On April 26, 1968, as an architecture student at the University of Pennsylvania, Kiyoshi Kuromiya and some friends held a demonstration against the use of napalm in Vietnam by announcing that a dog would be burned alive with napalm in front of the university library. Thousands turned up to protest, only to be handed a leaflet reading: “Congratulations on your anti-napalm protest. You saved the life of a dog. Now, how about saving the lives of tens of thousands of people in Vietnam.” . . Born in the Heart Mountain, WY concentration camp in 1943, Kiyoshi Kuromiya (May 9, 1943 – May 10, 2000) was a lifelong activist advocating for civil rights, gay liberation, and proper HIV/AIDS treatment and resources, and against the Vietnam War. . . . Kuromiya spent the spring and summer of 1965 in the South fighting for civil rights, and became friends with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. When King was assassinated, Kuromiya helped take care of the King children. . . Kuromiya participated with the Gay Pioneers in the first organized gay and lesbian civil rights demonstrations, “the Annual Reminders,” held at Independence Hall and the Liberty Bell each Fourth of July from 1965 to 1969. He was one of the founders of Gay Liberation Front-Philadelphia and served as an openly gay delegate to the Black Panther Convention that endorsed the gay liberation struggle. Diagnosed with AIDS in 1989, Kuromiya became a self-taught expert on the disease, operating under the mantra “information is power.” He founded the Critical Path Project, which provided resources to people living with HIV and AIDS, including a newsletter, a library, and a 24-hour phone line. . . . Learn more about Kuromiya in this remembrance video by friend Alfredo Sosa at https://vimeo.com/12474786
In 1968, the AmeriCong announced that a dog would be burned alive in front of University of Pennsylvania’s Van Pelt Library. 2000 people showed up in protest. They were given leaflets.
“Congratulations on your anti-napalm protest. You saved the life of a dog. Now, how about saving the lives of tens of thousands of people in Vietnam.”
From his birth in an internment camp to marching as a high schooler in Selma and being brutalized by horseback police to starting the Critical Path Project to educate people living with HIV/AIDS on health and activism to his 1999 suit, Kuromiya v United States, for the right to medical marijuana, Kiyoshi Kuromiya’s life is a celebration of direct action and education.
Today, May 19th, is National API HIV/AIDS Awareness Day. HIV is a political issue. HIV demands collective and systemic change. Here are notes from a BARS meeting session earlier this year on API folk and HIV/AIDS: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1U8Dw9MP-t9seZkTrw6Mvai3b068UWrTnoaXpHAgZkm4/edit
Interview with Kuromiya: https://thescene.com/watch/them/kiyoshi-kuromiya
07/02/20
More than 2,100 anti-Asian American hate incidents related to COVID-19 were reported across the country over a three-month time span between March and June, according to advocacy groups that compile the data. The incidents include physical attacks, verbal assaults, workplace discrimination, and online harassment.
The online tool is available in multiple languages and allows users to report the information with the promise that personal information will be kept confidential. On Wednesday, the advocacy groups released an analysis of the incidents reported through June 18 in California, where about 40 percent of the 2,120 hate incidents took place. The groups released the national data to CBS News after an inquiry.
While racist stereotypes have harmed the Chinese in America by fueling racial violence and policy, especially during the era of Chinese Exclusion, they have proven beneficial to companies in the form of profitable merchandise. This American-produced latex dog toy (pictured), made for a “very important pet,” depicts a slant-eyed Asian character in a vague karate uniform and pose. Products of this kind reduce Chinese personhood to a monolithic Asian stereotype and literally objectify and demote Asians to a status below that of an animal.⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
While the production date of the toy is unknown, racist stereotypes of Asians and other races persist in merchandising, such as the notorious Abercrombie & Fitch T-shirts of 2002. These shirts included Asian caricatures like Wong Brothers Laundry Service, which featured the tagline “two Wongs can make it white.” ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ Photo Credit: Latex Dog Toy. Museum of Chinese in America (MOCA) Collection.
Developing “ MAIDHAR” with Bay Area Bhutanese Youth Group storytelling performance has been such a great experience.
Learning their lives, culture, stories and history bridges our story and history as well. Repeating tragic stories from past to present is on going and we are trying hard to address that grieves through our truthful storytelling art piece so we are not repeating that history over and over again. We have reasons to do and share with people and public together.
Seeing displacement in here and other countries through time period, people leave their beloved ones from their own countries, tortured from the truth, separating from the family members, political and economical cause of people to be fled and sheltered… so many people from different countries through times…. my ancestor was one of them in 1907… leaving his beloved country and family to take back their country from the colonization.
I could feel their pain and struggles through “MAIDHAR” story. Walls, Borders, Wars, Camps, Identity, Displacement, Culture, Roots and Ancestors and Resists bridge stories in the world. Bay Area Bhutanese Youth, they are still young, most of them were born in refuge camp but they are taking their steps to share their stories, untold histories and try to remember their history and identity and taking leadership to continue this struggles into positive force for the hope. Sharing not only their communities but also all the people who are struggling from separated family and their ancestral land that they belong to is part of reason that they are sharing their stories.
Their work evolves every time with their passion and importance to face on reality on humanity crisis that is same to myself. Why we are sharing this work together through arts, we believe that doing performance as action, when we address our stories, it transforms ourselves and we believe that it will transform others as well.
Their on going work will be present:
August 2nd and 3rd at Flight Deck (Friday for their community and Saturday for public) and Oct 5th at Peralta Hacienda Hostorical Park and 2020 at Yerba Buena Center For the Arts with Dohee Lee’s Puri Arts.
clara chan lee (in hat) and emma hoo tom (left), becoming the first chinese american women to register to vote in the US.
the historic act is remembered in the alice street mural project (alice/14th st, oakland).
photo from the oakland tribune, november 8, 1911. via oaklandwiki, gene anderson, and oaklandhistory.
happy international women’s day!
stories:
excerpt from last article:
Erica Buddington, a Brooklyn author and educator, called the footage a “national treasure” given the erasure and caricature of black lives.
“As an educator that fights for her scholars to see themselves reflected in more than trauma and monoliths, I am enamored by this film,” she told HuffPost.
“I search the web, books, and archives for depictions of our tribulations and our triumphs,” she added. “When I look at this clip, I see the nuance of who we are, and the variation we’ve always been despite what the history books show you.”
Black love ― the simple notion that black couples exist comfortably in their culture and in their affection for each other ― has always been around, even if cameras weren’t focused on it. This clip serves to remind us of that, Buddington said.
“We have loved, before the ability to capture it in this way, before the written word,” she said. “We will do so until the end of time.” [x]
“Singaporean & Malaysian Bisexual ♀♀ & Lesbians – SAMBAL,” San Francisco Dyke March, June 1995. Photo c/o @sfpubliclibrary. #lgbthistory #lgbtherstory #lgbttheirstory #lgbtpride #QueerHistoryMatters #HavePrideInHistory (at San Francisco, California)
10/26/18
- As of July 2018, South Koreans represented the sixth-largest group of active beneficiaries of DACA and the largest Asian group, totaling 7,170.
- According to the Migration Policy Institute, there were about 192,000 undocumented Koreans in the US in 2013, which by one estimate, could be as much as 20 percent of the Korean American population.
jamuseum This t-shirt design by artist Rob Sato is not only visually interesting, it subtly tells the story of the WWII Japanese American soldiers. It’s just one of the items on sale at the @giantrobotstore table at Kokoro Craft Boutique today until 4pm. #442nd#giantrobot #robsato
Allyson Tintiangco & Dawn Mabalon - Resistance & Struggle Are Sisters
from Various Artists - Elements…Hip-Hop Periodicals, Episode One (1996)
apicc_sf We are at a loss with the sudden passing of author, historian and community leader Prof. Dawn Bohulano Mabalon. Her contributions to the support and preservation of the Filipino American experience cannot be overstated. While celebrations of her life are being planned in San Francisco, Stockton and Los Angeles, please consider contributing to help bring Dawn back home and also to pay for the funeral and memorial costs. www.gofundme.com/nakj9-dawn039s-memorial-fund #Repost @pinayism with @get_repost ・・・ #dawnmabalonisintheheart Thank you @jjtypography for this beautiful tribute!
from a mass email I got late Friday afternoon (July 20) from UCLA’s Asian American Studies Center:
REMEMBERING AIKO HERZIG-YOSHINAGA (1925-2018) We at the UCLA Asian American Studies Center are saddened by the loss of Aiko Herzig-Yoshinaga, who passed away on Wednesday, July 18, 2018 at the age of 92. She was beloved by her family, friends, and colleagues and celebrated for her leadership and lifetime commitment to justice. She was a hero for her extraordinary work to uncover key documents that led to the recognition of the unjust role of the U.S. government in incarcerating more than 120,000 Japanese residents during World War II. The paper trail that she and her late husband, Jack Herzig, discovered helped to pave the way for the passage of the 1988 Civil Liberties Act, an official apology by the government, reparations of $20,000 for each camp survivor, and the vacating of wartime convictions of Japanese Americans who challenged the forced removal in Coram nobis cases. Prior to this, she was involved in civil rights work in New York through Asian Americans for Action and related activities.
Aiko and Jack's legacy can be found, in part, in the Jack and Aiko Herzig Papers housed at the UCLA Library Special Collections. This collection represents their decades-long personal research and their work with the Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civilians, the Office of Redress Administration, the National Council for Japanese American Redress, and the Civil Liberties Public Education Fund. Our Center was honored to have partnered with Aiko to archive their collection for free public community access. A short video about the collections (shared below), features a passage on Aiko's life and work that we hope raises further awareness of her important contributions. Our sincere condolences to her family, loved ones, and friends. May our remembrances of Aiko continue to guide and inspire us.
- UCLA Asian American Studies Center
Roberts purports to have overruled Korematsu in Trump v. Hawaii, but the logic underpinning both is quite literally the same: the President is due extreme deference as long his discrimination is facially based on nationality.
If you celebrated the Court’s decision today we know exactly how you would have felt about Japanese internment.
How so? Korematsu was a decision that involved the deprivation of liberty, internment, of a group of American citizens, which is fundamentally different from how and to whom you issue non-immigrant visas.
Assigning someone a view on a horrible issue from seventy-five years ago based on non-agreement with an irrelevant case from today … yesterday was Orwell’s birthday. See, e.g., thought crime.
The distinction between immigrants and citizen treatment of Korematsu is a red herring because Executive Order #9066 targeted all people of Japanese ancestry regardless of citizenship status. People going through the process of Visa procurement would have been interned as well. Furthermore, the strict scrutiny and rational observer standards are applied to due process and establishment clause claims, respectively, regardless of citizenship status as well
Both EOs underlying Korematsu and Hawaii were facially neutral in terms of race and religion. They purported only only to target specific countries to address national security concerns, but were fostered by xenophobic concerns. Both EOs were premised on factually incorrect data, and yet both were afforded extreme deference under rational basis review - a review never before applied to explicit religious discrimination.
@bombingbarrister: exactly.
@loganvok: fuck you, fuck Roberts and fuck anyone else who believes the ridiculous racist propaganda that Korematsu has “nothing to do” with the Muslim ban.
This is so true. The overturning was essentially just saying, “well, since most people (with the glaring exception of Trump supporters) now think Japanese internment was a mistake, it’s perfectly safe to acknowledge public opinion, and it makes us look good!” Overturning Korematsu while upholding the Muslim travel ban strikes me as the worst kind of hypocrisy. Sotomayor even tried her best to make that clear:
While Supreme Court Justices have talked about Korematsu in media interviews and public appearances, it is rare for the case to be mentioned at length in a Supreme Court decision. And on Tuesday, Chief Justice John Roberts made it clear how the five Justice majority in Trump v. Hawaii viewed Korematsu in the canon of Supreme Court decisions.
Roberts strongly objected to Justice Sonia Sotomayor’s comparison of his decision to Hugo Black’s majority 6-3 decision in Korematsu. “Whatever rhetorical advantage the dissent may see in doing so, Korematsu has nothing to do with this case,” Roberts said.
“Korematsu has nothing to do with this case”? Fuck that piece of shit Roberts. It has everything to do with the Muslim ban. As a Japanese-American I’m enraged that he thinks he can wipe the board of history clean in order to scapegoat a new population.
If Fred Korematsu were still alive today, he’d be calling bullshit too. This ruling actively dishonors him.
Korematsu spoke out after September 11, 2001, on how the United States government should not let the same thing happen to people of Middle-Eastern descent as what happened to Japanese Americans. When prisoners were detained at Guantanamo Bay for too long a period, in Korematsu’s opinion, he filed two amicus curiae briefs with the Supreme Court and warned them not to repeat the mistakes of the Japanese internment.[37]
Ok literally I wrote so many papers in this in law school and for the life of me I’m gonna wonder how they’re gonna justify Hamdi etc and trumps wish to take away citenzhip without it
Also the main holding in korematsu was about US CITIZENS being treated as enemy combatants and thus losing due process…so Roberts was trying to technically evade but missed the point—which is that korematsu differentiated between German and Italian immigrants and Japanese ones based solely on “they haven’t integrated into society” which obviously is bullshit and even ones who took loyalty oaths were ignored. Like it’s a decision that justifies racism after the fact using stupid national security arguments but it’s also a decision that has been used to justify each and every terrible islamaphobic law and court ruling ever so…..
And Sotamayer is right that this decision effectively replaces it anyways. Sure, citizens are protected, but it’s not like the GOP/Trump administration isn’t doing their best right now to redefine that - and entire categories of people can be denied admittance as long as there is any argument that shows a probable security concern. As long as that happens, it’s not even the court’s right to question it!
It really does read like virtue signaling as does Kennedy’s concurrance, like they knew exactly what this actually means but need to get some righteous shit on paper lest history try to paint them as total bigots.
"This ruling will go down in history as one of the Supreme Court's great failures," said Omar Jadwat, director of the ACLU's Immigrants' Rights Project, in a statement. "It repeats the mistakes of the Korematsu decision upholding Japanese-American imprisonment and swallows wholesale government lawyers' flimsy national security excuse for the ban instead of taking seriously the president's own explanation for his actions.
"It is ultimately the people of this country who will determine its character and future. The court failed today, and so the public is needed more than ever. We must make it crystal clear to our elected representatives: If you are not taking action to rescind and dismantle Trump's Muslim ban, you are not upholding this country's most basic principles of freedom and equality."
TRIVIAL NOTE: Although he didn’t finish, RP spent some time in the Asian American Studies MA program at UCLA.
Hey everyone? This is not okay. In May, the US government officially adopted a policy separating children from their parents when they crossed the border. It was meant to act as a deterrent to anyone seeking to immigrate to this country. Don’t come with your kids, or we’ll arrest you and take your children away. Children should never be used as political pawns like this. It’s inhuman and cruel.
Parents, after being separated from their children, are being tried as criminals. According to Attorney General Jeff Sessions, “If you cross the Southwest border unlawful, then we will prosecute you. It’s that simple” So not only are families being torn apart, parents are being sent to jail. It’s really hard to be reunited with your child if you are in federal prison.
Please pay attention to what is happening at our southern border. Please care about these people. I know there is a lot gong on in the world, and it’s hard to care about everything all the time, but please don’t forget about the immigrant families. Call you representatives. Vote the people who support this policy out of office in November. Find a local rally/protest. Donate to a charity. Don’t let the people in power get away with this.
Sources are from The New York Times, the Boston Globe, and a video interview with Jess Session found on NBC news. Jacob Soboroff is a reporter for NBC news and MSNBC. 13 June 2018
“Vineyard Workers in Sonoma County” (1959) by Jake Lee
Chinese American artist Jake Lee (1915–1991) was commissioned by Johnny Kan, owner of Kan’s Restaurant in San Francisco’s Chinatown in 1959, to produce a series of twelve watercolour paintings that illustrated milestones in early Chinese American history.

