Japanese Canadian legacies honoured as part of redressing historical wrongs

Of almost 22,000 Japanese Canadians who were interned, approximately 6,000 remain alive today

 

NEW community programs focused on seniors’ health, culture and education are part of a new initiative announced by Premier John Horgan to provide lasting recognition of historical wrongs committed by the Province of B.C. against Japanese Canadians during the Second World War.

Horgan made the announcement at the Steveston Martial Arts Centre, the oldest Japanese-style dojo in North America, alongside Rachna Singh, Parliamentary Secretary for Anti-Racism Initiatives, Kelly Greene, MLA for Richmond-Steveston, former MLA Naomi Yamamoto, and members of the Japanese Canadian community.

This year marks 80 years since the internment of Japanese Canadians across B.C., and May 21 is a day of significance that recognizes the first arrivals of Japanese Canadians to the Greenwood, Kaslo, New Denver, Slocan City and Sandon Internment Camps in 1942.

The $100-million initiative is the result of engagement with the community, through the National Association of Japanese Canadians (NAJC), and will include funding for: enhanced health and wellness programs for internment-era survivors; creating and restoring heritage sites for all British Columbians to explore and learn, including a monument to honour survivors of the internment era; and updating B.C.’s curriculum to teach future generations about this dark chapter in B.C.’s history.

It builds on a 2012 apology by the B.C. Legislature and responds to a redress proposal advanced in 2021 by the NAJC. The Province will continue to work closely with the NAJC to support these important initiatives during the coming months and years.

“Eighty years have passed since the internment of thousands of Japanese Canadians. Families were uprooted and incarcerated, forced to leave behind the lives they had worked so hard to build. It was a cruel, racist act, and the injustice still resonates today,” said Horgan. “We are committing this new funding to honour the legacies of Japanese Canadians, to continue the healing of intergenerational trauma, and to serve as an important reminder of this dark chapter in B.C.’s history.”

Beginning in early 1942, more than 90% of Japanese Canadians living in British Columbia were detained under the War Measures Act and were stripped of their homes, possessions and businesses. After the war ended, Japanese Canadians were given the choice to move east of the Rockies or go to Japan, a country many had never known. In 1949, four years after the end of the Second World War, Japanese Canadians were allowed to return to the West Coast. They were still subjected to racist policies and treatment for years, and many communities never recovered.

“At age eight, together with my parents and siblings, we were uprooted from our home and life in Vancouver by the Government of Canada. The war with Japan was used as an excuse to remove from the West Coast all persons of Japanese ancestry, even as my parents were registered as ‘naturalized Canadians’, with born-in-Canada children,” said Grace Eiko Thomson, an internment-era survivor. “Having watched how my parents’ lives were destroyed, I, now age 88, do my best to speak out whenever issues of human rights arise, particularly as related to racism.”

Of almost 22,000 Japanese Canadians who were interned, approximately 6,000 remain alive today. This funding package aims to provide some peace of mind to the survivors that their experiences will be honoured in a lasting and meaningful way that benefits British Columbians for generations.

“We acknowledge that the due process denied our community in 1942 has been granted by this government,” said Susanne Tabata, BC Redress project director, NAJC. “All of this work is about honouring our elders, past and present, and we have been thorough with community consultations between 2019 and 2021. By honouring their legacies, we built these initiatives to provide the community with specific, material improvements that redress the enduring harms of the internment era.”

This investment builds on the $2-million funding the Province provided to the Nikkei Seniors Health Care and Housing Society in May 2021 for health and wellness supports for Japanese Canadian internment-era survivors.

“The shadow of the internment of almost 22,000 Japanese Canadians still hangs heavy over the community,” said Rachna Singh, Parliamentary Secretary for Anti-Racism Initiatives. “This discriminatory policy saw families separated, culture and community torn apart, and people uprooted from their homes and businesses. We know that healing the wounds of the past is a long process. Across government and together with our partners, we are focused on honouring the dignity and sense of belonging of all communities. It is more important than ever that we learn from the mistakes of the past and acknowledge historical injustices. I hope this announcement brings some solace to the survivors and their descendants.”

This investment is an important part of the Province’s commitment to dismantle systemic racism and build a better, more inclusive province for everyone.

Mary Kitagawa, internment-era survivor, said: “My grandparents’ retirement on their 200-acre estate on Salt Spring Island was stolen from them in 1942 after 40 years of struggle to build their home, destroying their lives forever.”

Kelly Greene, MLA for Richmond-Steveston, said: “Until 1942, Steveston was home to a large Japanese Canadian community with a thriving fishing fleet. That was all taken away by the governments of the day as thousands were forced to leave their homes, boats and nearly every possession behind. The resilient Nikkei community has rebuilt since that tragic time, with the local community centre and martials art centre delivering a range of programs for Japanese Canadians. This funding will support Japanese Canadians in Steveston and across the province to reconnect with their culture and strengthen what was lost 80 years ago.”

Lorene Oikawa, President, NAJC, said: “We honour the Japanese Canadian community, from babies to seniors, who, 80 years ago, were ripped from their homes, dispossessed and forced into exile until four years after the end of the Second World War. The B.C. government’s meaningful action will help redress the violation of rights and losses and set in motion a path to reduce systemic racism and safeguard against future injustices.”

Learn More:

For more information about the National Association of Japanese Canadians, visit: http://najc.ca/

 

 

BACKGROUNDER
Redressing historical wrongs against Japanese Canadian communities in B.C.

The National Association of Japanese Canadians (NAJC) was established in 1947 and has a long history of advocating for and providing support to the community. The organization was responsible for negotiating the historic Redress Settlement for the community with the federal government in 1988.

The B.C. government and the NAJC have been working closely with members of the Japanese Canadian community to develop a comprehensive recognition package to redress the historical wrongs and to honour the legacies of internment-era survivors.

Timeline:

* In 2012, the Government of British Columbia delivered a public apology to the Japanese Canadian community for the traumatic internment of nearly 22,000 people during and after the Second World War.

* After the apology, the NAJC continued to advocate for greater supports for the Japanese Canadian community and in 2018 met with the Province to discuss measures to build on the public apology and deliver a more comprehensive and definitive acknowledgment based on direct input from the community.

* In 2019, with support from the Province, the NAJC carried out extensive consultation with the Japanese Canadian community.

* Initial recommendations based on these consultations were presented to the Province in November 2019 in the report Recommendations for Redressing Historical Wrongs Against Japanese Canadians in B.C.

* Government pledged to act on the recommendations and included commitments in the 2020 mandates for the attorney general and parliamentary secretary for anti-racism initiatives to deliver lasting recognition of historical wrongs committed by the Province of B.C. against the Japanese Canadian community during the Second World War.

* From April to September 2021, Rachna Singh, Parliamentary Secretary for Anti-Racism Initiatives, led a series of meetings with the NAJC, in which proposals were presented to the B.C. government by representatives from the Japanese Canadian community who spoke about six topics, culminating in the comprehensive NAJC submission Legacy Initiatives to Redress Historical Wrongs Against Japanese Canadians 2021. The report is a community-validated and detailed set of specific initiatives about: antiracism; education; monument; heritage; community and culture; and seniors’ health and wellness, with a priority on the urgency of survivors’ health supports.

* In 2021, an initial $2-million grant was provided to the Nikkei Seniors Health Care and Housing Society to develop and deliver programming for internment-era survivors across Canada, through the Japanese Canadian Survivors Health and Wellness Fund.

* A primary goal of this grant was to find survivors of the internment era and do an initial outreach by creating a database to help them access future health supports.
– Almost $1.2 million was provided directly to survivors, with more than 1,800 people receiving up to $650 each to support their health or assist with financial hardship.

– An additional 50 organizations shared almost $470,000, which supported: a variety of seniors’ events to mark the 80th anniversary of internment; supports for seniors; and outreach and education initiatives throughout B.C. and Canada.

– More than $53,000 went to 19 small seniors’ groups to support projects such as a curling tournament hosted by the Vancouver Nisei Curling Club, a memorial garden in Lillooet, and an introduction to Ikebana with the Vancouver Ikebana Association.

* This $2-million funding was an interim measure to deliver supports to elders while the Province worked with NAJC on a more fulsome recognition package. This work has resulted in a $100-million recognition package, announced on May 21, 2022.