Editor's Note: Yuri Kochiyama turns 82 today.
See
also: Marching
in Step with Dr. King
By Akemi Kochiyama-Ladson
A. Magazine
December 1, 1994
One
of the earliest memories I have of my grandmother was Hiroshima
Day, August 6, 1978. I was six years old and she took me along to a
demonstration she was attending. On the train ride downtown, she
explained to me that we were going to the Riverside Research
Institute, a "think tank" for building weapons, including
nuclear ones. This was the place where they made the bombs they
used against the people of Vietnam. This was a place in which they
thought up new ways to kill people. Despite my youth, I understood
the importance of the cause.
I remember that the moment we got to the demonstration site, it
seemed like she knew everyone: these people were her extended
family. She was in her element, greeting, embracing, and
introducing her colleagues to one another, all the while handing
out leaflets to every person she encountered. Meanwhile, she
quickly obtained a sign from someone and hung it around my neck.
The sign was about as tall as I was, and twice as wide. It read
"MEET HUMAN NEEDS."
As I grew older and accompanied Yuri to other demonstrations,
rallies, protests, and meetings, I realized that this was business
as usual for a woman with incredible energy and a vast political
network.
Yuri, born Mary Yuriko Nakahara, marks 1942 as the year she came
into political consciousness. Yuri was 20 years old, and even then
displayed a deep concern for her community. A volunteer for the
YWCA, the Girl Scouts, and the Homer Toberman Settlement House,
which served the Mexican community in her home town of San Pedro,
California, Yuri also taught first aid at the Red Cross and Sunday
School at the local Presbyterian church.
But on the day Pearl Harbor was bombed, December 7, 1941, three
FBI men came to her home and took her father -- who had returned
from the hospital only the day before -- away with them. No
explanation was given. And it was not until six weeks later that he
was brought home, visibly weakened, and disoriented to the point
that he could no longer recognize his family. He died that night.
Yuri later learned that her father had been under surveillance
for 20 years, and that the FBI had been holding him in the state
penitentiary under suspicion of being a spy for the Japanese
government. This came as a shock to the Nakaharas, who, as did most
Japanese Americans of the time, saw themselves as a patriotic,
law-abiding family. Soon after, in compliance with Executive Order
9066, the government removed 110,000 Americans of Japanese ancestry
from their homes and communities and interned them in
"relocation" camps. The Nakaharas found themselves
uprooted from their comfortable home and sent to a camp in Jerome,
Arkansas.
"I had no hard feelings against the United States,"
Yuri says of this period. "I was so American, so steeped in
the 'red, white, and blue.' But I did slowly start to look at
America with different eyes."
Like many other Japanese Americans, Yuri tried to make her life
in the relocation camp as normal as possible. She taught Sunday
School there and worked with children and teens, much as she had in
San Pedro. In 1944, she left the camp to work for a USO in
Mississippi specifically created for Japanese American soldiers,
since Asians were not welcome in white USOs. It was there that she
met and fell in love with a dashing young soldier named Bill
Kochiyama -- a member of the all-Japanese American 442nd regimental
combat team, one of the most decorated battalions in U.S. history.
After the war ended and the camps closed, Yuri was reunited with
Bill in New York, and they were married. In 1960, they and their
six children moved by subway from the Amsterdam Projects midtown to
the uptown Manhattanville Housing Projects. This was a major change
for Yuri and the whole Kochiyama family, as they were swept up in
the world of Harlem in the '60s -- a hotbed of political activity.
Through their involvement with the Harlem Parents' Committee, Bill
and Yuri learned of the Freedom Schools organized by the concerned
community in an attempt to supplement the deficiencies of the
public education system. The Schools taught black children to have
pride in their heritage, and Yuri became committed to the project.
"Both my husband and I felt we didn't know anything about
black history, black thinking, or black culture, and in order to
understand the black community and and its people, we thought we'd
better sign up. So we enrolled, along with our three eldest
children, Billy, Audee, and Aichi. The education we received was
priceless."
As Yuri's involvement grew, so did her political awareness.
"I began going down to 125th Street and Seventh Avenue where
nationalist and Leftist activists would hang out and speak. I
started to see that Harlem's politics ran a wide gamut. There were
also the Garveyites, the Yoruba, and the Nation of Islam.
Everything to me was new, exciting, and mind-boggling," she
remembers. "Several days a week I would take the four youngest
children and ride the subway to Brooklyn to participate in
protests. I also joined Malcolm's Organization of Afro-American
Unity and his Liberation School, and later Amiri Baraka's Black
Arts School. Harlem was truly a 'university without walls."'
Most significant for Yuri during this period was her encounter
with Malcolm X. His politics and philosophy would radically change
her understanding of racism in America. "Before I met Malcolm,
I had no understanding of the two trends in the black movement. I
was involved only with the civil rights movement, represented by
Martin Luther King and his vision of harmonious integration of
people to make a greater America through nonviolence. But after
listening to Malcolm, I strongly felt that his position of total
liberation from the jurisdiction of the United States was the only
way that black people in this country would be able to empower
themselves, to determine their own destiny. His position of
self-determination, self-reliance, self-defense, and a sovereign
nation was integral to realizing one's own potentials, humanity,
and dignity. It is impossible to attain justice in a racist
country. Malcolm helped me to see, more clearly, the true essence
of the United States in all its negative reality."
In 1964, Yuri invited Malcolm X to her home, to meet with
reporters from the Hiroshima/Nagasaki World Peace Study Mission.
Some in the group were actual bomb victims, and others were antiwar
activists. More than any other political leader in the U.S., they
wanted to meet Malcolm X. "They were curious to know why the
United States government feared one black man, who seemingly had no
wealth, power, or status in America," she recalls. "They
wanted to know what made him different from other black leaders.
They were also probably curious to know how he would react to
Japanese people."
This was a risky time for Malcolm X, because he had just split
with the Nation of Islam and knew that he was in serious danger of
assassination. Still, he came, and surprised all present with his
graciousness and openness. "Black, white or Asian, he showed
no partiality. He thanked the Japanese hibakusha [bomb victims] for
coming to Harlem's 'World's Worst Fair,' rather than attending the
much-publicized 1964 World's Fair at Flushing Meadow Park in
Queens. He then spoke of European colonization of Asia, and spoke
admiringly of Mao Tse Tung for what he was able to accomplish,
fighting against feudalism, corruption, and foreign domination.
Then he spoke of Vietnam. I remember he said, 'The struggle of the
people of Vietnam is the struggle of the Third World -- a struggle
against imperialism and neocolonialism.' All were deeply
impressed," Yuri says.
It was easy for Yuri to connect the Asian movement with the
black movement, because many of the issues they were fighting for
were the same. "Blacks, Asians, Latinos, and Native Americans
were fighting separately and together for basic needs like food,
housing, education, health care, and jobs. They also fought side by
side for ethnic studies, open enrollment, increased student voice,
more ethnic faculty, more loans for minority students, and many
other issues pertaining to education. And we cannot forget that
Asians and blacks and others fought for China's inclusion in the
United Nations. They marched together to support the Attica
Brothers, rallied behind the Black Panthers, and Young Lords, and
joined in efforts against nuclear proliferation, against the
possibility of more Hiroshimas or Nagasakis. They also joined
generally in the massive demonstrations of the '60s and '70s
against the Vietnam War, and likewise dealt with similar issues
within their own groups like communism, socialism, nationalism,
united fronts, identity crises, and the future of the Left."
Through her political organizing and community activity, Yuri my
grandmother has done her best to encourage different communities to
work with one another. It is her belief that ethnic minorities like
blacks, Latinos, Asians and Native Americans need to recognize the
similar oppression they have suffered as people of color in the
United States -- and that unity is our best hope for true and
lasting change. And Asian Americans should be setting an example.
"Asians must go beyond the Asian American border," she
says, "and engage in joint ventures or programs with other
communities."