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Densho: The Japanese American Legacy Project

Coordinates:47°35′58″N122°18′48″W / 47.599312°N 122.313388°W /47.599312; -122.313388
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromDensho Encyclopedia)
American nonprofit organization
Densho: The Japanese American Legacy Project
Map
Founded1996; 30 years ago (1996)
HeadquartersSeattle, United States
Location
  • United States
Websitedensho.org
Japanese Americans in World War II, a National Historic Landmark theme study

Densho is anonprofit organization based inSeattle, Washington whose mission is “to preserve and share history of the WWII incarceration of Japanese Americans to promote equity and justice today.”[1] Densho collects video oral histories, photos, documents, and other primary source materials regardingJapanese American history, with a focus on the World War II period and theincarceration of Japanese Americans. Densho offers a freedigital archive of these primary sources. It also maintains an online encyclopedia of notable Japanese Americans and related topics and an educational curricula.[2]

History

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TheJapanese worddenshō (伝承) means "to pass on to future generations." The organization was founded in 1996 with a primary goal of collecting personal testimonies fromJapanese Americans who wereincarcerated duringWorld War II. Over the years, its work expanded to "educate, preserve, collaborate, and inspire action for equity." Densho uses digital technology and best archival practices to collect, record, preserve, and share its oral histories, documents, photographs, newspapers,[3] and other primary source materials documenting the wartime detention of over 120,000 people of Japanese descent without due process of law.

Densho's founding director Tom Ikeda announced his retirement in 2022.[4] He was succeeded by Naomi Kawamura.[5]

Organizational structure

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Densho is a501(c) 3 organization, with tax-exempt status, founded in Seattle in 1996 as a project of the Japanese American Chamber of Commerce of Washington State. It became an independent organization in 2002.[1] Densho has a Board of Trustees with nine members and a staff of 17, led by Executive Director Naomi Ostwald Kawamura. Program activities are supported by volunteers and graduate student interns. Financial support is provided by foundation and government grants, the annual Densho fundraising event, and individual donations.

Awards

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Densho received the firstNPower Innovation Award[6] for groundbreaking use of technology; the Association of King County Historical Organizations Long Term Project Award;[7] anAmerican Library Association citation for online history;[8] theWashington State Historical Society David Douglas Award;[9] theStetson Kennedy Vox Populis Award of theOral History Association;[10] the Society of American Archivists Hamer-Kegan Award;[11] and the City of Seattle Mayor’s Arts Award for Cultural Preservation.[12] The Executive Director, Tom Ikeda, has received a Humanities Washington Award[13] for outstanding contributions to the humanities; theJapanese American Citizens League Biennium Award;[14] theJapanese American National Museum Founders’ Award;[15] the Association of King County Historical Organizations’ Charles Payton Award for Cultural Advocacy;[7] and the Washington State Historical Society’s Robert Gray Medal;[16] among other honors.

Activities

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Densho's online archive contains nearly two thousand hours of indexed and transcribed video interviews and eighty thousand historic photos and documents. The website also includes free social studies curricula meeting Washington-State standards. Over nine hundred video interviews detail individuals' experiences at the tenWar Relocation Authority (WRA) camps as well as the Justice Department and War Department detention facilities. In addition, Japanese Americans who were not detained, white employees in the camps, and non-Japanese Americans who witnessed the forced removal during World War II or supported theredress movement of the 1980s tell their stories to Densho. Prominent people such asAiko Herzig-Yoshinaga,Norman Mineta,Daniel Inouye,Dale Minami, andYuri Kochiyama are included in the collection, but the organization's goal is to capture life stories of diverse Japanese Americans from all walks of life. Densho continues to interview survivors of the camps and others who can describe how the forced removal and detention affected people's lives. The broader goal is to inform the American public about the false basis for the mass incarceration, so that a similar injustice would not affect another minority group in the future.

Densho presents public education programs such as author talks, and has collaborated with cultural and civic organizations such as theWing Luke Museum of the Asian Pacific American Experience, theMuseum of History and Industry, the Washington State Holocaust Education Resource Center, theBirmingham Civil Rights Institute, theAmerican Civil Liberties Union of Washington, and the Washington chapter of theCouncil on American-Islamic Relations. Densho assistsoral history generation and preservation by other ethnic heritage and cultural organizations, such as theBainbridge Island Japanese American Community and theJapanese American National Museum in Los Angeles. These efforts expand and enrich Densho’s mission by drawing connections with the Japanese American experience and other little-recorded and seldom discussed stories of discrimination,racism, andstereotyping faced by many ethnic communities, both in the past and today.

Densho offers curriculum units investigating civil liberties issues. For example, the lesson "Causes of Conflict" guides students through a study of the issues of immigration via the essential question: "How do conflicts over immigration arise from labor needs and social change?" In the unit "Dig Deep", they explore the media and the incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II by asking the question, "How do members of a democracy become fully informed so that they can participate responsibly and effectively?" In the unit "Constitutional Issues: Civil Liberties, Individuals, and the Common Good", students find answers to the question, "How can the United States balance the rights of individuals with the common good?" Densho's education efforts encourage students' critical thinking and respect for everyone's civil liberties.

Densho Encyclopedia

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TheDensho Encyclopedia is a free, publicly accessible resource that covers many key concepts, people, events, and organizations relevant to the WWII incarceration of Japanese Americans. The encyclopedia also covers the history of Japanese immigration to the United States, legal and social discrimination prior to WWII, and Japanese American efforts to obtain redress and reparations in the decades after incarceration. Brian Niiya, director of content at Densho, is editor. Articles are peer-reviewed and contributed by professional scholars, graduate students, journalists, and individuals who Densho describes as having “played a role in telling the Japanese American story or who have been active players in that story.”[17]

The Densho Encyclopedia initially went online in 2012 with about 360 articles and currently has an article count of nearly 1,500, along with photos, documents, and oral history clips drawn from Densho’s archives and other sources. The Densho Resource Guide to Media on the Japanese American Removal and Incarceration went online in 2017. Funding has come from theCalifornia State Library's California Civil Liberties Public Education Fund and theNational Park Service. The content, including most 3rd part materials, is provided under aCreative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License (CC BY-NC-SA 3.0).[18]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ab"About Densho". Densho. RetrievedMarch 13, 2020.
  2. ^"Saving Densho Memories".Seattle Times. December 22, 2006.
  3. ^Chawkins, Steve (May 3, 2007)."Barbed Wire and Free Press".Los Angeles Times.
  4. ^Shinmasu, Ikuo (March 28, 2022),"Densho Founder Tom Ikeda Announces His Retirement",North American Post
  5. ^Hirai, Tomo (September 22, 2022),"Executive director change at Densho signals new generation of JA leadership",Nichi Bei Times
  6. ^"NPower Seattle Recognizes Densho as Winner of Nonprofit Innovation Award". My Wire. October 23, 2005.
  7. ^ab"AKCHO Awards Recipients". Association for King County Historical Organizations. Retrieved2020-01-16.
  8. ^"World Class Achievement: Saluting the 2007 ALA Award Winners". American Library Association. Archived fromthe original on 2008-12-24. Retrieved2009-07-14.
  9. ^"Washington State Historical Society Awards". Washington State Historical Society. Archived fromthe original on 2009-04-20. Retrieved2009-07-14.
  10. ^"Previous Awards". Oral History Association. Retrieved2020-01-16.
  11. ^"Philip M. Hamer and Elizabeth Hamer Kegan Award: Densho". Society of American Archivists. 2013. Retrieved2020-01-16.
  12. ^Tony Kay (September 1, 2015)."Mayor's Arts Award: Densho". City Arts Magazine.
  13. ^"Past Recipients of Humanities Washington Award". Humanities Washington. Archived fromthe original on 2008-07-23. Retrieved2009-07-14.
  14. ^"Remarks for the Honorable Norman Y. Mineta, Secretary of Transportation: Japanese American Citizens League 2004 National Convention". U.S. Department of Transportation. August 14, 2004. Archived fromthe original on 2009-06-30. Retrieved2009-07-14.
  15. ^"JANM to Honor Founding Executive Director, President". The Rafu Shimpo. May 4, 2017. Retrieved2020-01-16.
  16. ^"Washington State Historical Society announces 2018 History Awards recipients". Tacoma Daily Index. August 23, 2019. Retrieved2020-01-16.
  17. ^"Authors".Densho Encyclopedia. Densho. RetrievedMarch 13, 2020.
  18. ^"About".Densho Encyclopedia. Densho. RetrievedAugust 1, 2019.

External links

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Key topics
Internment camps
Assembly centers
Citizen Isolation centers
Detention facilities
Army facilities
Notable incarcerees
Literature
and arts
Legacy

47°35′58″N122°18′48″W / 47.599312°N 122.313388°W /47.599312; -122.313388

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