Japanese Canadians, or
Nikkei (meaning Japanese immigrants and their descendants), are
Canadians of Japanese heritage. Japanese people arrived in Canada in two
major waves. The first generation of immigrants, called Issei, arrived
between 1877 and 1928, and the second after 1967. The 2016 census
reported 121,485 people of Japanese origin in Canada, or 0.35 per cent
of the Canadian population. The first generations of Japanese Canadians
were denied the full rights of citizens, such as the right to vote in
provincial and federal elections and to work in certain industries.
During the Second World War, the federal government interned and
dispossessed over 20,000 Japanese Canadians. Japanese Canadians have
settled primarily in British Columbia, Alberta and Ontario, and have
contributed to every aspect of Canadian society. Well-known Japanese
Canadians include novelists Kerri Sakamoto, Aki Shimazaki, Michelle
Sagara, Hiromi Goto, Kim Moritsugu and Joy Kogawa, poet Roy Miki, writer
Ken Adachi, filmmakers Midi Onodera and Linda Ohama, scientist David
Suzuki, public servant Thomas Shoyama, architects Raymond Moriyama and
Bruce Kuwabara, community leader Art Miki, judoka Mas Takahashi, and
agriculturalist Zenichi Shimbashi. Artists include Takao Tanabe, Miyuki
Tanobe, Roy Kiyooka and Kazuo Nakamura. Politicians include Bev Oda, the
first Japanese Canadian Member of Parliament and cabinet minister; BC
Liberal cabinet minister Naomi Yamamoto; and former Ontario Progressive
Conservative cabinet minister David Tsubouchi. Vicky Sunohara was part
of the national women’s hockey team that won silver (1998) and gold
(2002, 2006) at the Olympic Winter Games. Devin Setoguchi of the
Minnesota Wild and AHL players Jon Matsumoto and Raymond Sawada are
Japanese Canadian hockey players.
Migration History
The first known immigrant from Japan, Manzo Nagano, arrived in British
Columbia in 1877. By 1914, 10,000 people of Japanese ancestry had
settled permanently in Canada. The 2016 census reported 121,485 people
of Japanese origin in Canada (56,725 single responses and 64,760
multiple responses). The majority of the people of Japanese descent live
in three provinces: British Columbia (42 per cent), Ontario (34 per
cent) and Alberta (14 per cent).
First Wave (1877‒1928)
The first wave of Japanese immigrants, called Issei (first generation),
arrived between 1877 and 1928. Until 1907, almost all immigrants were
young men. In 1908, Canada insisted that Japan limit the migration of
males to Canada to 400 per year, arranging what was known as the
Gentlemen’s Agreement with officials in Japan. As a result, most
immigrants thereafter were women joining their husbands or unmarried
women engaged to men in Canada. In 1928, Canada further restricted
Japanese immigration to 150 persons annually, a quota seldom met. In
1940, immigration ceased after Japan allied itself with Canada’s Second
World War enemies, Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy. Japanese immigration
did not resume until the mid-1960s, except for family reunifications.
The Issei were usually young and literate. Most were from fishing and
farming villages on the southern islands of Kyushu and Honshu; a
minority migrated from other parts of Japan. Many settled in the
“Japantowns” or suburbs of Vancouver and Victoria, on farms in the
Fraser Valley and in fishing villages, and pulp-mill and mining towns
along the Pacific coast (see Company Towns). A few hundred settled on
farms and in the coal-mining towns of Alberta, near Lethbridge and
Edmonton.
Second Wave (1967—)
The second wave of Japanese immigration began in 1967, when immigration
laws were amended and a point system was instituted. The point system
was based on social and economic characteristics that favoured educated
immigrants competent in English or French from industrialized cities.
Many Japanese immigrants to Canada during this period worked in
business, the service sector and skilled trades.
The 2016 census recorded 45,060 first generation Japanese Canadians
(Japanese immigrants); 37,615 second generation (children of Japanese
immigrants) and 38,810 third generation and more Japanese Canadians.
A History of Racism and Exclusion
Japanese Canadians, both Issei immigrants and their Canadian-born
children, called Nisei (second generation), have faced prejudice and
discrimination. Beginning in 1874, BC politicians pandered to White
supremacists and passed a series of laws intended to force all Asians to
leave Canada. All Asians were denied the right to vote: the Chinese in
1874, Japanese in 1895, and South Asians in 1907. Laws excluded Asians
from underground mining, the civil service and professions such as the
practice of law, which required the practitioner to be listed on the
provincial voting lists. Labour and minimum-wage laws ensured that
employers hired Asian Canadians only for menial jobs or farm labour, and
paid them at lower pay-rates than Caucasians. When Asians worked harder
and longer to earn a living wage, White labour unions accused Asian
Canadians of unfair competition, stealing jobs and undermining union
efforts to raise the living standards of White workers.
On 7 September 1907, five days ahead of the arrival of SS Monteagle from
Punjab — a steamer carrying 901 Sikhs to the CPR pier in Vancouver —
hostility toward Asian immigrants erupted. Whipped up by agitators from
the Asiatic Exclusion League, a mob of 9,000 smashed windows and
destroyed the homes and shops of Asian-Canadians in Chinatown and
Japantown. When the mob reached the Japantown section of Vancouver, they
were driven away by Japanese immigrants who were veterans of the recent
Russo-Japanese war. That success fuelled the “yellow peril” warnings of
White supremacists and gave birth to their “big lie” that Japan was
smuggling an army into Canada.
During the First World War, with a few rare exceptions, recruitment
offices in BC would not accept Asians for military service. To
circumvent this practice, over 200 Issei men travelled from British
Columbia to Alberta to enlist. Of the 222 who served, 54 were killed.
Thirteen Japanese Canadian men received medals for bravery, including
Sergeant Masumi Mitsui, recognized for his service at the Battle of Vimy
Ridge (see Decorations for Bravery).
After the First World War, discrimination continued. Just before the
start of the 1922 salmon season, the federal fisheries department
reduced the number of troll licenses issued to Japanese Canadian
fishermen by one third. During the Great Depression of the 1930s, the BC
government denied logging licences to Asians and paid Asians only a
fraction of the social assistance paid to Whites.
Community Development
Excluded from Canadian society, Japanese Canadians before the Second
World War congregated in enclaves and developed their own social,
religious and economic institutions ( see Residential Segregation). In
Japantown near the Powell Street Grounds (now Oppenheimer Park) in
Vancouver, in Steveston, Mission City and other Fraser Valley villages,
and in coastal centres such as Powell River, Tofino and Prince Rupert,
Japanese Canadians built Christian churches and Buddhist temples,
Japanese language schools and community halls; and, in Steveston, a
hospital staffed by Japanese Canadian doctors and nurses trained in
Japan and in segregated hospitals in the US. Japanese Canadians formed
co-operative associations to market their produce and fish, and
community and cultural associations for self-help and social events. By
1941, there were more than 100 clubs and organizations within a tightly
knit community of 23,000 individuals, half of whom were children.
In the 1920s and 1930s, even well-educated Nisei who sought employment
in business or the professions were unable to obtain employment outside
the Japanese Canadian enclaves. Some Nisei had to seek employment in
Japan. A few left BC for Ontario. Others started businesses serving
Japanese Canadians. For example, BC-born Thomas K. Shoyama , a double
Honours graduate from the University of British Columbia, who, after the
Second World War, became a senior civil servant in the Saskatchewan and
federal governments, started The New Canadian, an English-language
newspaper for Japanese Canadians.
Political Activism: Seeking the Vote
Japanese Canadians also organized to challenge their exclusion from the
BC voters’ list. Without being on the list, the Nisei and naturalized
Japanese Canadians could not vote in federal, provincial or municipal
elections, could not practice law or even be on a school board. The
franchise (or right to vote) was the key to breaking the discrimination
barrier. In 1900, Tomekichi Homma, a naturalized Canadian, launched the
first challenge, seeking a court order to have his name entered on the
voters’ list. While initially successful when the BC Supreme Court ruled
in his favour, he lost when, in 1902, the Privy Council in England ruled
that BC had exclusive jurisdiction over its provincial civil rights, and
had the ability to exclude persons from the voters’ list.
In the 1920s, the Issei veterans of the First World War, who by their
service and casualties had proved their loyalty to Canada, tried again
to win the right to vote. Only in 1931, did the BC legislature finally
grant the right to vote, but only to surviving Issei veterans.
In 1936 a new Nisei group, the Japanese Canadian Citizens League (JCCL),
despairing of gaining the provincial vote, sought instead to gain the
federal franchise. While the JCCL delegation was permitted to speak to
the Special Committee on Elections and Franchise Acts, the BC Members of
Parliament — except Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF) members —
persuaded the Liberal-dominated Committee to uphold the denial of the
franchise. This outcome was not surprising given that the BC federal
Liberal campaign slogan in the 1935 federal election had been: “A Vote
for ANY CCF Candidate is a VOTE TO GIVE the CHINAMAN and the JAPANESE
the same Voting Right that you have!”
During the Second World War, Nisei men tried to follow in the footsteps
of the Issei veterans by enlisting in the armed forces. They knew that
enlistment would enfranchise not only the soldier but also his wife.
Only 32 Nisei succeeded in enlisting before December 1941 when Japan
attacked the US base at Pearl Harbor in Hawaii. Most of the 32 were
Japanese Albertans and one, Jack Nakamoto of Vancouver, enlisted by
travelling east until he persuaded a recruiting officer in Montréal to
sign him up. In 1945, the British government requested the right to
recruit Japanese Canadians as translators for the British forces. The
federal government permitted 119 Nisei men (most of whom had been
expelled from their homes in BC and whose families were in detention
sites) to enlist as translators in the Canadian Intelligence Corps. The
federal government then added a provision to the 1945 Soldiers’ Vote Act
disenfranchising any Japanese Canadian who had not previously had the
right to vote. Nisei veterans from BC finally got the franchise in 1949
along with all other adult Japanese Canadians.
Expulsion, Detention, Dispossession, Deportation, and Dispersal
During the Second World War, the federal Cabinet destroyed the Japanese
Canadian community in British Columbia. On 25 February 1942, a mere 12
weeks after the 7 December 1941 attack by Japan on Pearl Harbor and Hong
Kong, the federal Cabinet, at the instigation of racist BC politicians,
used the War Measures Act to order the removal of all Japanese Canadians
residing within 160 km of the Pacific coast. At the time the government
claimed that Japanese Canadians were being removed for reasons of
“national security,” despite the fact that the removal order was opposed
by Canada’s senior military and RCMP officers, who stated that Japanese
Canadians posed no threat to Canada’s security (see Internment of
Japanese Canadians).
In 1942, 20,881 men, women and children of Japanese ancestry, 75 per
cent of whom were Canadian citizens, were removed from their homes,
farms and businesses. More than 8,000 were moved through a temporary
detention centre at Hastings Park in Vancouver, where the women and
children were accommodated in the Livestock Building. The detainees were
shipped to camps near Hope, BC, and in the Kootenays, to sugar beet
farms in southern Alberta and Manitoba, and to road labour camps along
the Hope-Princeton and Yellowhead highways in BC, and at Schreiber,
Ontario. Those who resisted the removal of Japanese Canadians were
shipped to prisoner of war (POW) camps at Petawawa and Angler in
Ontario.
Having physically removed the Japanese Canadians from the coast, the
federal government began severing all their ties to BC in preparation
for their deportation after the war. Between 1943 and 1946, the federal
government sold all Japanese Canadian-owned property — homes, farms,
fishing boats, businesses and personal property — and deducted from the
proceeds any social assistance received by the owner while confined and
unemployed in a detention camp. In 1945, the inmates of the camps, in a
biased survey, were forced to choose between deportation to Japan or
uncertain dispersal to a location east of the Rocky Mountains. Most
chose the latter and were shipped through demobilized POW camps and air
bases to Ontario, Québec or the Prairie provinces. In December 1945 — a
full year after the US had permitted Japanese Americans to return to
their homes on the US Pacific coast — the Canadian government defied
Parliament to give the Cabinet the power to deport 10,000 Japanese
Canadians to war-ravaged Japan. With freedom of the press restored in
January 1946, the deportation plans became general knowledge and
produced a massive public protest from all parts of Canada. Referring
the matter quickly to the courts to buy time for a political solution,
the federal government accelerated the dispersal of Japanese Canadians
to provinces east of the Rocky Mountains and expedited the shipment to
Japan of 4,000 Japanese Canadians — 2,000 of whom were aging Issei who
had lost everything and despaired over starting again, and 1,300 of whom
were children under 16 years of age. The remaining 700 were young Nisei
over 16 years of age who could not or would not abandon their aging
parents.
In 1948, racism as a political tool was finally discredited in BC.
First, in an attempt to win two federal by-elections in BC for the
Liberals, the federal Cabinet extended the exclusion of Japanese
Canadians from the Pacific Coast area for a seventh year. Both Liberal
candidates lost to CCF candidates. At the same time, the BC government’s
attempt to re-impose a prohibition on Japanese Canadians holding logging
licences backfired when forest workers and forestry unions condemned the
regulation as “an act of deplorable discrimination.”
On 1 April 1949, Japanese Canadians regained their freedom. The legal
restrictions used to control their movements were removed. Ironically,
BC had enfranchised Japanese Canadians just one week earlier, thereby
removing the legal basis for their discrimination in the province.
Although free to return to BC, very few Japanese Canadians had the means
or the inclination to move back to British Columbia. (See also Japanese
Internment: Banished and Beyond Tears.)
Postwar Community
In the 1950s, Japanese Canadians struggled to rebuild their lives but,
now scattered across Canada, could not rebuild their communities. The
third generation, the Sansei (San-say), born between the 1940s and
1960s, grew up in overwhelmingly White-dominated communities. The
remnants of the pre-war Japanese Canadian community persisted only in
three newspapers and a few churches, temples and community clubs in the
largest cities. Scattered, and without contact during their youth with
other Japanese Canadians, many of the Sansei speak English or French but
little or no Japanese, and have only limited knowledge of Japanese
culture, past or present.
Today, Japanese Canadians work in all occupations, including the service
sector, manufacturing, business, teaching, the arts, academia and the
professions. The changes since the Second World War are perhaps best
illustrated by the fact that more than 75 per cent of the Sansei have
married non-Japanese.
Lobbying for Redress
In the late 1970s and 1980s, redress of the wrongs suffered during the
Second World War became the primary focus of a revived national
organization for Japanese Canadians, the National Association of
Japanese Canadians (NAJC). The opportunity came following the
publication of the novel Obasan (1981) by Joy Kogawa, and of new
histories that used the federal government’s own documents. The first
piqued public interest in the wartime experiences of Japanese Canadians
while the latter gave the NAJC the facts it needed to persuade the
federal government to acknowledge wartime wrongs, to negotiate
compensation for those who were wronged and, most importantly, to change
Canada’s laws to prevent other Canadians from suffering similar wrongs.
The redress campaign initially divided Japanese Canadians. A small
group, centred in Toronto, wanted to accept a group settlement of $6
million offered in 1984 by the Conservative government. They viewed this
settlement as politically realistic and, haunted by memories of their
wartime experiences, feared retaliation against Japanese Canadians by
the government if they demanded more. A second,
nationally-representative group, led by NAJC President Art Miki, viewed
the $6 million as a token offer and a continuation of the wartime
attitude that Japanese Canadians could be treated as an amorphous group
on whom a settlement could be imposed.
To the leaders of the NAJC, a just process was as important as achieving
redress. They wanted a negotiated, not an imposed, settlement and a
monetary acknowledgement that their individual rights had been abused.
Between 1984 and 1988, the NAJC held seminars, house meetings and
conferences; lobbied and petitioned the government; sought the support
of First Nations, ethnic, religious and human rights groups; and
composed and distributed studies and press materials designed to educate
politicians, Japanese Canadians and the general public. One study by
Price Waterhouse, a respected accounting firm, revealed that the
economic losses from the wartime property confiscation were $443 million
in 1986 dollars. By 1986, national polls showed that 63 per cent of
Canadians supported redress of some kind and 45 per cent supported
individual compensation.
Negotiations with the NAJC
By the spring of 1988, the Conservative government of Brian Mulroney was
almost ready to negotiate. The Emergencies Act, a replacement for the
War Measures Act, was making its way through Parliament. On 14 April,
the NAJC held a well-publicized redress rally on Parliament Hill that
resulted in a groundswell of support by the Canadian public that could
no longer be ignored. Then, on 20 April, the United States Senate
approved a redress package for Japanese Americans that included
individual compensation of $20,000. By mid-June, tentative negotiations
began with Minister of State for Multiculturalism Gerry Weiner, but they
seemed to stall. A meeting called for July was cancelled without
explanation.
On 21 July, the Emergencies Act became law, abolishing the War Measures
Act and putting in place an emergency regime for Canada that expressly
prohibits discriminatory emergency orders, permits Parliament to
override the emergency orders of the government, requires an inquiry
into the actions of the government after any emergency, and provides for
payment of compensation to the victims of government actions. It has
never been used. The first goal of the redress campaign had been
achieved.
On 10 August, US President Ronald Reagan signed the US redress package
into law and the NAJC began planning a second demonstration on
Parliament Hill. The demonstration proved unnecessary. On 25 August,
negotiations resumed in Montréal, but not with the multicultural
minister. This time the negotiator was Secretary of State Lucien
Bouchard, a far more powerful minister. Two days later, after 17 hours
of negotiation, the NAJC agreed to a redress package.
On 22 September 1988, Mulroney rose in the House of Commons to
acknowledge the wartime wrongs and to announce compensation of:
$21,000 for each individual Japanese Canadian who had been either
expelled from the coast in 1942 or was alive in Canada before 1 April
1949 and remained alive at the time of the signing of the agreement;
a community fund of $12 million to rebuild the infrastructure of the
destroyed communities;
pardons for those wrongfully convicted of disobeying orders under the
War Measures Act;
acknowledgement of the Canadian citizenship of those wrongfully deported
to Japan and their descendants; and
funding of $24 million for a Canadian Race Relations Foundation. civil
rights projects, programs and conferences.
In 2012, the government of British Columbia apologized to Japanese
Canadians for its role in their internment and dispossession. Naomi
Yamamoto, the first Japanese Canadian elected to the BC legislature,
whose father was interned during the Second World War, introduced the
motion. Vancouver City Council apologized the following year. In 1942,
city council had passed a motion calling for “the removal of the enemy
alien population from the Pacific coast to central parts of Canada.”
Japanese Canadian Historic Sites
There are only a handful of sites on the Canadian Register of Historic
Places that are significant to Japanese Canadian history, most of which
are located in British Columbia. They include the Nikkei Internment
Memorial Centre in New Denver, the Langham Cultural Centre in Kaslo, the
Martial Arts Centre in Richmond and three buildings where Japanese
immigrants boarded in Vancouver’s former Japantown (see Historic Site).
In July 2016, Heritage BC announced the Japanese Canadian Historic
Places Recognition Project. The project sought to recognize places in
British Columbia that are significant to Japanese Canadian history. The
nomination process was open to the public, which suggested 176 sites. In
April 2017, 56 of those sites were officially recognized by the province
and pinned to an interactive map created by Heritage BC. The map also
includes the sites that were nominated.
The map depicts significant streets, neighbourhoods, parks, memorials
and historic buildings, among other historic markers throughout the
province. It also outlines the “protected area,” stretching 160 km
inland from the Pacific coast — an area that Japanese Canadians were
ordered to vacate during the war. Many of the sites are related to
internment, including road labour camps in Hope-Princeton and Yellowhead-Blue
River and internment camps in the Slocan Valley (including Lemon Creek,
Popoff and Bay Farm). Other sites memorialize Japanese Canadian
businesses such as the Deep Bay Logging Company, Buddhist temples,
Japanese language schools, gardens and more.
Community Centres and Associations
The National Association of Japanese Canadians (NAJC) is a national
collective of locally-based Japanese Canadian organizations. The NAJC is
a non-profit community organization that was first formed as the
Japanese Canadian Citizens Association in 1947. The NAJC focuses on
human rights, community development and government relations.
During the redress campaign, other Japanese Canadian cultural centres or
associations emerged in Montréal, Winnipeg, Vancouver, Victoria,
Edmonton, Calgary, Lethbridge, Ottawa, Regina and Thunder Bay. Several
martial arts and kendo clubs, and taiko groups operate across the
country, including in Halifax.
Several organizations across Canada promote Japanese heritage and
Japanese Canadian community life, such as Toronto’s Japanese Canadian
Cultural Centre (JCCC). Founded in 1963, the JCCC offers programs
ranging from tea ceremony initiation and the art of calligraphy to
martial arts and Japanese business etiquette. The JCCC also hosts
several events each year, including spring and summer festivals.
Similarly in Burnaby, BC, the mission of the Nikkei National Museum and
Cultural Centre is to preserve and promote Japanese Canadian history,
arts and culture through programs and exhibits that connect generations
and inspire diverse audiences.
Asahi Baseball Team
In the face of prejudice and persecution, sports offered a path to
dignity and courage. While Japanese Canadians participated in various
sports, from judo to bowling, baseball had a special place in the hearts
and minds of prewar community members.
Before the Second World War, the Asahi baseball team was legendary in
Vancouver. The club was established in 1914 and was one of the city’s
most dominant amateur teams, winning multiple league titles in Vancouver
and along the Northwest Coast. The Asahi stayed at the top of the
Pacific Northwest Japanese Baseball Championship for five consecutive
years (1937–41), and earned applause across colour lines. When every
Japanese Canadian was confined in detention camps during the Second
World War, the former Asahi players played a leading role in creating
baseball diamonds in the camps (see Vancouver Asahi).
The unique skills of the Asahi were recognized in 2003, when the team
was inducted into the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame and into the
British Columbia Sports Hall of Fame in 2005. A commemorative plaque was
unveiled in 2011 in their home field, the Powell Street Grounds, the
heart of Japantown in Vancouver.
Japanese Canadian Culture
Culture changes over time. Although immigrants from the first wave, the
Issei, practised many traditional Japanese skills such as martial arts,
odori, origami and ikebana, they learned them in the Meiji and Taisho
eras of their youth. The destruction of their communities in the 1940s
reduced their opportunities to practise these skills and to use the
Japanese language. While the Nisei went to Japanese language schools in
the 1930s, their children and grandchildren had few opportunities to
learn Japanese language or cultural traditions.
The language and cultural traditions of the post-1967 immigrants, the
Shin Ijusha, are different from those of the Issei in the same way that
Victorian English and manners are different from modern English culture.
The culture of the post-1967 immigrants reflects changes in Japan over
the last century. They bring to Canada their knowledge of both ancestral
cultural skills and of contemporary Japanese language, literature and
art, including popular art forms such as anime and manga. In the 2011
NHS, 40,180 people reported Japanese as their mother tongue (first
language learned).
Japanese Canadians, now into the fifth generation (Gosei), have
developed new and hybrid forms of culture and art. For example, taiko
drumming groups are found in many Canadian cities. Canadians of Japanese
ancestry are diverse in their cultural practices, experiences, education
and economic circumstances.
Prominent Japanese Canadians
Well-known Japanese Canadians include novelists Kerri Sakamoto, Aki
Shimazaki, Michelle Sagara, Hiromi Goto, Kim Moritsugu and Joy Kogawa,
poet Roy Miki, writer Ken Adachi, filmmakers Midi Onodera and Linda
Ohama, scientist David Suzuki, public servant Thomas Shoyama, architects
Raymond Moriyama and Bruce Kuwabara, community leader Art Miki and
agriculturalist Zenichi Shimbashi. Artists include Takao Tanabe, Miyuki
Tanobe, Roy Kiyooka and Kazuo Nakamura. Musicians include Jon Kimura
Parker and Jamie Parker.
Politicians include Bev Oda, the first Japanese Canadian Member of
Parliament and federal cabinet minister, BC Liberal cabinet minister
Naomi Yamamoto and former Ontario Progressive Conservative Cabinet
minister David Tsubouchi.
Athletes include judoka Mas Takahashi and hockey player Vicky Sunohara,
who was part of the national women’s hockey team that won silver (1998)
and gold (2002, 2006) at the Olympic Winter Games, as well as Devin
Setoguchi of the Minnesota Wild (NHL) and AHL players Jon Matsumoto and
Raymond Sawada.
(Continental Daily
News) was published in Vancouver between 1907 and 1941. The paper,
predominantly written in Japanese, was an important source of
information for Japanese immigrants to British Columbia. The Nippō sheds
light on the Japanese-Canadian community previous to the internment of
Japanese Canadians during World War II. Therefore, the newspaper is
relevant to those researching Japanese Canadians and Canadian history
more broadly, as well as immigration history, multiculturalism, Asian
Studies and the impact of war.
In addition to news stories, the Nippō includes advertisements for
Japanese-Canadian businesses that were later forced to closed as a
result of the internment, as well as religious (both Christian and
Buddhist) announcements and community event notices. There is no
equivalent newspaper or resource about pre-war Japanese-Canadian
society. The University of British Columbia Library owns the only known
collection of the Nippō, and the digitization of the paper was funded by
the University as part of its Japanese Canadian Student Tribute,
honouring the 76 Japanese-Canadian students who could not finish their
UBC degrees or were not able to attend graduation ceremonies as a result
of the 1942 internment. The family of Yasushi Yamazaki, who founded the
Nippō, kindly granted the UBC Library permission to make the newspaper
available online.
UBC Library gratefully acknowledges Professor Norifumi Kawahara’s
research team at Ritsumeikan University in Kyoto, Japan for supplying
much of the rich metadata made available here. By scouring the content
of the issues in order to list key terms and major titles, Professor
Kawahara’s team has enhanced researchers’ ability to find articles
through keyword searching, something that would not be possible
otherwise given the limitations of optical character recognition for
this type of material.
Report by W. L. MacKenzie King, C.M.G.
Deputy Minister of Labour, Commissioner, appointed to investigate into
the losses sustained by the Japanese population of Vancouver, B.C., on
the occasion of the Riots in that city in September, 1907 (pdf)
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