The purpose of this site is to provide information on the campaign to turn Joy Kogawa's childhood home into a historic literary landmark for Vancouver and all of Canada.

The house was purchased by The Land Conservancy of BC in May 2006. Funds are now needed to restore the house to they way it looked between 1938 and 1942, when author Joy Kogawa lived there as a child; to turn the house into a historic literary landmark; and and to create an annual writers-in-residence program.

Donate now to the campaign.

Georgia Straight: Joy Kogawa House is "BEST NEW PLACE TO GET WRITING DONE "

Joy Kogawa House is:

BEST NEW PLACE TO

GET WRITING DONE


Pictures: Joy and brother Tim and Kogawa House circa 1944, chery tree and house 2007, Joy Kogawa and children from Thomsett Elementary School, Joy Kogawa and house photo by Dan Toulget/Vancouver Courier, Joy & brother Tim with school friends circa 1944

When I joined the "Save Kogawa House" campaign in September 2005, I just knew it was something that had to be done. Three years later we now have our first writer-in-residence program with the arrival of Madeleine Thien and a grant from the Canada Council. 

The House was purchased by The Land Conservancy of BC in May 2006, and we have since had readings by Ruth Ozeki, Shaena Lambert, Sharon Butala, Heidi Greco, Marion Quednau, and Vancouver’s poet laureate George McWhirter, as well as Joy Kogawa herself.  We have also had musical performances by opera soprano Heather Pawsey, flautist Kathryn Cernauskas and pianist Rachel Iwaasa. 

It's an amazing story that this house has survived not only the WW2 Internment of its previous owners, but also rising real estate prices and the threat of demolition.  It was a vision that we had to create a home for writers, to both recognize the accomplishments and life of Joy Kogawa, as well as to provide a place for them to hone their craft, and hopefully inspire them to their own greatness.

Check out page 77 of the Sept 18-25 / 2008 issue of the Georgia Straight.  Kevin Chong writes that "Madeleine Thine will take up residence at a retreat dedicated to Joy Kogawa"


Historic Joy Kogawa House

1450 West 64th Avenue

Now that Joy Kogawa’s childhood home has been purchased and saved from the wrecking ball after years of struggle, it’s set to become a writer’s retreat for visiting authors, starting in 2009. (The first author to arrive in the house, located in leafy, sleepy Marpole, will be Madeleine Thien.) Hopefully, the house, which celebrates the contributions of one of B.C.’s best-known authors while reminding us of a regrettable episode in our nation’s history—the internment of Japanese Canadians during World War II—will inspire new books in the years to come. More info is available at www.kogawahouse.com/ .

Page 77

Kogawa House cherry tree at Vancouver city hall is given a plaque on the 20th anniversary of the Japanese-Canadian redress.


Cellphone photo of plaque in place at Vancouver City Hall, Sunday, September 21, 2008

"Friendship Tree" plaque at Vancouver City Hall for the "Kogawa House cherry tree" graft - photo Ann-Marie Metten.

Sixty-six years ago, in 1942, Japanese-Canadians were "evacuated" from Canada's Pacific coast and sent to internment camps for the duration of WW2.

in 1981, Joy Kogawa wrote her first novel Obasan, the first novel to address the issue of the Japanese-Canadian internment.  Joy Kogawa would receive the Order of Canada in 1986 for her literary acheivement, what Roy Miki called
"a novel that I believe is the most important literary work of the past 30 years for understanding Canadian history."

20 years ago, the Japanese Canadian Redress settlement was signed in Ottawa with Joy present.  She stood in the House of Commons gallery, when NDP leader Ed Broadbent read a passage from "Obasan"

2005 was a busy year for Joy Kogawa.  Obasan was the "One Book One Vancouver" selection for the Vancouver Public Library.  "Naomi's Road", a mini-opera based on her children's novel debuted by the Vancouver Opera Touring Ensemble.   And the childhood home of Joy Kogawa, which she had always hoped her family could return to after the war, was threatened with demolition.  And on November 1st,at Vancouver City Hall, there was the Joy Kogawa Cherry Tree Planting".

On November 3rd, a presentation was made to Vancouver City Council to do whatever they could to stop or delay the proposed demolition of Joy Kogawa's childhood home.  An unprecedented motion was passed to delay the processing of the demolition permit by 3 months.  read Kogawa House: Vancouver Council votes unaminously to create 120 day delay to demolition application.

City councilor Jim Green accompanied Joy Kogawa in turning the sod.  Jim had helped Joy take the original grafts from the tree a year before.  They were accompanied by Vancouver chief librarian Paul Whitney, and Vancouver Opera managing director James Wright.Now there is a plaque to officially recognize and commemorate the significance of this young cherry tree.  It is grafted from the original cherry tree from Joy Kogawa's childhood home.
Joy Kogawa with City Librarian Paul Whitney, Opera Managing Director James Wright, and City Councillor Jim Green - photo Deb Martin

On November 3rd, a presentation was made to Vancouver City Council to do whatever they could to stop or delay the proposed demolition of Joy Kogawa's childhood home.  An unprecedented motion was passed to delay the processing of the demolition permit by 3 months.  read Kogawa House: Vancouver Council votes unaminously to create 120 day delay to demolition application.

In May of 2006, The Land Conservancy of BC purchased the house at 1450 West 64th Ave, to help preserve the childhood home of author Joy Kogawa.


In April 2008, Joy released a children's picture book titled Naomi's Tree.  It encompasses the stories of the WW2 internment, and also the saving of her childhood home, while reflecting on the friendship of a young child and cherry try as they both age and meet again.  This book tells the story of the "Friendship Tree,"  Joy Kogawa reads "Naomi's Tree" at Vancouver Kidsbooks for the Vancouver book launch. 

20th Anniversary of the Japanese Canadian Redress Agreement

Monday, September 22, 2008, Vancouver--Today is the 20th anniversary of the Japanese Canadian Redress Agreement negotiated with the National Association of Japanese Canadians after five years of struggle. On this day, then Prime Minister Brian Mulroney stood in the House of Commons and stated:

Mr. Speaker, I know I speak for members of all sides of the House in offering to Japanese Canadians the formal and sincere apology of this Parliament for those past injustices against them, their families, and their heritage, and our solemn commitment to Canadians of every origin that they will never again be countenanced or repeated.

As we recognize the 20th anniversary of the Redress Agreement, quite amazingly, we have learned that it is also the 64th anniversary of the expropriation sale of the childhood home of Joy's family. Recently we have been approached with research involving Land Registry searches on 1450 West 64th Avenue, and one of the discoveries was that it was sold on September 22, 1944.

Forty-four years later, to the day, the Redress Agreement was signed in Ottawa, with Joy present. Gregory Tatchell, the researcher, noted: "I think of these parallels as God winks, not as coincidence!" 

 

Excerpt from Justice in Our Time: The Japanese Canadian Redress Settlement (Vancouver: Talonbooks, 1991) by Roy Miki and Cassandra Kobayashi

Visit Joy Kogawa at the Royal BC Museum - take a picture with her!

Photo Library - 2899 by you.
 
Where is Joy Kogawa in this picture?
 
This is the interactive photo display in front of the Royal BC Museum, in Victoria BC, for the "Free Spirit" exhibition celebrating the 150th Anniversary of British Columbia.  These pictures are from "The Party" display which features 150 of BC's most fascinating people.
 
The display also features Japanese-Canadian David Suzuki and other famous authors such as Jane Rule, Douglas Coupland, PK Page and Dorothy Livesay.
 
Check out the website and find Joy and David Suzuki in:
http://www.freespiritbc.ca/virtualexhibition/theparty.aspx
 
hint: you can stand behind Joy, as Kogawa House committee member Deb Martin is doing.  This picture of Joy was taken by Kogawa House committee members Deb and Todd Wong- who is is also featured in "The Party" exhibit.
 
The exhibition opened in March, Deb and I went to visit "Joy" in April: read our story: Traveling to "The Party" at BC Royal Museum
<!-- PHOTO CONTENT: DESCRIPTION, NOTES, COMMENTS -->

Joy Kogawa featured in "The Party" at Royal BC Museum

Joy Kogawa featured in

"The Party" at Royal BC Museum

To celebrate BC's 150th Anniversary, the Royal BC Museum "gathers a glorious crowd of 150 British Columbians - famous and infamous, living and dead - so you can explore their fascinating stories." 

It's called "The Party"

And Joy Kogawa is one of them!

As well as fellow Asian-Canadians Dr. David Suzuki, Tong Louie and the Hon. David Lam.

Fellow authors Douglas Coupland, Susan Musgrave, Jane Rule, Dorothy Livesay, P.K. Page and Emily Carr. 

Community activists such as Guujaw, Svend Robinson, Nellie McClung,  Betty Krawzyck, and the Raging Grannies. 

Musicians include David Foster, Sara Mclachlan, Diana Krall, DOA, The Collectors and Bryan Adams and artists Gathie Falk, BC Binning, Tony Onley and Robert Davidson. 

Architects include George Rattenbury, Cornelia Oberlander, Arthur Erickson, and James Cheng.

Politicians include the James Douglas - the first governor of BC, W.A.C. Bennett, Grace McCarthy, Dave Barrett, Amor de Cosmos, Rosemary Brown and Emery Barnes - also a former BC Lions football player.


Our visit to the BC Royal Museum was a very exciting one.  Last year, the BC Royal Museum had contacted author Joy Kogawa because they wanted to include a full length picture of her for an exhibit celebrating 150 years of BC history.  But Joy didn't like the picture that the museum had selected, and the pictures Joy did like weren't completely full length.  I offered that my girlfriend Deb and I would do a photo session for Joy.  The pictures turned out wonderfully and the museum was happy when we sent them 6 pictures to choose from.

At the museum, we were soon met by my friend, author Gary Geddes and his wife Anne.  Gary had already seen the exhibit and said it was quite good.  We got our guest passes and followed him up.  As we entered the exhibit room, we quickly saw all the life size photos arranged like a celebratory birthday cake.  It is a riot of images of famous British Columbians in many different poses.  Some black and white, some colour.  Quickly catching my eye was the photo of Bryan Adams, and then an almost naked Dr. David Suzuki. Rick Hansen in his wheelchair.  Terry Fox up high, wearing his "Marathon of Hope" t-shirt. 

But where was Joy?

P4230239

We followed Gary around to the other side, my eyes constantly stopping on every image I saw - wanting to identify each figure, but at the same time keep moving to find Joy.

We found her, tucked half way up the display, tucked behind and between Betty Krawzyck and Karen Magnussen.

P4230223

P4230222

It's a nice photo of Joy, and the photo credit is attributed to Todd Wong.  Cool!

You can see the full length photo and bio of Joy at:

http://www.freespiritbc.ca/virtualexhibition/theparty.aspx 

Joy Kogawa's Obasan, is an important part of a new Canadian literary canon

Joy Kogawa's Obasan, is an

important part of a new

Canadian literary canon

How important is Joy Kogawa and her novel Obasan to Canada?

Obasan was chosen twice, amongst the panel of 5, for their top ten most important Canadian literary works. Only 5 works were chosen twice or more... and Obasan was one of them!

Reading the Globe & Mail on Canada Day morning should be a tradition. Except for all the other FREE Canada Day activities and events that are happening out there, and you have to get out early to beat the crowds or to find parking.Canadians are proud of their authors, it helps us define who we are, as well as our history and our psyche.  It also adds "Canadian content" to our newspapers and media stories.

The Globe and Mail's John Adams explains that "Thirty years ago dozens of scholars, critics, authors and publishing types gathered for four days in Calgary for what was billed as the National Conference on the Canadian Novel.... We enlisted a panel of five - three women, two men, from across the country, all well-read in Canadian literature and deeply knowledgeable of its history. Each was asked to come up with his or her own Top 10 annotated list of Canadian English-language fiction titles."

Upon reading the list of authors and titles, the first thing that struck me was the inclusion of authors of ethnic diversity.  30 years ago we didn't really have authors of colour considered as important for Canadian fiction.  Joy Kogawa's Obasan came out in 1981, and really lead the way for the acceptance of Asian-Canadian literature.  Michael Ondaatje's In the Skin of a Lion, came out in 1987. 

I was surprised by the inclusion of SKY Lee's Disappearing Moon Cafe (1990), because Wayson Choy's The Jade Peony (1995) is usually cited and lauded but it was missing on these lists.  But for me, I couldn't put Disappearing Moon Cafe down, once I had started.  It took me several starts to get into The Jade Peony, and it wasn't until I was on the Vancouver Public Library's inaugural One Book One Vancouver committee that had chosen The Jade Peony as it's inaugural choice, that I actually finished reading it.

Check out the list:Taking a shot at a new canon http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20080701.wcanonadams01/BNStory/Entertainment/home

Of particular interest

comments are from the G&M article 

Joy Kogawa
Obasan (1981) is selected twice

This novel broaches the difficult topic of the internment of Japanese Canadians during the Second World War. My students were profoundly moved by the way the lyrical prose personalized the political agenda.

Lucy Maud Montgomery
Anne of Green Gables (1908) is selected 3 times

Elizabeth Smart
By Grand Central Station I Sat Down and Wept (1945) is selected 3 times

Margaret Laurence
The Stone Angel (1964) is selected 3 times

Alice Munro
Lives of Girls and Women: A Novel (1971) is selected 3 times

Readers have long argued whether this is a novel or a collection of short stories. Whatever it is, it's an uncanny portrait of the artist as a young Souwesto girl.

Leonard Cohen
Beautiful Losers (1966) is selected twice

Sky Lee
The Disappearing Moon Café (1990)

This novel about four generations of a Chinese family in Vancouver is an amazing evocation of Sophocles-like angst and sturm und drang.

Margaret Atwood is named twice but for different books

Michael Ondaatje is named twice for different books.

Cherry Tree planted, Sen. Ruth acknowledged as $ 1/2 Million donor, Joy given Georrge Woodcock Lifetime Achievement Award

It was a wonderful busy

busy day of celebration

at Joy Kogawa House

on April 25th.

 

 

3pm press conference, introduction of formerly anomnynous $500,000 donor (Sen. Nancy Ruth) + baby cherry tree planting

CIMG0122

At 3:40pm, we sat inside the living room of Historic Joy Kogawa House and listened to CBC Radio One's Arts Report by Paul Grant.  Paul had interviewed Sen. Nancy Ruth, Bill Turner and Joy Kogawa for his story on how the house was saved, and how Sen. Nancy Ruth's formerly anonymous gift of $500,000 was important.  In this picture Hon. Iona Campagnolo, Sen. Nancy Ruth and Joy Kogawa.- photo Todd Wong

Hon. Iona Campagnolo (former BC Lt. Gov. speaks about importance of preserving culture and heritage represented through Historica Joy Kogawa house.  She stands next to Joy Kogawa, Bill Turner (TLC executive director), Senator Nancy Ruth, Ujal Dosanjh MP for Vancouver South, Ellen Woodsworth (former Vancouver City councilor) - photo Todd Wong

4pm VIP reception - where we sold 6 baby cherry trees that will be planted at designated public sites (I want to plant one at Government House in Victoria)

CIMG0183

Joy Kogawa signs books for MP Ujal Dosanjh and Vancouver councilor Heather Deal - two of the politicians we first contacted in 2005 to find ways to save the house and ensure its heritage designations. - photo Todd Wong

8pm  Music and Poetry with Joy Kogawa and Friends, featuring poets George McWhirter, Heidi Greco, Marion Quednau, soprano Heather Pawsey, flautist Kathryn Cernauskas, pianist Rachel Kiyo Iwassa, and composer Leslie Uyeda.

Author Joy Kogawa reads to a packed house in her childhood home. Composer Leslie Uyeda stands 2nd from left.  Vancouver Public Library Community Programming director Janice Douglas sits in the front row, 3rd from left. - photo Todd Wong

Following the music, Joy was presented with the George Woodcock Literary Achievement Award from BC Bookworld Publisher Alan Twigg, Vancouver Public Library Community Programs Director Janice Douglas, and historian Jean Barman.

Alan Twigg speaks of Joy's acomplishments

Joy Kogawa accepts the award

Alan Twigg speaks of Joy's accomplishments                        Joy Kogawa accepts the award

This morning Joy Kogawa sent this email out to our Historic Joy Kogawa House Society

Dear Friends,
 
For a day of unalloyed happiness --
 
I have had many many wonderful days in my life -- but this one!  It was the happiest. If ever I've felt at home.... Or felt the love that underlies all...
 
My friend Heather Pawsey, soprano wrote:

Last night was one of the most beautiful and profound evenings of my musical life.  Heartfelt thanks to everyone behind Kogawa House.  May it continue to rise and spread its wings.

Pictures and more details to follow.
see:

Kogawa House April 25 2008

Kogawa House April 25 2008


Joy Kogawa House, April 25th 2008

Joy Kogawa House, April 25th 2008

Globe & Mail: 'Instead of dying, it's been given a second chance' - story about Joy Kogawa's childhood home and beloved cherry t

Globe & Mail: 'Instead of dying, it's been given a second chance' - story about Joy Kogawa's childhood home and beloved cherry tree

 
1) Joy and Timothy @ Kogawa House circa 1939 2) Joy and Timothy with friends circ 1939 3) Rev. Tim Nakayama, Roy Miki, Joy Kogawa and Todd Wong May 2005, at the Obasan Launch for One Book One Vancouver, Vancouver Public Library.

This is truly a miracle story.  I remember in the early 1980's shelving "Obasan" on book shelves while I worked at the Vancouver Public Library.  Just the existence of the book spoke to me about Asian-Canadian history and identity.  I was inspired to learn more about Japanese-Canadian history as part of my own Asian-Canadian history, as part of my own identity as a Canadian. 

The very first time I met Joy Kogawa was at Expo 86.  She gave a reading, and read a poem titled "Oh Canada," about the sorry and loss of the internment.  I introduced myself to her friend Roy Miki and he gave me Joy'
s copy of the poem.

Many years later, I am honoured to call these great Canadians as friends.  It is a pleasure to be president of the Historic Joy Kogawa House Society, with so many good-hearted people on our board.

As I told CBC arts reporter Paul Grant, back in 2005 when we had just re-started the Save Kogawa House campaign, "Saving the house is a calling.  It's something that has to be done.

Today, we have a literary and historic landmark for not only the City of Vancouver, but for all Canadians.  And we still have work to do.  We must restore the house to its 1942 qualities when Joy and her brother Tim lived in the house, before they were sent away to the internment camps and beet farms.  We must build a writer's-in-residence program for this house.

'Instead of dying, it's been given a second chance'

Celebrated author Joy Kogawa returns to the house her family lost during their wartime internment and revels in its future

From Friday's Globe and Mail

<!-- dateline -->VANCOUVER<!-- /dateline --> — As a girl, Joy Nakayama would write from her family's miserable shack in the Alberta sugar beet fields to the new occupants of the comfortable Vancouver home seized from her family during the wartime internment of Japanese Canadians.

She begged the owners for a chance to get the house back. They never replied.

More than 60 years later, in a charming circle of history, Ms. Nakayama, better known as the celebrated writer Joy Kogawa, stood once more in her childhood home this week, eager to guide a visitor through its emotional past.

From her former bedroom window, she gazed again at the famous backyard cherry tree that forms the heart of her memories and so much of her writing.

"It's the tree, more than anything else, that grips me," Ms. Kogawa said. "It's as if it has a message written upon it, that everything we've gone through in life is known. ... When it dies, I feel I will die."

Split in the middle, oozing sap, with many of its limbs missing, the gnarled, ailing tree is nonetheless draped in a glorious display of springtime blossoms, as much a miracle of survival as the house itself.

The modest bungalow in the city's now fashionable Marpole district was just days from destruction when a last-minute, anonymous donation of $500,000 allowed The Land Conservancy to buy it, with hopes of establishing a writers' residence and a tribute to Ms. Kogawa and her award-winning novel Obasan, about the tragedy of internment.

The donor's identity is to be disclosed at a ceremony this afternoon. But The Globe and Mail has learned that the improbably large sum came from Conservative Senator Nancy Ruth, sister of former Ontario lieutenant-governor Henry Jackman.

"Why? Because I have a tremendous fondness for Joy Kogawa," Ms. Ruth explained, adding with a modest chuckle: "And also because of the tax incentives of the Harper government. No capital gains on stock earnings given to charity."

Internment was a shameful act, she said. "I can remember reading Obasan and weeping at the pain."

Yet, Ms. Ruth said, Ms. Kogawa retains a deep sense of faith in humanity, that reconciliation and hope are still possible, even in the face of things that are terrible.

Writers residing in the house in the future will have to deal with that, Ms. Ruth said. "How can you sit at a desk and look out at that cherry tree and not think from whence all that came?"

As for Ms. Kogawa, the six-year-old who once dangled upside down from the tree's low branches is now grey-haired and 72, albeit with undiminished energy and flashing eyes.

She can scarcely comprehend the astounding chain of events that has brought her childhood refuge back after so many years, particularly on a street where many residences were torn down long ago in favour of larger, more expensive dwellings.

"I had given up. I'd gone to the realtors. I pleaded and begged not to let it go. I offered to write books for them, to name characters after their children. It all fell on deaf ears."

Now, she marvelled, "such a strange thing has happened here. It's all a bit surreal, dream-like. I don't know even how to describe it. It's like some movie script, this sense of wonder and delight."

During her tour of the house, Ms. Kogawa indicated how much has changed over the years. New walls, doors and windows replaced, closets ripped out.

"My mother's piano was right there," she said, gesturing toward an empty corner of the living room. "The gramophone was over there, and that's where the goldfish

bowl stood."

She headed into the basement. Suddenly, there were gasps of surprise.

"There they are! The windows and the doors!" She pointed to a pair of fine French doors and old window frames, carefully stacked along a wall. "And there's some of the cedar planks that my father put in. Wouldn't it be great if things could be brought back to the way they were?"

Ms. Kogawa brought back a few family possessions that survived internment. Her brother's toy cars, her mother's Japanese tea set, tattered picture books. "These are the pictures I grew up with." And an old apple crate. "That was saved, because it was useful when we had to move," she said, without bitterness.

It was a good day.

"The story of this house has come to a wonderful place, like a new beginning," she said, groping to find just the right words.

"It had one birth. It lived its life, and then, instead of dying, it's been given a second chance. That's a wonderful, wonderful thing to have.

"It's going to live again. It will breathe. It will bring life to people. It will bring reconciliation. Those are the things this house has been called to do."

Language of Music, The Music of Words

A Musical Evening with Joy Kogawa and Friends

When: Friday, April 25, 8:00 to 9:30 p.m.

Where: Historic Joy Kogawa House, 1450 West 64th Avenue, Vancouver

Cost: By donation. Space is limited. To secure a seat, please RSVP by emailing kogawahouse@yahoo.ca. Wine and cheese will be served.

Vancouver composer Leslie Uyeda presents two song cycles written to accompany five of Joy Kogawa’s most exquisite poems. "Stations of Angels" will be performed by soprano Heather Pawsey and flutist Kathryn Cernauskas and "Offerings," by Heather Pawsey and pianist Rachel Kiyo Iwaasa. These performances are the world premiere of both song cycles, which were composed especially for these three artists.

To complement the musical performance, poets Joy Kogawa, Heidi Greco, Marion Quednau, and Vancouver’s poet laureate George McWhirter will read.

The evening will close with a stellar presentation: the Vancouver Public Library will award Joy the George Woodcock Lifetime Achievement Award for an outstanding literary career related to British Columbia.

This National Poetry Month event takes place in Joy Kogawa’s childhood home—a place that is representative of the many properties owned by Canadians of Japanese descent that were confiscated during the Second World War when their occupants were interned. After a hard-fought effort to save the house from demolition, the tiny bungalow is being restored and will host a writer-in-residence program.

Proceeds from this musical event will fund the honorarium for the first writer to live and work at the house, beginning in March 2009.

We acknowledge the support of the Canada Council for the Arts and the League of Canadian Poets.

 

 

Joy Kogawa "NAOMI'S TREE" reading at Vancouver Kidsbooks

Joy reads "Naomi's Tree"

at Vancouver Kidsbooks

book launch



It was a good event for the launch of  Naomi's Tree.  So good that all the books that had been delivered in advance to Kidsbooks sold out.  We were holding two extra copies, so I passed them on to two people who didn't have any.  They were both very thankful. 

One of them, an Asian women said she had met me before.  She was a cousin of Joy's, and we had met once at a dinner, then again at the Church when Joy's brother Rev. Timothy Nakamura came to speak.  It was nice to see her again, and I am glad that she had a book that Joy could sign for her, and take home with her children.

P4100237
Joy Kogawa reads at Vancouver Kidsbooks - photo Deb Martin 

When Joy performed her reading, she told the audience of children and adults that she had fallen in love with a tree.  It was a special "Friendship Tree" - a cherry blossom tree. 

She explained that she had a special unbound copy of the Naomi's Tree.  She could hold it up and show the beautiful pictures by Ruth Ohi, while she read the words on the other side of the page.

It's a beautiful story that spans across an ocean, beginning in the "Land of Morning" - Japan, and travels over the Pacific Ocean  to the "Land Across the Sea" - Canada.  The story also spans many generations.  And along the way it also briefly tells about the internment of Japanese Canadians during WW2.

But the story is also about forgiveness, remembering and love. 

Joy and Todd

Joy signs a book for Todd Wong - photo Deb Martin 

It's been almost 3 years since I got to know Joy during the May 2005, when One Book One Vancouver chose Obasan to become it's literary selection for that summer.  It's been a pleasure becoming friends with Joy, as we have shared the fears of her childhood home being threatened by demolition, and the joys of watching Vancouver Opera Touring Ensemble's production of "Naomi's Road" - her children's novel as a mini-opera.  After the reading, Joy signed a copy for me.

Joy writes the the Afterword of the book, and writes

My brother Tim and I were born in Canada, in Vancouver, B.C.  When I was six years old in 1942, our family along with the entire Japanese-Canadian community on the West Coast were classified as enemy aliens and removed from our homes.  All our property was confiscated.  Following WW2, the community was destroyed by the government's dispersal policy, which scattered us across Canada.

On August 27, 2003, I discovered that my old family home, with the cherry tree still standing in the backyard, was for sale.  On November 1, 2005, which was dcalred Obasan Cherry Tree Day, Councilor Jim Green and I planted a cutting from the cherry tree at Vancouver City Hall.  On June 1, 2006, after a short intense campaign, the Land Conservancy of B.C., with the help of the Save Joy Kogawa House Committeee, purchased the house for a writers' center.  The cherry tree, sadly was fatally ill, but a new Friendship Tree grown from a cutting of the old tree was planted on the property.  To this day, children can visit the Friendship Trees at Vancouver City Hall and at my childhood home, at 1450 West 64th Avenue.

I would like to thank with profound appreciation the work of the Save Joy Kogawa House Committee, the Land Conservancy of B.C., the writers' organizations, school children, and others too numerous to mention.  Without the initial vision and heroic labor of Anton Wagner and Chris Kurata in Toronto and Ann-Marie Metten and Todd Wong in Vancouver, the house and tree would not have been saved.  In particular, I wish to thank members of the Historic Joy Kogawa House Society for their ongoing commitment.  Finally, I offer my deep gratitude to my dear friend, Senator Nancy Ruth, whose action made all the difference.

Check out pictures at
Naomi's Tree reading by Joy Kogawa at Kidsbooks

Naomi's Tree reading by Joy Kogawa at...

Syndicate content