Day of Remembrance Saturday at GVJCI

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“The Unfinished Business After Redress” is the theme of the 2014 Day of Remembrance program from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. Saturday, March 1 at the Gardena Valley Japanese Cultural Institute, JCI Hall at 1964 W. 162nd St., Gardena.  The event is free and open to the public.

“The Unfinished Business After Redress” is the theme of the 2014 Day of Remembrance program from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. Saturday, March 1 at the Gardena Valley Japanese Cultural Institute, JCI Hall at 1964 W. 162nd St., Gardena.  The event is free and open to the public.

DOR commemorates the signing of Executive Order 9066 by President Franklin D. Roosevelt on Feb. 19, 1942. E.O. 9066 led to the mass removal and imprisonment of 120,000 people of Japanese ancestry, the vast majority of whom were U.S. citizens, in concentration camps administered by a new federal bureaucracy—the War Relocation Authority.

Event officials said this year’s event is especially timely.

“Today all Americans live under the threat of ‘indefinite detention’ for ‘suspicion” of disloyalty – based on a provision in the 2012 Defense Appropriations Act that was signed by President Barack Obama in December 2012,” organizers said.  “Today, the DOR is not only an event of interest to Japanese Americans, but one that applies to all Americans who value their civil rights.”

Keynote speaker Dr. Lane Hirabayashi occupies a prestigious endowed professorship at UCLA and his official title underlines his expertise on the subject of this year’s DOR, organizers said.

Hirabayashi is the George and Sakaye Aratani Professor of the Japanese American Incarceration, Redress, and Community. He is known for his eclectic and scholarly interests and sweeping interpretations, as reflected in numerous books and articles that focus on the wartime Nikkei gulag and diaspora, but also range from the early Issei pioneers in the Gardena Valley, to a book on Japanese immigrants to Latin America.

Most recently, he authored a book on his uncle Gordon Hirabayashi.  Prof. Hirabayashi will lead a question-and-answer session at the conclusion of the program.

Keisho Maehara and Zawar Jafri, two students involved in the Bridging Communities project will follow the keynote speaker. Sarah Amarragy of the 2014 Bridging Communities Program is also expected to speak on Saturday.

Bridging Communities is a program co-sponsored by the Greater Los Angeles Area chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), Kizuna, Pacific Southwest district of the Japanese American Citizens League (PSW-JACL), Nikkei for Civil Rights and Redress (NCRR), and the National Park Service.

Realizing that the experiences of Nikkei after the attack on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii that launched World War II, and the Muslim community after the terrorist attacks on “9/11” were unfortunately similar, Bridging Communities was created to bring youths from these diverse communities together, officials said.

Through cross-cultural and interfaith experiences, they build understanding and partnerships to each other.

Entertainment will be provided by members of the popular Grateful Crane Ensemble. Founded in 2001, the Grateful Crane Ensemble, Inc. is a non-profit theatre group whose mission is to present educational and theatrical programs in appreciation for the unique hardships and inspiring contributions of Nikkei in our nation’s history.  Members of the group will perform at the beginning and end of the program.

A lengthy and diverse list of co-sponsors reflects an effort to nurture collegial support on issues of common interest, and includes Assemblyman Al Muratsuchi (66th Assembly District); Asian-Pacific Islander and Native American Faculty and Staff Association, CSUDH; California State University, Dominguez Hills’ Library, Archives and Special Collections, Friends of the Japanese Garden; Dominguez Rancho Adobe Museum; Go For Broke National Education Center; Grateful Crane Ensemble; Greater Los Area Singles Chapter of the JACL; Japanese American Cultural Community Center; Japanese American Historical Society of San Diego; Japanese American Historical Society of Southern California;  Japanese American National Museum; Kizuna; Little Tokyo Historical Society; Little Tokyo Service Center; Manzanar Committee; Nikkei for Civil Rights and Redress; South Bay chapter of the JACL; Torrance Historical Society; Tule Lake Committee; UCLA Aratani Endowed Chair; UCLA Asian American Studies Program; and the UCLA Nikkei Student Union.

For more information, call 310-324-6611 or visit the JCI website at jci-gardena.org.