920s After several years of negotiations Japan eventually agreed to reduce its immigration quota under the Gentleman s Agreement to only 150 persons per year 7 Internment edit Main article Japanese Canadian internment In 1942 the Canadian government used the War Measures Act to brand Japanese Canadians enemy aliens and to categorize them as security threats There were 20 881 Japanese placed in internment camps and road camps in British Columbia and prisoner of war camps in Ontario Families were also sent as forced labourers to farms throughout the prairies Three quarters of them were already citizens in Canada A parallel situation occurred in the United States the Japanese American internment 8 The property and homes of Japanese Canadians living in the province of British Columbia were seized and sold off without their consent in 1943 The funds were used to pay for their internment They also had to pay rent for living in the internment shacks that they were assigned In 1945 after the war as part of the continued effort to remove all Japanese Canadians from British Columbia Prime Minister William Lyon MacKenzie King had his cabinet pass Orders in Council to extend the powers of the War Measures Act and give Japanese Canadians two options to be relocated to another province East of the Rockies or to go back to Japan though most were born in Canada and had never been to Japan After organized protests by against their treatment they were finally given the right to vote in 1949 Mobility restrictions were lifted in 1949 After World War II edit Until 1948 Japanese Canadians both Issei and Canadian born Nisei were denied the right to vote Those born in the 1950s and 1960s in Canada are mostly Sansei the third generation Sansei usually have little knowledge of the Japanese language Over 75 of the Sansei have married non Japanese Nisei and Sansei generally identify themselves not as fully Japanese but as Canadians first who happen to have Japanese ancestry Since 1967 the second wave of immigrants were usually highly educated and resided in urban areas 9 In the late 1970s and the 1980s documents on the Japanese Canadian internment were released and redress was sought by the National Association of Japanese Canadians an organization representing Japanese Canadians nationally that was headed by Art Miki from Winnipeg In 1986 it was shown that Japanese Canadians had lost 443 million during the internment There were 63 of Canadians who supported redress and 45 who favoured individual compensation On September 22 1988 the National Association of Japanese Canadians succeeded in negotiating a redress settlement with the government at the time under the leadership of Prime Minister Brian Mulroney The settlement included 21 000 for each individual directly affected which was by 1993 almost 18 000 survivors The federal government also provided a community endowment fund to assist in rebuilding the community which is run by the National Association of Japanese Canadians In addition to address the more systemic racism that led to the plan and later justifications of the effort to remove all people of Japanese racial origin from Canadian territory the redress settlement included the establishment of the Race Relations Foundation and challenges to the War Measures Act The Prime Minister also offered a formal apology in the House of Commons and the certificate of acknowledgement of injustices of the past which was sent to each Japanese Canadian whose rights had been stripped incarcerated dispossessed and forcibly displaced The younger generation of Japanese Canadians born in the late 20th century are mostly Yonsei the fourth generation Many Yonsei are of mixed racial descent According to Statistics Canada s 2001 census of population information Japanese Canadians were the Canadian visible minority group most likely to have a formal or common law marriage with a non Japanese partner Out of the 25 100 couples in Canada in 2001 that had at least one Japanese person in only 30 of them were both partners of Japanese descent As of 2001 65 of Canada s Japanese population was born in Canada Education edit nbsp nbsp Toronto nbsp Vancouver nbsp Montreal nbsp Calgary nbsp Edmonton nbsp Halifax nbsp London nbsp Ottawa nbsp Saskatoonclass notpageimage Locations of hoshu jugyō kō in Canada Hoshu jugyō kō Japanese supplementary schools for instruction of the Japanese language include those in Calgary Edmonton Halifax London Montreal Ottawa Saskatoon Toronto and Vancouver 10 With teachers from Japan Toronto Japanese School Vancouver Japanese School バンクーバー補習授業校 Bankuba Hoshu Jugyō Kō Established on April 7 1973 Showa Year 48 11 Without teachers from Japan 10 Alberta Calgary Hoshuko Japanese School Association カルガリー補習授業校 Karugari Hoshu Jugyō Kō 12 Metro Edmonton Japanese Community School MEJCS エドモントン補習校 Edomonton Hoshukō 13 Nova Scotia Japanese School of Halifax ハリファックス補習授業校 Harifakkusu Hoshu Jugyō Kō Ontario London CA Japanese School ロンドン CA 補習授業校 Rondon Hoshu Jugyō Kō The Ottawa Hoshuko オタワ補習校 Otawa Hoshukō 14 Quebec Montreal Hoshuko School Saskatchewan Saskatoon Japanese Language School サスカトーン補習授業校 Sasukatōn Hoshu Jugyō Kō Demographics editHistorical populationYearPop 19014 738 19119 067 91 4 192115 868 75 0 193123 342 47 1 194123 149 0 8 195121 663 6 4 196129 157 34 6 197137 260 27 8 198140 995 10 0 198654 505 33 0 199165 680 20 5 199677 130 17 4 200185 225 10 5 200698 905 16 1 2011109 740 11 0 2016121 485 10 7 2021129 425 6 5 Japanese Canadians by province or territory edit Japanese Canadian population by province and territory in Canada in 2021 according to Statistics Canada Province or territory Japanese Canadians Percentage nbsp Canada 129 425 0 4 nbsp British Columbia 54 640 1 1 nbsp Ontario 42 250 0 3 nbsp Alberta 18 605 0 4 nbsp Quebec 7 460 0 1 nbsp Manitoba 2 770 0 2 nbsp Saskatchewan 1 295 0 1 nbsp Nova Scotia 1 125 0 1 nbsp New Brunswick 440 0 1 nbsp Yukon 275 0 7 nbsp Prince Edward Island 250 0 2 nbsp Newfoundland and Labrador 150 0 0 nbsp Northwest Territories 145 0 4 nbsp Nunavut 15 0 0 Gallery edit nbsp Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre in Steveston Richmond BC nbsp Vancouver Japanese Language School in Vancouver BC is the oldest Japanese language school in Canada nbsp Vancouver Buddhist Temple in Vancouver BC nbsp Founding members of the Canadian Japanese Association at the Japanese Canadian War Memorial in Stanley Park Vancouver BC nbsp Nikkei Internment Memorial Centre in New Denver BC is designated as a National Historic Site of Canada Notable people editAcademics Audrey Kobayashi social scientist Yoshio Masui cell biologist Emi Nakamura economist Santa J Ono biologist Irene Uchida scientist and Down syndrome researcher Noriko Yui mathematicianActivists Tomekichi Homma voting rights activist Art Miki activist Hide Hyodo Shimizu educator and Japanese Canadian civil rights activist Setsuko Thurlow anti nuclear and peace activistArchitects Bruce Kuwabara architect Raymond Moriyama architectAthletes David Akutagawa karateka Noah Kenshin Browne soccer player Yuka Chokyu para badminton player Christa Deguchi judoka Bill Hatanaka football player Shane Higashi karateka Nathan Hirayama rugby player Akito Hirose ice hockey player Taro Hirose ice hockey player Kate Horne curler Martin Kariya ice hockey player Noriko Kariya boxer Paul Kariya ice hockey player Steve Kariya ice hockey player Yoshio Katsuta judoka Sarah Kawahara figure skater Jason Krog ice hockey player Jon Matsumoto ice hockey player Glenn Michibata tennis player Bryan Miki curler Keegan Messing figure skater Issey Nakajima Farran soccer player Paris Nakajima Farran soccer player Emily Nishikawa cross country skier Kristy Odamura softball player Takemasa Okuyama karateka Stuart Percy ice hockey player Shigetaka Sasaki judoka Raymond Sawada ice hockey player Yoshio Senda judoka Devin Setoguchi ice hockey player Masaru Shintani karateka Jamie Storr ice hockey player Vicky Sunohara ice hockey player and coach Nick Suzuki ice hockey player Ryan Suzuki ice hockey player Masao Takahashi judoka and author Phil Takahashi judoka Ray Takahashi wrestler and judoka Tina Takahashi judoka Atsuko Tanaka ski jumper Yuki Tsubota freestyle skier Masami Tsuruoka karateka Katie Tsuyuki snowboarder John Tucker ice hockey player Nyl Yakura badminton player Kimiko Zakreski snowboarderFilm and broadcasting Mio Adilman actor TV host and writer Trailer Park Boys The Strain Nobu Adilman actor TV host and writer Trailer Park Boys Food Jammers Denis Akiyama actor and voice actor Johnny Mnemonic Sailor Moon Jeff Chiba Stearns documentarian and animator One Big Hapa Family Brian Clement filmmaker Meat Market Binge amp Purge Severn Cullis Suzuki environmentalist author and television host Kazumi Evans actress and voice actress My Little Pony Friendship is Magic Jeananne Goossen actress Falcon Beach Criminal Minds Mary Ito radio and television host Robert Ito actor Quincy M E Falcon Crest Brenda Kamino actress Carter Hiro Kanagawa actor Smallville The Man in the High Castle Andrew Kishino voice actor and rapper The LeBrons Fortnite Byron Lawson actor Snakes on a Plane Margaret Lyons former CBC vice president Nobu McCarthy actress The Wash Philip Nozuka actor Degrassi The Next Generation Linda Ohama documentary filmmaker Randall Okita screenwriter and filmmaker The Lockpicker Lauren Riihimaki YouTuber Tetsuro Shigematsu filmmaker playwright and radio broadcaster Peter Shinkoda actor Falling Skies Daredevil Dylan Akio Smith film and video game director Man Feel Pain FIFA Jennifer Spence actress Stargate Universe Continuum Peter Stursberg writer and broadcaster Richard Stursberg former CBC executive vice president David Suzuki environmentalist and documentarian The Nature of Things Mutsumi Takahashi television news anchor Lauren Toyota television host Mia Uyeda model and VJ Jai West actor Hazard Big Bang Love Juvenile A Lisa Yamanaka actress and voice actress The Magic School BusMusicians Kenji Fuse violinist Aristazabal Hawkes double bassist Guillemots Ron Korb flautist Kytami violinist Catherine Manoukian violinist Mark Takeshi McGregor flutist George Nozuka R amp B singer Justin Nozuka singer songwriter Jon Kimura Parker pianist Alcvin Ramos shakuhachi player Tim Tamashiro jazz singer and radio broadcaster Diyet van Lieshout folk singer Christine Yoshikawa pianistPoliticians and government officials S I Hayakawa former U S Senator for California Bev Oda former MP for Durham cabinet minister Thomas Shoyama economist and civil servant early proponent and designer of Medicare David Tsubouchi former MPP for Markham cabinet minister Naomi Yamamoto former MLA for North Vancouver Lonsdale cabinet ministerVisual artists Roy Kiyooka painter photographer and multi media artist Nobuo Kubota multi media artist Nina Matsumoto comic book artist Saturnalia Takeshi Miyazawa comic book artist Mary Jane Runaways Betty Mochizuki painter and printmaker Cindy Mochizuki multimedia artist Tomori Nagamoto visual artist and poet Kazuo Nakamura painter and sculptor Matsubara Naoko printmaker and painter Haruko Okano mixed media artist Tim Okamura painter and graphic artist Midi Onodera video artist Marjorie Pigott painter Jillian Tamaki comic book artist This One Summer Miyuki Tanobe painter Takao Tanabe painterWriters and authors Ken Adachi journalist Hiromi Goto writer The Kappa Child Tamai Kobayashi novelist and short story writer Joy Kogawa author Obasan Kyo Maclear novelist and children s author Roy Miki poet and scholar Kenzo Mori journalist and newspaper publisher Kim Moritsugu novelist Sachiko Murakami poet Norimitsu Onishi journalist Ruth Ozeki novelist My Year of Meats All Over Creation Michelle Sagara novelist Kerri Sakamoto novelist and screenwriter Strawberry Fields Mark Sakamoto writer and lawyer Aki Shimazaki novelist and translator Mariko Tamaki graphic novelist This One Summer She Hulk Grace Eiko Thomson curator and memoiristOther Dan Liu fashion designer Masumi Mitsui World War I veteran Masajiro Miyazaki physician Manzo Nagano first recorded Japanese immigrant to Canada Gordon Goichi Nakayama Anglican priest Rick Shiomi playwright and director Yellow Fever Hidekazu Tojo chef inventor of the B C rollSee also edit nbsp Japan portal nbsp Canada portalJodo Shinshu Buddhist Temples of Canada Asian Canadians Japanese Canadians in British Columbia Japanese in Toronto Japanese Americans East Asian Canadians Judo in Canada Reference re Persons of Japanese Race The Vancouver Asahi 2014 Japanese film described Asahi baseball team References edit The Japanese Community in Canada Statistics Canada 2007 a b Statistics Canada 2011 National Household Survey Data tables Retrieved 11 February 2014 The Japanese Community in Canada Tanaka Yusuke October 23 2020 Waves of Pandemics and the Prewar Japanese Canadian Community Discover Nikkei Baker Rafferty November 17 2019 Riot Walk tour recounts dark moment in Vancouver s history CBC News Lee Erika 2007 The Yellow Peril and Asian Exclusion in the Americas Pacific Historical Review 76 4 551 doi 10 1525 phr 2007 76 4 537 Robinson Greg 2009 A Tragedy of Democracy Japanese Confinement in North America Columbia University Press p 24 ISBN 978 0231129220 Ann Gomer Sunahara The politics of racism The uprooting of Japanese Canadians during the Second World War James Lorimer amp Co 1981 Ken Adachi The enemy that never was A history of the Japanese Canadians McClelland amp Stewart 1976 a b 北米の補習授業校一覧 平成25年4月15日現在 MEXT Retrieved on May 5 2014 Home page Vancouver Japanese School Retrieved on April 2 2015 トップページ Calgary Hoshuko Japanese School Association Retrieved on February 15 2015 Time Location Metro Edmonton Japanese Community School Retrieved on February 15 2015 Contact The Ottawa Hoshuko Retrieved on February 15 2015 日本大使館 領事班 オタワ補習校事務局 住所 255 Sussex Dr Ottawa ON Further reading editAdachi Ken The enemy that never was A history of the Japanese Canadians McClelland amp Stewart 1976 Sunahara Ann Gomer The politics of racism The uprooting of Japanese Canadians during the Second World War James Lorimer amp Co 1981 Ward W Peter The Japanese in Canada Canadian Historical Association Booklets 1982 online 21ppExternal links editMulticultural Canada website images in the BC Multicultural Photograph Collection and digitized issues of The New Canadian Japanese Canadian newspaper and Tairiku Jiho The Continental Times Japanese Canadians Photograph Collection A photo album from the UBC Library Digital Collections chronicling the treatment of Japanese Canadians in British Columbia during World War II Tairiku Nippō Japanese Canadian newspaper published between 1907 and 1941 and now digitized by the UBC Library Digital Collections Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Japanese Canadians amp oldid 1192630789, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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