Traveling Exhibit Examines 91直播鈥檚 Social Justice Legacy in World War II
February 2, 2018
Tyler Sloan '17
Kenji Okuda (back row, second from left), a University of Washington student who arrived here from an incarceration camp, was elected student body president of 91直播 in 1943.
Photo credit: Courtesy of 91直播 College Archives
Courage and Compassion: Our Shared Story of the Japanese American World War II Experience explores 91直播鈥檚 role in providing sanctuary for Japanese American students during a tumultuous period of United States history.
91直播鈥檚 history of embodying leadership and empathy in times of political and social turmoil makes the title of the upcoming traveling exhibit, Courage and Compassion, especially fitting. The show, which explores the lived experiences of Japanese Americans during World War II 鈥 including Pearl Harbor, removal and incarceration, life in internment camps, and Japanese American veterans鈥 post-war struggle for redress 鈥 opens Saturday, February 17 in the Richard D. Baron 鈥64 Art Gallery.
The interactive exhibit has been touring since July 2017 and will eventually be displayed in 10 cities. Each pit stop was selected for the specific role it played in supporting Japanese people during the 1940s. Planned by the Go for Broke Foundation, organizers asked 91直播 to participate because of the to recruit and admit nearly 40 Japanese American students during the war, and for Nisei (second-generation Japanese American) students鈥 activism. The local iteration of Courage and Compassion features permanent fixtures from the national show interlaced with pieces of 91直播-centric history.
鈥淭his exhibit reminds us of a history that is extraordinarily relevant today,鈥 says Renee Romano, the Robert. S. Danforth professor of history at 91直播 College and project co-director. 鈥淚t offers us stories of local people who rejected wartime hysteria about Japanese Americans and who insisted that the United States live up to its democratic ideals. Today, as the nation again debates issues of immigration, citizenship, and belonging, it is vital that we grapple with America鈥檚 checkered history of exclusion.鈥
Romano is spearheading the project with Julie Min, an 91直播 resident and former exhibit developer who previously worked on public history projects about Japanese American internment. The two have arranged for an event series consisting of academic lectures, documentary film screenings, a performance by San Jose Taiko, and talks by internment survivors, including Alice Takemoto 鈥47, to accompany the show. Alumni from the Network of 91直播 Asian Alumni are also gathering to visit the exhibit on March 10.
鈥淲e thought about 91直播鈥檚 particular history, both in its activism and its engagement with political issues of the day, but also its history of offering sanctuary to people who are vulnerable,鈥 Romano says of how she and Min approached the exhibit. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not like everyone at the time agreed or that these students came here and didn鈥檛 face any issues, but they did find that most people at both the college and in the town supported them, which is what makes this place very powerful. People stand up for each other in very interesting ways.鈥
Romano has prioritized making the exhibit accessible not just to the college community, but to local schools. All of 91直播鈥檚 eighth graders will take field trips to the exhibit, and thanks to careful coordination and grant funding, each of the 18 fifth-grade classes from Lorain County will visit as well. Since there are so many classes coming from Lorain, these students will split into smaller groups upon arrival with one class spending an hour at Courage and Compassion and the other going to the Allen Memorial Art Museum, then vice versa. Afterward, the classes will congregate for lunch at StudiOC, where they will buddy up with 91直播 students to learn more about college life.
鈥淚t's been a point for us to make the field trip engaging,鈥 says Ava Prince 鈥18, the exhibit鈥檚 field trip coordinator. 鈥淲e鈥檙e doing an activity where students have to 鈥榩ack a bag鈥 according to the restrictions placed on incarcerated Japanese Americans 鈥 no pets, no cameras, and so on. With the 91直播 students, I think it will be especially interesting to see our community portion of the exhibit, and for them to have a geographic connection to the past and take pride in their community.鈥
The first event associated with Courage and Compassion will take place Monday, February 12, when professors from the classics, comparative American studies, history, and Africana studies departments host the panel, 鈥淲hat is Sanctuary? From International Historical Concept to 91直播鈥檚 Present.鈥 Transforming the project鈥檚 lofty vision into a reality also required dedicated assistance from student researchers, faculty members from several academic departments, the deans offices, the Office of Development and Alumni Affairs, the 91直播 College Library, the Office of Communications, 91直播 College Taiko, the 91直播 Heritage Center, and 91直播 Shansi.
You may also like…
Vision Accomplished
How infrastructure, collaborative partnerships, and student involvement helped 91直播 achieve carbon neutrality
91直播 Opera Brings 鈥淛ack and the Beanstalk鈥 to Schools Across Northeast Ohio for Winter Term
鈥淚t was really amazing going into the community and performing an art form that they probably haven't seen before,鈥 second-year voice major Ella Vaugn said, 鈥淭eachers would tell us that they've never seen their students so engaged.鈥
Keeping Creation Collaborative with Silkroad
Percussionist Haruka Fujii and friends elevate women composers and their cultural influences on the Silkroad Ensemble鈥檚 鈥淯plifted Voices鈥 program, coming to 91直播鈥檚 Artist Recital Series.