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Photo Essay: Nisei Week Celebrates Its 80th Year In-Person

A woman wearing a kimono and holding a fan in her hands stands in the middle of the street amongst other women in kimonos and fans. In the background, parade onlookers watch from the curb.
Members of the Azuma Kotobuki Kai dance school show off their learned routine on the parade route. | Jireh Deng
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From Japanese pop stars and taiko drummers to folk dancers, around 20 different groups marched through the intersection of Central Avenue and 2nd Street in Little Tokyo last Sunday to celebrate the 80th Nisei Week, drawing crowds from around Los Angeles and even out of state.

The word nisei is a term that describes the generation of Japanese Americans who were born and raised in the U.S. and Canada while their parents were born in Japan. First held in 1934, Nisei Week in-person celebrations have only been canceled twice: during the World War II-era Japanese American incarceration and, most recently, the height of the Coronavirus pandemic.

"Being able to do things live and in person is very different from our virtual event we did last year," says Nancy Okubo, one of the co-presidents of the Nisei Week Foundation. "Seeing so many people out [supporting], asking us when these things are going to happen if they're going to be happening — it is wonderful."

Parade participants carry a portable miniature shrine on their shoulders as they walk down the street. Women lead the group at the front, wearing gray kimonos. Onlookers watch from the curb.
Parade participants carry a mikoshi, or a portable miniature shrine through 2nd Street and Central Avenue. | Jireh Deng

Keith and Wendy Kowta are respectively fourth and third-generation Japanese Americans. Keith grew up attending Nisei Week and his grandparents have been honored in past parades for their contributions to the local religious community. This past weekend, Wendy and her daughters dressed in kimonos and danced in the Grand Parade with Azuma Kotobuki Kai, a Japanese classical dance studio based in Ventura County. Once L.A. locals, the Kowtas had driven almost every weekend leading up to Nisei Week from their new home in Henderson, Nevada to Southern California for practices.

"We just recently moved. So we're still we're hoping to find [a Japanese American community]," says Wendy. "But we'll keep coming back and continue dancing with the group because they meet once a month."

Alex and Maya Shibutani are wearing shirts that read "Team USA" and sit at the top of a red, topless car. Alex smiles at the camera while Maya looks on at parade attendees. Onlookers watch the parade from the sidewalk.
Alex and Maya Shibutani ride through the parade route and wave to crowds. | Jireh Deng

The Grand Parade also brought in the Shibutani siblings who led the festivities as Parade Marshalls. Since Alex and Maia Shibutani made history by winning bronze as the sibling duo on the ice at the 2018 Winter Olympics, they've been representing Japanese Americans and Asian Americans internationally. As the Parade Marshalls, they're using the opportunity to bring visibility to a more local Japanese American community since they officially moved to the greater Los Angeles area in the fall of 2018.

The siblings see their responsibility to maintain the history and show public support for events like these because the Japanese American community is always on their minds, says Maia Shibutani.

"We were representing Team USA, we were representing siblings all around the world," says Alex Shibutani. "But having this community now feels so meaningful to us. While we knew that we were representing Japanese Americans, to see faces and to have names behind that community, it's very emotional actually."

Parade attendees sit on a ledge off the side of the road and look on as a man shoots a basketball into a basketball hoop attached to a parade float that's parked nearby. The man is sitting on the ledge and watches as the ball hovers over the rim. He is holding a green basketball, ready to attempt his next shot. Children and other passersby look up at the ball.
A float with basketball hoops stops to let crowds from the sidelines play ball. | Jireh Deng

The organizers of Nisei Week are all volunteers putting in their time as a labor of love. Cory Hayashi, the other co-president of the Nisei Week Foundation, attended Nisei Week as a child and has fond memories of being connected to a larger Japanese American population every year.

"Little Tokyo has always been special to me. I grew up in Orange County, so there wasn't a lot of Japanese or Japanese American, Asian American representation growing up," says Hayashi. " Being able to come to Little Tokyo was one of the only ways I actually really got to connect with my heritage."

An elder Asian woman wearing a navy blue shirt that says, "Bunkado" across the right side of the chest stands behind a glass counter and looks to the side. Next to her, sitting on top of the glass countertop is a revolving metal rack with various keychains hanging off of its various hooks. Behind the woman is a glass case built into the wall, displaying various trinkets and items for sale.
Irene Tsukada Simonian is the third generation of her family to own and run the second oldest business in Little Tokyo, Bunkado. The land Bunkado sits on is a historic site where Kame Restaurant, the first Japanese-owned business in L.A., started Little Tokyo. | Jireh Deng

At gift shop Bunkado, the second oldest business in Little Tokyo, Irene Tsukada Simonian looks on at the parade with bittersweet sentiments. Simonian's aunt and uncle opened Bunkado right after World War II. As the third generation in her family to manage this store, she has seen Little Tokyo geographically decrease in size over the years as Japanese Americans have relocated and businesses have closed. Although she's sad in some ways to see the population shrinking, she's also amazed by the history and the traditions that have been sustained over the decades.

"I'm just glad that the same week has continued for 80 years. It's pretty remarkable for a small community like this," said Tsukada. "I'm also delighted that so many people are interested to come here and watch the parade and go to the exhibits. So I look at it as 'It's a great accomplishment that it's still as vibrant as it is.'"

Nisei Week festivities are ongoing through August 21. Check Nisei Week's full schedule for details.

Scroll down to view more photos from the 2022 Nisei Week Parade.

Two elder Asian women wearing kimonos pose for a photo. The sun shines through a tree behind them, casting an orange glow over the photo.
Beverly Toyama (on the right) and Margie Greenwald (on the left) are both third-generation Japanese Americans and became friends many years ago through Obon dancing. Toyama buys her kimono directly from Okinawa while Greenwald's family abroad mails them from Japan. | Jireh Deng
A young Asian child wearing a pink kimono with flowers and stripes on it holds a red and white striped pole. The child is also wearing a fluffy, pink headdress atop their head. An older Asian woman in a navy blue kimono stands behind and adjusts the headdress.
A child has their headdress fixed by a fellow dancer. | Jireh Deng
Two young men wearing white martial arts clothing and black belts around their waist practice moves in a parking lot. The sun behind them casts their shadows on the black pavement.
A martial arts group practices before the start of the Grand Parade at Centenary United Methodist Church. | Jireh Deng
Women wearing gowns, tiaras and sashes stand in a line behind a row of other women wearing gowns sitting in a row of chairs. In the middle of the first row of chairs, the Shibutani siblings, dressed in Team USA shirts, and honorary parade marshal Kellyn Acosta, dressed in a white t-shirt, sit. The women in the back wearing sashes have different words printed on it like, "Queen," "Princess," "1st Princess," and "Miss Congeniality."
Nisei Week court members pose for photos with the parade marshals, the Shibutani siblings, and honorary parade marshal, Kellyn Acosta. | Jireh Deng
Two young Asian women in kimonos covered in red, white, black, yellow and blue polka dots drink water with a straw out of water bottles. Both women have white and purple floral accessories in their hair and have pink makeup across their eyes.
Michelle Itomura (on the right) and Karlee Itomura (on the left) are hydrating before their dance group, Nippon minyo kenkyu Kai kotobuki no Kai, joins the Grand Parade. | Jireh Deng
Alex, left, and Maia, right, Shibtani smile and pose for a photo. They are both wearing Team USA t-shirts.
Alex and Maia Shibutani were parade marshals at the 2022 Nisei Week Parade. | Jireh Deng

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