Rechercher dans ce blog

Thursday, November 18, 2021

Nihonmachi Little Friends Receives JA Confinement Sites Grant - The Rafu Shimpo

little.indah.link
1830 Sutter St. in San Francisco Japantown, home to Nihonmachi Little Friends, was originally the Japanese YWCA, estbalished by Issei women in the 1930s. (Californiajapantowns.org)

SAN FRANCISCO — Nihonmachi Little Friends (NLF) has received a $99,790 grant from the Department of Interior, National Park Service (NPS) through the Japanese American Confinement Sites (JACS) grant program.

The funds will support a website project featuring the little-known story of the Issei women of San Francisco and the Japanese YWCA building they erected at 1830 Sutter St.

This project, “Dreams Interrupted: Uncovering Wartime Experiences of Issei Women” will be a robust multimedia website exploring how 1830 Sutter was a centerpiece in the Issei women’s efforts to overcome racism, discrimination, and hardship faced by the Japanese American community, and struggles other marginalized people fought for their rights.

Through their experiences and the establishment of this community center, the project will explore pre-World War II racial discrimination; the wartime incarceration, exile, and diaspora of the Issei; and their modern-day legacy. The website is expected to launch in conjunction with the building’s 90th anniversary in 2022.

Designed by famed architect Julia Morgan, the 1830 Sutter “Issei Women’s Building” was built in 1932, offering cultural and social activities and temporary housing for young women and girls. Over six decades later, the building was entrusted to NLF, a culturally-based, non-profit childcare organization, as part of an out-of-court settlement of a community-supported lawsuit to save the building.

1830 Sutter was added to the National Register of Historic Places and the California Historic Register in 2020 and was designated as San Francisco’s #291 Landmark on May 30 this year.

Along with these recognitions, the JACS award will help NLF “further promote the building’s unique history and cultural significance,” stated NLF Executive Director Cathy Inamasu.

The Dreams Interrupted project seeks recollections from Nikkei whose mothers, grandmothers, or great-grandmothers in San Francisco were incarcerated in the Tanforan Assembly Center and the Manzanar, Topaz, and Tule Lake concentration camps.

The project also invites NLF alumni and their families who were involved in community organizing associated with the Soko Bukai v. YWCA case to contribute their photos and stories.

As one of the JACS grant recipients, NLF needs to match $2 in federal funds for every

$1 in either non-federal funds or in-kind contributions. For more information on the project and to donate, contact NLF at (415) 922-8898 or nlfchildcare@gmail.com.

The NLF grant proposal was selected through a competitive process. In 2021, NPS awarded 22 grants totaling over $3,155,000. With these funds, JACS grants are awarded to private nonprofit organizations; educational institutions; state, local, and tribal governments; and other public entities to preserve and interpret U.S. confinement sites where Japanese Americans were detained during World War II.

For questions on the JACS grant program, contact Kara Miyagishima, program manager, at (303) 969-2885.

Adblock test (Why?)

The Link Lonk


November 18, 2021 at 01:26PM
https://rafu.com/2021/11/nihonmachi-little-friends-receives-ja-confinement-sites-grant/

Nihonmachi Little Friends Receives JA Confinement Sites Grant - The Rafu Shimpo

https://news.google.com/search?q=little&hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US:en

No comments:

Post a Comment

Featured Post

Nikki Haley's super PAC spent big to fuel her rise. It started 2024 with little left. - NBC News

little.indah.link The super PAC backing former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley entered the election year in January with just $3.5 million in...

Popular Posts