Celebrate the twentieth anniversary of Discover Nikkei with a day-long festival of activities honoring Nikkei family stories. Discover Nikkei is JANM’s international, community-based project that highlights Nikkei identity, culture, and history. Discover Nikkei Fest kicks off a year-long celebration of the website’s milestone anniversary.
- Community Fair (12 p.m.–3 p.m.) featuring Nikkei organizations, fun crafts, an opportunity drawing, and a rubber stamp rally (free, registration recommended)
- Family Stories Workshops (12 p.m.–3 p.m.) including journaling, video life history interview tips, Nikkei Genealogy 101, artifact preservation, a poetry workshop, and collecting senior memories
- Nikkei family stories panel discussion (3:30 p.m.–5:30 p.m.) with moderator Naomi Hirahara and panelists Mitch Homma (US), Andrew Hasegawa (Australia), Harumi López Higa (Peru), Gus Hokama (Argentina), and Jorge Okubaro (Brazil)
- Reception (5:30 p.m.–7:30 p.m.) with musical performances, Nikkei-inspired food and drinks, a photo booth, and silent auction
For event details, please see below. Access to the Community Fair is free, but you must check in for participation in the drawing and stamp rally. Participation for all other in-person activities requires an all-access ticket. Tickets available starting December 28, 2024; JANM Members presale tickets available now.
Can’t join us in person? Register in advance to receive the FREE Zoom link to watch the panel discussion virtually with simultaneous translation in all of Discover Nikkei’s site languages!
Artwork by Jay Horinouchi.
Sponsors:
With generous support from Akira and Hisako Nerio Imamura and family.
Media Sponsor:
In-Person
Community Fair All Access Pass
Virtual (FREE)
Panel Discussion
Schedule
12:00 PM - 3:00 PM
Community Fair
- Meet Nikkei organizations from around Southern California
- Decorate a journal to write and draw in with this family-friendly activity! Make it your own by decorating it and then use it to collect thoughts, stories, poems, memories, and ideas. If you’re attending some of the workshops today, be sure to bring it along. You never know when inspiration will strike!
- Pick up tickets for an opportunity drawing (JANM members receive two tickets per member!)
- Participate in a rubber stamp rally
The fair is free but registration and check-in at the event is required to receive tickets for the opportunity drawing and participate in the stamp rally.
12:00 PM - 12:45 PM
Preserving Family Artifacts workshop
Learn how to care for your treasured family heirlooms and digitize precious photos and documents in this workshop led by JANM's Director of Collections Management & Access and Curator, Kristen Hayashi.
12:00 PM - 12:45 PM
Intergenerational Delight—a family stories poetry workshop
Explore your family stories, generational struggles, joys, and everything in between in this dynamic workshop led by Navigating With(out) Instruments author, traci kato-kiriyama.
traci kato-kiriyama has curated Discover Nikkei’s monthly Nikkei Uncovered: a poetry column since December 2016, and has hosted the Nikkei Uncovered poetry readings (2020, 2021, 2022, 2024). The poetry column was borne from a suggestion submitted to Discover Nikkei during its 10th anniversary activities.
1:00 PM - 1:45 PM
Nikkei Genealogy 101
Begin your family history journey in this workshop led by Melinda Crawford Yamane and Linda Harms Okazaki of the Nikkei Genealogical Society. They will teach you how to research your family trees and dig into your Japanese roots and heritage.
The Nikkei Genealogical Society promotes, encourages, and shares Nikkei genealogy through education, research, and networking.
1:00 PM - 1:45 PM
Senior Memory Collection
Capture and preserve the memories of a special grandparent, parent, or any senior citizen in this workshop led by Let’s Talk Story Club. Multigenerational families and groups are invited to reflect on the life journey of seniors, record their stories in a personal memory book, and take home the book as a treasured keepsake.
Let’s Talk Story Club helps seniors of Japanese ancestry combat loneliness, and reduce cognitive decline and memory loss by pairing seniors with volunteers who preserve their memories in life story books.
2:00 PM - 2:45 PM
Video Life History Interviews
Learn how to conduct an effective life history interview with JANM’s Frank H. Watase Media Arts Center. You’ll learn how to conduct background research, formulate questions, select your equipment, and conduct, transcribe, store, and share your interview.
2:00 PM - 2:45 PM
Family Stories Journaling
Discover how to write for pleasure and celebrate the experimentation and surprise found in journaling in this workshop led by writer and editor, Mia Nakaji Monnier. You’ll be guided through a series of prompts on documenting family stories with a family photo and a text message from a loved one. Short readings from a range of authors will show you the possibilities of journaling and personal writing. You’ll explore how to add some fun to the process with sketching, ephemera, found quotes, and colored pens. You will also learn the difference between journaling and memoir and have a chance to share your work or talk about how the writing process felt in a supportive environment.
Mia Nakaji Monnier is a writer and editor with work in the Washington Post, the Los Angeles Review of Books, O: The Oprah Magazine, and more. She served as developmental editor for The Poet and the Silk Girl: A Memoir of Love, Imprisonment, and Protest by Satsuki Ina (Heyday 2024) and previously edited for Guernica and The Rafu Shimpo. She has a master of professional writing in nonfiction from USC, and she is a WriteGirl mentor. She has been journaling since she was six years old.
3:30 PM - 5:30 PM
Sharing International Nikkei Family Stories
Join a conversation about Nikkei family stories moderated by Naomi Hirahara and featuring Mitch Homma (USA), Andrew Hasegawa (Australia), Harumi López Higa (Peru), Gus Hokama (Argentina), and Jorge Okubaro (Brazil). Simultaneous translations for this in-person and virtual event will be provided in English, Japanese, Spanish, and Portuguese.
Can’t join us in person? Watch the panel discussion virtually! Advance registration required by Friday, February 7, 10 a.m. (PST) to receive the free Zoom link. REGISTER NOW
See below for participant bios.
5:30 PM - 7:30 PM
Reception
Enjoy special musical performances by Gus Hokama, Ryukyukoku Matsuri Daiko Los Angeles Branch, and John Azama; Nikkei-inspired food and drinks; a photo booth; and a silent auction that will give you opportunities to connect and reflect after the day’s festivities.
Bios
Naomi Hirahara
Naomi Hirahara—an Edgar Award-winning author of multiple traditional mystery series, noir short stories, and historical mysteries Clark and Division and Evergreen. A former journalist with The Rafu Shimpo, she has written numerous nonfiction history books, including the award-winning Terminal Island: Lost Communities on America’s Edge and curated exhibitions.
Mitch Homma
Mitch Homma (USA)—a third-generation Japanese American aerospace engineer with interests in Japanese history and Christianity in Japan. A regular Discover Nikkei contributor, he has shared prewar and World War II family photos, documents, and stories from Japan and the Heart Mountain and Amache concentration camps.
Andrew Hasegawa
Andrew Hasegawa (Australia)—a fourth-generation Nikkei Australian who researches Nikkei history while running a Japanese lifestyle goods business. He is a member of Nikkei Australia and a 2023 Past Wrongs, Future Choices Scholar in Residence for his research on the Nikkei fight for freedom from incarceration in Australia and the United States.
Harumi López Higa
Harumi López Higa (Peru)—a Peruvian film director and visual artist with Okinawan roots. She is a founding member of NUNA, the Association of Film Directors of Peru, a researcher at the Peruvian Japanese Academic Association, and recipient of the Nippon Foundation Nikkei Scholarship Association grant. Her work includes short films, video installations, and curated exhibitions. Her artistic and academic practice explores themes of migration, memory, and minorities.
Gus Hokama
Gus Hokama (Argentina)—an award-winning Argentine singer-songwriter of Japanese ancestry who connects his cultural heritage with music and brings it to international stages. Inspired by his grandparents’ immigration from Okinawa to Argentina and his family history, his compositions are an homage to their arduous path of struggle and sacrifice.
Jorge Okubaro
Jorge Okubaro (Brazil)—a Brazilian journalist, writer, and editor whose works include a book about his father’s personal history and Japanese immigration in Brazil. He has researched Japanese immigration to Brazil under the auspices of the Brazilian Association of Japanese Culture (Bunkyo) and serves as president of the São Paulo Nippo-Brazilian Studies Center (Jinmonken).
Ryukyukoku Matsuri Daiko Los Angeles Branch
Ryukyukoku Matsuri Daiko (Ryukyu Kingdom Festival Drums) is modeled on the traditional Okinawan obon festival drum dancing called eisa where performers dance and drum to an exciting blend of traditional and contemporary Okinawan and Japanese music. Founded in Okinawa in 1982, Ryukyukoku Matsuri Daiko has chapters in Japan, South America, and the US. The Los Angeles branch was established in 1995 and will celebrate its thirtieth anniversary in 2025.
John Azama
John Azama joined Ryukyu Damashii (Dallas, TX), which teaches Okinawa’s culture to the next generation through eisa, in 2018. After moving to Dallas, Texas, in 2017 he was invited to join the group. When he attended their practice, they were rehearsing the folk songs “Asadoya Yunta,” “Miruku Munari,” and “Ashibina” which he was familiar with and was able to dance in their upcoming event. Since then he has taught other dances and has simplified some of the dance routines so that everyone can have a good time.
In-kind donations are generously provided by: