NAKAMURA, Charles Kiyoshi (1928-2010)

     Charles Kiyoshi Nakamura was a resident of San Jose, entered into rest on November 16, 2010. During WW II, evacuated & relocated to the Poston internment camp,  block 211-1-B in Arizona.He was preceded in death by his wife, Jean (Teramoto) Nakamura; and brothers, James, Harry, Robert, Donald Nakamura; and sister, Earlyn.
      He is survived by daughter, Regina (Frank) Hernandez; and sisters, Marion (Saburo)  Masada and May Morgan.

Source: San Jose Mercury News/San Mateo County Times

SASAKI, Hideo (1919-2000)

Hideo Sasaki
     Hideo Sasaki was born in Reedley, California on November 25, 1919. He grew up working on the family farm and harvested crops.  He was attending the University of California, Berkeley when WW II began, and he was forced to leave college and evacuate to Poston block 318-12-A in Arizona.  He was able to leave the camp by working on a farm in Sterling, Colorado.
     After WW II, Hideo moved to Denver, CO, and met his future wife, Kisa, a graduate of the University of Colorado.  In 1946, he attended the University of Illinois and received a Bachelor of Fine Arts and Landscape Architecture degree.  In 1948 he received a Master's degree in Landscape Architecture from Harvard Design School.  He returned to Illinois and taught for 2 years, then spent the following 18 years as a professor and chairman of the Landscape Architecture Dept of the Harvard Graduate School of Design.
     In 1953, Hideo Sasaki founded the Sasaki Associates, Inc which was located in Watertown Mass.  He was the president and chairman of the company until 1980. Hideo worked in the planning and design of many well-known projects, such as the corporate projects for IBM, Upjohn Co., and Deere & Co.; numerous public spaces including Hartford's Constitution Plaza, New York City's Greenacre Park, and Pennsylvania Avenue; as well as university campuses at the University of Colorado- Boulder and Foothill College in Los Altos, California.
     He was honored by Harvard at the Dept of Landscape Architecture's 100th anniversary celebration with the Centennial Medal, for his extraordinary achievement in landscape architecture.  He also received include honorary degrees from Ohio State University and University of Illinois. At the 1993 Ohio State commencement, the University praised his contributions as a designer and educator and he was awarded the Ohio State Doctor of Fine Arts citation.
     In 1961, Hideo Sasaki was appointed to the U.S. Commission of Fine Arts by President John F. Kennedy, and he was reappointed by President Johnson in 1965.  Hideo served on many distinguished panels,  juries, and design review committees including the Vietnam War Memorial Competition in 1981, the Astronaut Memorial Competition in 1988, and the Peace Garden Competition in 1989. He was the first to receive the American Society of Landscape Architects' medal in 1971.  In 1973, he was awarded the Allied Professions Medal from the American Institute of Architects.
     During his later years,  Hideo lived with his wife and daughters in Lafayette, California. 
     He was survived by his wife, Kisa, and two daughters, Rin and Ann.

Source: http://www.landscapeonline.com/research/article/3232

YAMAMOTO, Hisaye (1921-2011)

Posted on Sat, Feb. 12, 2011 

Hisaye Yamamoto, writer of Japanese-American stories
By Elaine Woo
Los Angeles Times 

     Hisaye Yamamoto, one of the first Asian American writers to earn literary distinction after World War II with highly polished short stories that illuminated a world circumscribed by culture and brutal strokes of history, has died. She was 89.
     Yamamoto had been in poor health since a stroke last year and died in her sleep Jan. 30 at her home in northeast Los Angeles, said her daughter, Kibo Knight.
     Often compared to such short-story masters as Katherine Mansfield, Flannery O'Connor and Grace Paley, Yamamoto concentrated her imagination on the issei and nisei, the first- and second-generation Japanese Americans who were targets of the public hysteria unleashed after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941.
     Yamamoto was 20 when the attack sent the United States into war and her family into a Poston, Arizona internment camp (block 22-1-C) . 
     Her most celebrated stories, such as "Seventeen Syllables" and "The Legend of Miss Sasagawara," reflect the preoccupations and tensions of the Japanese immigrants and offspring who survived that era. Among her most powerful characters are women who struggle to nurture their romantic or creative selves despite the constraints of gender, racism and tradition.
     "She wrote in a true voice," said Wakako Yamauchi, the Japanese American dramatist who wrote "And the Soul Shall Dance" and had known Yamamoto since childhood. "She wrote about what she knew and that was about us - Asians, Japanese Americans. Her stories were wonderful, beautiful legacies."
     A private, somewhat taciturn woman with a wry outlook, Yamamoto began writing in the 1930s and published her earliest stories in such prestigious journals as Partisan Review as well as in anthologies, including "The Best American Short Stories of 1952." But she did not receive serious critical attention until the 1970s, when Asian American scholars began to study her work.
     "She was the opposite of the self-promoting writer," said University of California, Los Angeles English professor King-Kok Cheung, recalling a woman who often responded cryptically, if at all, to questions and lacked flair in public readings. Yet Yamamoto was, Cheung notes, "a very unusual writer, especially given the times, when it was so hard for a Japanese American, not to mention a woman, to publish."
     Hisaye Yamamoto was born in Redondo Beach on Aug. 23, 1921. The daughter of immigrant strawberry farmers from Kumamoto, Japan, she was a voracious reader and published her first story when she was 14. At Compton College, where she earned an associate of arts degree, she studied French, Spanish, German and Latin. She wrote stories for Japanese American newspapers using the pseudonym "Napoleon."
     During World War II, she wrote for the Poston internment camp newspaper, which published her serialized mystery "Death Rides the Rail to Poston." She briefly left the camp to work in Springfield, Mass., but returned when her 19-year-old brother died while fighting with the U.S. Army's 442nd Regimental Combat Team in Italy.
     After the war ended in 1945, she returned to Los Angeles and became a reporter and columnist for the Los Angeles Tribune, an African American weekly. Her experiences there deepened her awareness of racism to a point of nearly unbearable anguish. She wrote a story about the intimidation of a black family named Short by white neighbors in segregated Fontana. She attempted to hew to journalistic standards of impartiality, cautiously describing the threats against the family as "alleged" or "claims."
     After her story ran, the Shorts were killed in an apparent arson fire. Yamamoto castigated herself for failing to convey the urgency of their situation.
     "I should have been an evangelist at Seventh and Broadway, shouting out the name of the Short family and their predicament in Fontana," she wrote decades later in a 1985 essay called "A Fire in Fontana." Instead, she pronounced her effort to communicate as pathetic as "the bit of saliva which occasionally trickled" from the corner of a feeble man's mouth.
     She left the newspaper and rode trains and buses across the country. "Something was unsettling my innards," she wrote of her dawning multiethnic consciousness. "I continued to look like the Nisei I was, with my height remaining at slightly over four feet ten, my hair straight, my vision myopic. Yet I know that this event transpired within me; sometimes I see it as my inward self being burnt black in a certain fire."
     She drew from this well in the burst of writing that followed. Her breakthrough came with the 1948 publication in Partisan Review of "The High-Heeled Shoes, a Memoir," a shockingly contemporary story about sexual harassment. She weaved intercultural conflicts and bonds into "Seventeen Syllables" (1949), in which a nisei girl's blooming romance with a Mexican American classmate offers an achingly innocent counterpoint to her issei mother's arranged marriage. "Wilshire Bus" (1950) explores a Japanese American woman's silence during a white man's racist harangue against a Chinese couple on the bus they are riding.
     Fifteen of her stories and essays were collected in "Seventeen Syllables and Other Stories" (1988), which an Amerasia Journal reviewer hailed as "a literary time capsule - an intimate slice of Japanese American history." Two of her stories - "Seventeen Syllables" and "Yoneko's Earthquake" - formed the basis of an hourlong drama called "Hot Summer Winds" for the PBS series "American Playhouse" in 1991.
     With an adopted son, Hisaye Yamamoto moved to New York in the early 1950s to be a volunteer in the Catholic Worker Movement. In 1955 she married Anthony DeSoto and returned to Los Angeles, where they raised four more children. Her husband died in 2003. 
     In addition to Knight, of Los Angeles, Yamamoto is survived by children Paul of Simi Valley, Yuki of Los Angeles, Rocky of Sylmar and Gilbert of Arcadia; seven grandchildren and two brothers.
     Yamamoto often described herself as a housewife, not a writer. Not surprisingly, her output was greatly diminished during the years consumed by childrearing, but picked up again after her children were grown.
     "I write when something sticks in my craw," she told A. Magazine in 1994. "Writing is a compulsion - or an itch."

NAGATA, Gordon Mitsuo (1932-2011)


Born in Dinuba, CA, on October 17, 1932, Gordon passed away on February 5, 2011, in Orosi, CA.

[NOTE: In August 1942, 10 year-old Gordon, with his parents, George Saichi & Tamaji Nagata, and older sibblings, Mallie, Stanley, Lydia, Lilyan and Amy Nagata were forced to relocate to the Poston internment camp,  block 305-11-C in Arizona.]

He earned his Doctor of Pharmacy degree from the University of Southern California in 1957. He opened Cutler Pharmacy on October 3, 1966, and purchased Dinuba Drugs in 1969.

 In 2007, Gordon was recognized by the California State Board of Pharmacy for 50 years as a registered pharmacist and recently honored by the Cutler-Orosi Chamber of Commerce with their "2011 Business of the Year" award for community service. He enjoyed bowling, golf, playing the piano and vacations with his family. He also gave years of service to Palm United Methodist Church.

Gordon was preceded in death by his son, Keith, [his parents, George Saichi Nagata and Tamaji (Matsuyama) Natata], his sister, Mallie (Nagata) Hanada, and his brother, Stanley Nagata.

He is survived by his wife, June (Kishi), of 41 years; his daughter, Michele; his brother, Ed Nagata; and his sisters, [Lydia (Nagata) Shiba], Lilyan (Nagata) Kiyomoto, and Amy (Nagata) Akaishi.

Services at Palm United Methodist Church in Dinuba on Friday, February 18, at 10:00 a.m. 

Source: Visalia Times Delta

OHAMA, George Taro (1914-2010)

George T. Ohama
     George T. Ohama, a long-time Sanger area Japanese-American farmer, passed away on Sunday, August 15, 2010, five weeks prior to his ninety-sixth birthday. He was born on September 22, 1914, in Osso Flacco near Guadalupe and Arroyo Grande on the central California coast where his parents Kunzo and Hanako Ohama farmed.
     In 1926, the Ohama family moved to Sanger where George graduated from Sanger High School in 1932. A few years later, George left the family farm and worked in Guadalupe until the outbreak of World War II. He interned at Poston Camp (Block 222-11-C) in Arizona where he met and married Haruye Adachi (Block 222-4-A). They were happily married for over 66 years. The young couple left camp early to work in Pennsylvania, then returned after the end of the war to farm peaches, grapes, and raisins in the Fresno area.
     For the last few years of his life, he was a resident of Vintage Gardens. He loved fishing! The family would like to extend their deepest gratitude to the staffs of Vintage Gardens and Optimal Hospice for their care of their father.
     Preceding him in death was sister, Haruko Umino; and brothers, Abe, Ben and Bill. He is survived by Haruye, his wife of 66 years: five children, Abe (Darlene) Ohama, Dan (Kathleen) Ohama, Irene (Steve) Domoto, all of Fresno; Ruth (Don) Fujinaga of Cutler;  and Marilyn (Ted) Hasegawa of Santa Clara; nine grandchildren: Joe, Jason, Jamie, Jacey, Sarah, Lance, Rebecca, Derek and Michael; and five great-grandchildren.

Source: Published in the Fresno Bee from August 22 to August 24, 2010

KIMURA, George Kenji (1926-2011)

George K. Kimura
     George Kenji Kimura was born on January 16, 1926 in Selma, California to Arakichi and Yoshiye (Kuroki) Kimura. He passed away on Sunday, February 6, 2011, at the age of 85. George grew up in Reedley and attended Clay Elementary School. He attended Reedley High School, but during his sophmore year and in the midst of World War ll, George and is family were interned in Poston, Arizona (Block 326-14-A). However, in 1943 while still in the internment camp, George graduated from high school and  thereafter joined the U.S. Military as a proud member of the 442nd RCT.
     After his time in service, George returned to Reedley and along with his brother Frank, established Kimura Trucking Company and began farming numerous ranches in the Reedley and Orange Cove areas. It was fitting that George and his brother would start a trucking business because George loved trucks and one of his dreams in life was to have his own business. George ran Kimura Trucking successfully for over 50 years and his was extremely proud that his son continued the family business, which is still in operation today.
     George married his loving wife Setsuko (Naito) in 1952 and together they had four children. George and Sets started their life together in Reedley and in 1954 they moved to their ranch in Orange Cove and spent ten great years there before returning to Reedley, the town they have called home ever since.
     As the children grew, George enjoyed taking annual trips to Las Vegas and Disneyland with his family. He was always supportive of his children in all their endeavors. In his later years, George along with Sets, enjoyed visiting with friends and family by traveling to reunions of the 422nd Unit and Poston III camp. He always treasured family gatherings and reunions, and especially enjoyed his weekly trips "up-the-hill".
     He also loved spending time with all of his grandchildren and great grandchildren. George was a loving husband, devoted father, doting grandpa, and adoring great grandfather.
     George is preceded in death by his parents, Arakichi and Yoshiye Kuroki Kimura ; his grandson, Blake Egoian; and brother, Frank Shigeaki Kimura. He is survived by his wife, Setsuko (Naito) Kimura; children Karen  (Gary) Sakata and daughters Melanie & Lindsay, Kathy (Richard) Enns and daughters Lisa (Mark) Fowler and Laura (Matt) Giordano; Keven (Nannette) Kimura and  Chris and his fiancĂ© Linda, Justin (Eilis), Bryana and Todd; Carol (Jim) Egoian and Tisha (Jess) Foddrill and Whitney & Cole; great-grandchildren, Liberty, Brayden, McKenzie, Elijah & Addison; sisters-in-law, Helen Kimura, Michi Ikeda, Amy E. Naito, Sumiye Okita, Namie Naito, Nana Naito, and Amy Naito; brother-in-law, Shig Naito.

Source: Published in the Fresno Bee on February 9, 2011 
 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 

By Tom Willey of Tom Willey Farms
     I used to entice my young children into accompanying me on each day’s harvest haul to Kimura Trucking’s Reedley dock with promised treats from the “Indian” or “Piggy” store. I became acquainted with George Kimura, consummate fresh produce transporter hereabouts, some 30 years back, when this greenhorn vegetable farmer struggled to establish relationships with top commission merchants in Los Angeles and Bay Area terminal markets.  Those agents would invariably admonish me: “Send it on Kimura”, which translated to their receiving my product near midnight in a properly refrigerated van for a super fresh same-day-sale.
     Few, if any, haulers could match Kimura’s on time service, skillfully managing his small signature fleet of classic, long-nosed green and white conventionals, the secret was George’s “tight ship” operation. Woe to any of his several dozen, mostly family-scale stonefruit growers or the odd vegetable farmer whose flatbed of produce pulled up late to Kimura’s east Reedley staging dock. George would cast a disapproving gaze that withered delinquents with shame. But he and wife Sets also kept a candy jar on the desk for farmers’ sweet-toothed offspring.
     George was a native local, born in 1926 to freshly immigrated parents from Fukuoka, Japan. The family had settled in Reedley where his folks labored on others’ farms before purchasing their own. The Kimuras were, of course, spirited away to a wartime relocation camp in Poston, Arizona. A similar fate befell all west coast Japanese-Americans. Young George was drafted when coming of age and served with the famously valiant 442nd Infantry Regiment in WWII’s European Theatre.
     Though a neighbor’s kind attention preserved and protected the Kimura ranch throughout war years, George invested in a truck soon after his 1946 return and thereafter focused sole attention on hauling produce for numerous moderate scale orchardists in his district yet packing under family labels.  We often forget, lounging at bountiful tables, farmers and laborers whose sweat produced our food, but rarely if ever might we honor the service of those transporting it. George’s son, Kevin, operates Kimura’s green-and-white fleet yet today, inheriting the ethic, “Under commit and over achieve” from his exacting father. As we laid George to rest from Reedley’s Buddhist Church, a few weeks ago, I couldn’t help but gratefully reflect on an immense part this good man’s service has played in the success of my farm.

Source: http://www.eco-farm.org/blogs/farmer/under_commit_and_over_achieve/

SUGANO, Kinji (1934-2011)


Feb 3, 2011 Chicago-Sun Times

     Kinji Sugano (Poston camp 1) was shy and quiet, the type of guy who might drift into a room and drift out again without people taking any notice. It was their loss.
     For family and friends, he would and could do anything, whether it was repairing a refrigerator, refurbishing an old chest, fixing a leaky pipe or providing chauffeur service.
     “I remember when I was in high school I asked my dad if he could take me and my friends to a concert in South Bend,” said daughter Edna Sugano. “Well, we got there when the parking lot gate opened, around noon, and he waited until the concert was over at 10:30. I don’t know what he did in the car for all that time, but he was right there when we came out.”

Daughter Doris Derbick recalls the time when she and her friends were stranded in suburban Olympia Fields after a cheerleading event. He drove down from the North Side in his Pontiac Catalina and “12 or 14 of us crammed into the car,” she said, adding, “This was before the seat-belt law.”
     He asked the girls where they lived and drove each of them home. This was done, as with most things he did, without complaint.
     Mr. Sugano died Jan. 22 of complications following surgery. He was 76.
     Mr. Sugano worked 33 years as a repairman for White-Westinghouse (later Frigidaire). “He was proud that he worked for such a big company,” said his wife, Kimie.
     A secure job gave Mr. Sugano the stability that always had seemed to elude him.
     “He had a rough life,” said Roy Akune, his brother-in-law.
     When Mr. Sugano was 8 years old, his family — and all Japanese Americans living on the West Coast — were sent to internment camps after war broke out in 1941. The family was separated, with Mr. Sugano, his mother and two brothers and sister, going to (Poston camp I) Arizona and later Texas. Mr. Sugano’s father, however, was initially sent to Tule Lake, Calif., a camp reserved for those the U.S. government deemed disloyal.
     After the war, Mr. Sugano’s father took the family to Japan, a country that young Kinji had never seen. Then 12, he was put into the fifth grade even though he could neither read nor write Japanese. He was bullied by classmates because he was illiterate and because he was an American. 
     The postwar years in Japan were harsh, with the economy in ruins and food scarce. Later, Mr. Sugano was sent to Tokyo to live with relatives.
     In the early 1950s, Mr. Sugano returned to America. For a while he worked as a farmhand. “The lady was really mean,” Akune said. “She would only feed him squash. Kinji came to hate squash.” 
     Eventually Mr. Sugano made his way to Chicago and was drafted into the Army, spending 1957-59 in Korea at the DMZ. Back home again, he took a course in air conditioning and refrigeration maintenance. It proved a wise decision. He was never out of work and there were occasional perks. 
     “He came home one day and said he fixed the refrigerator at Ernie Banks’ house,” his wife said. Mr. Sugano also got Banks’ autograph.
     Mr. Sugano loved sports, especially the Cubs and Bears. But he was also an athlete. A picture taken at the internment camp shows a shoeless 11-year-old dressed in a baseball uniform, his bat poised to take a healthy swing. Later, he would take up golf and win his share of tournaments.
     Mr. Sugano spent his retirement doing favors for family and friends — and indulging his grandchildren. His daughter Edna said her father took 4-year-old granddaughter Mika to an arts and crafts store to buy some little items to decorate an ornament. 
     “She came home with 14-carat gold beads,” Edna said. “They cost $150.”
But the grandchildren were content just sitting on the couch with him, laughing and joking and watching “SpongeBob: SquarePants.”
     “He was so clever and the most patient man you would ever hope to meet,” Doris said.
     Other survivors include sister Sumire (Sugano) Maruta; brother Katsushi Sugano; son-in-law James Derbick; granddaughters Jamie, Megan and Julia Derbick, and sister-in-law Yoshiko Sugano.