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Black and white image of Japanese American children seated in a classroom with bare wooden walls.  Many of the children have their hands raised.  A young woman in a long coat stands facing them with an open book in her hands.  The image is overlaid on a black background, with an inset in the upper left corner reading "Day of Remembrance 2022" in red letters.  Additional text below the image reads "The TEAACH Act: What it means for Illinois, educators, & the Japanese American Community, Sunday, 02-20-2022, 2:00-3:30 PM, @ Chicago History Museum”

Have you registered yet for Day of Remembrance 2022? Seats are filling up fast!

 

The TEAACH Act: What it means for Illinois, educators, and the Japanese American community


Sunday, February 20, 2022

2:00-3:30 PM

Chicago History Museum, 1601 N. Clark Street

 

PRE-REGISTRATION REQUIRED. MASKS and PROOF OF VACCINATION REQUIRED. There will be no refreshments served at this year’s event.


Click here to register or call (773) 275-0097 if you are unable to register online. There will be no livestream of this event. A recording will be shared as quickly as possible afterward for those who are unable to attend in person.


Signed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt on February 19, 1942, Executive Order 9066 led to the incarceration of 120,000 Japanese Americans during WWII. Every year, the Japanese American community in Chicago comes together to commemorate EO9066 as a reminder of the fragility of civil liberties in times of crisis and the importance of remaining vigilant in protecting the rights and freedoms of all.

 

Day of Remembrance 2022 features a variety of speakers celebrating the passage of the Teaching Equitable Asian American Community History (TEAACH) Act. Signed into law on July 9, 2021, the TEAACH Act makes Illinois the first state to mandate that Asian American history be taught in public schools. Join us to learn why the TEAACH Act matters, how the task of implementation is being addressed, and how the Japanese American community is contributing to the effort. The program will feature a showcase of classroom-ready resources for teaching about EO9066 and incarceration through a Chicago lens.

 

Chicago-based Ho Etsu Taiko will take the stage to perform a new work composed especially for Day of Remembrance 2022. Ho Etsu Taiko blends the deep-rooted culture of Japanese American drumming with influences that inspire and celebrate the diversity of their performing members. 

 

THIS EVENT IS SPONSORED BY THE CHICAGO JAPANESE AMERICAN COUNCIL, CHICAGO JAPANESE AMERICAN HISTORICAL SOCIETY, JAPANESE AMERICAN CITIZENS LEAGUE – CHICAGO CHAPTER, JAPANESE AMERICAN SERVICE COMMITTEE, AND JAPANESE MUTUAL AID SOCIETY OF CHICAGO

February Conversation Table - Thursday, February 10, 2022.

JASC 日本語でお話会

開催日:毎月第2木曜日

開催時間:午後1:30から3:00まで

参加費:1人/1回5ドル



日本語で交流したい方へのお知らせです。(日本語の会話クラスではありません。)

コロナ・パンデミックで過去1年以上ズームで続けてきた日本語のお話会ですが、州や市の拘束解除に伴って、今までどおりJASCで 開催できることになりました。

普段あまりほかの方との交流のない方、一人でお住まいの方、思いっきり日本語でおしゃべりしてみませんか?楽しい話題や暮らしのアイデアを分け合い、ちょっとした悩みや不安など、皆で話し合えば解決法がでてくるかも知れません。いろいろなことを日本語で話し合い、英語社会で溜まったストレスを解消しましょう。

このプログラムに興味のある方、参加したいと思われる方は、Eメールで川口ケイ[email protected]電話:773-275-0097内線226, までご連絡ください。


Date: Monthly, 1:30 pm to 3:00 pm

Cost: $5 per person, per session


For native-level Japanese speakers to connect and socialize with others. Please note that this is not a Japanese language class.


Following the Covid-19 guidelines for the city and state, we are now resuming in-person gatherings at JASC for our Conversation Table.


JASC's Conversation Table welcomes everyone to share their experiences, ideas, and stories through social interaction, and also an opportunity to expand their social networks with others in the local community.


If you would like to participate, please contact Kay Kawaguchi at [email protected] or please call and leave a message to Kay Kawaguchi to RSVP 773-275-0097 x 226.



JASC is located at 4427 N. Clark Street, Chicago, IL

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For more information, please visit our website:

https://www.jasc-chicago.org/community-services/for-everyone/tampopo-kai/



See what happens behind the scenes in planning a fun Tampopo class:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4PbMTN7ICGI

“Gray rectangle with a white vertical line dividing two sections of text.  Left side text in white and orange reads “Then They Came for Me, Incarceration of Japanese Americans During WWII and the Demise of Civil Liberties, Feb 18-May 29”.  Right side text reads “Where Conversations Happen” inside a blue speech bubble above “Jewish Museum Milwaukee, A Program of Milwaukee Jewish Federation” with a six-pointed star at lower-left of text.”

Then They Came for Me: Incarceration of Japanese Americans During WWII and the Demise of Civil Liberties

 

February 18 – May 29, 2022

 

Jewish Museum Milwaukee

1360 N Prospect Avenue

Milwaukee, WI 53202

 

A modified version of the groundbreaking Then They Came for Me exhibit that originated at Chicago’s Alphawood Gallery will be opening soon at the Jewish Museum Milwaukee. Featuring many items from the JASC Legacy Center’s collections, this is a wonderful opportunity reach a new audience and build new connections in the Midwest. 

 

If you have any friends or family in Milwaukee, tell them to check it out! Admission is free through May 29th thanks to the generous support of the Yabuki Family Foundation. Click here for full details.

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2022 Lunar New Year Gala To Honor

Mike Tanimura and Taka Handwerk

Michael Tanimura and Taka Handwerk will represent the Japanese American community

at the Asian American Coalition of Chicago’s 39th Annual Lunar New Year Celebration on Saturday, March 12, 2022.


Mike will receive the Community Service Award for his many years of work with the Japanese American Service Committee, Tohkon Judo Academy, and the US-Japan Council. He curated the “Art in Incarceration” online exhibit that accompanied Northeastern Illinois University’s commemoration of the 40th anniversary of the hearings on Japanese American redress. Mike is also the chair of the annual Chicago Japanese Community Picnic.


Taka Handwerk, a student at Lake View High School in Chicago, will receive the Youth Who Excels award. An active member of Ravenswood Fellowship United Methodist Church, Taka is recognized for his record of volunteering at Shedd Aquarium and The Anti Cruelty Society. He looks forward to studying marine biology at the college level in the future.


Hosted by the Malaysian American Community, the 39th Annual Lunar New Year Celebration will be held on March 12 at the Drury Lane Theatre & Events, 100 Drury Lane, Oakbrook Terrace.

Tickets are $100 each, or $1,000 per table of 10. For information on how you can attend the Lunar New Year Celebration and support Mike and Taka, please contact Tonko Doi at [email protected] or 773/960-8732.

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おめでとごさいます ~

Congratulations Donguri Kai Level 4 Students!

Donguri Kai held its first Speech Contest on January 22 for the advanced students. The online event featured six speeches, a question & answer session, and concluded with an awards ceremony. Best Writing awards went to Eita Tabion and Eito Tabion; Best Storytelling awards went to Penelope Kern and Nari Berthusen; and Best Topic Awards went to Saori Yamanaka and Remy Walker.

 

Nari Berthusen and Eita Tabion have been selected to compete in the 6th Annual Heritage Japanese Language Speech Contest on Sunday, January 30, 2022 hosted by the Consulate-General of Japan in Chicago. Good luck and best wishes to Nari and Eita!

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Chicago Northside Origami Group

There is a $5 fee per folder to be paid each time, and children under 12 must be accompanied by an adult (no charge for non-folding adults). Please bring paper for folding, and any models or books you would like to share.

All skill levels welcome!


For more information and future dates, please contact:

June Yamasaki, [email protected]


Please note, masks are required in all public areas of JASC.

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Workshop 1: Where does our idea of Japaneseness come from? 

Sunday, February 13, 2022, 1-3 PM CT

Click here to RSVP: bit.ly/Japaneseness_1


Nikkei Uprising is excited to announce the first installment in a series of workshops exploring the complexities of what it means to hold Japanese identity. In Workshop #1, we will be discussing race, how ideas of “being Japanese” root in the creation of Imperial Japan, and how those concepts interact with us in the diaspora. This is intended as a space to learn history and process as a community.


We hope that you will join us! If you have questions, you can email us at: [email protected]


Head shot of Professor Ichiro Tomiyama, featured speaker on Feb. 21st on the topic of The Making of Okinawans. Photo includes an Okinawan landscape view with the ocean in the background

The Center for East Asian Studies and the International House at the University of Chicago invite you to attend the 15th Annual Tetsuo Najita Distinguished Lecture in Japanese Studies on Monday, February 21st at 5 pm Central Time. Free Virtual Lecture via Zoom.


This year’s lecture will feature Ichirō Tomiyama, Professor of Global Studies at Doshisha University in Kyoto, Japan. Originally trained at Kyoto University as an agricultural historian, Professor Tomiyama is best known as an historian and cultural critic who works on Japanese imperialism and colonialism, issues of identity in postwar Japan, war memory, and Okinawa.


Part of the "Rethinking 'Reversion': Okinawa, Japan, and the U.S. Fifty Years Later" anniversary series, hear Professor Tomiyama’s lecture entitled, “The Making of Okinawans: “Reversion” as ‘L’ensemble des efforts’.”  This lecture will be in Japanese, with English translation.


Read the FULL lecture abstract and REGISTER by clicking HERE.

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Chicago Japanese American Council (CJAC) Events Calendar

Stay up to date on Chicago Japanese and Japanese American community events! This calendar will be a central place where people can see events by CJAC member organizations, and other Japanese and Japanese American community and cultural events. Visit the calendar at bit.ly/ChicagoJJACalendar


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Follow us on Instagram @AIRMW for all the latest news about Tsukasa Taiko!

http://www.taikolegacy.com |

For any inquiries, contact us at [email protected]


Tsukasa Taiko and Shubukai are programs of Asian Improv aRts Midwest and is supported in part by The Illinois Arts Council Agency, The MacArthur Funds for Culture, Equity, and the Arts at the Richard H. Driehaus Foundation, the Alphawood Foundation, JCCC Foundation, Gaylord & Dorothy Donnelley Foundation, The City of Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events (DCASE) and The Joyce Foundation.

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JASC WISHLIST

  • NEW or used Apple iPad
  • Letter Size (8 1/2 x 11) Copy Paper
  • "Dollar" gift items for Adult Day Service games & activities
  • Staples, Amazon, or Target gift cards
  • Amazon Wishlist (be sure to use smile.amazon.com!)
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