The agency was formed as a result of an agreement between the federal government and the National Association of Japanese Canadians called the Japanese Canadian Redress Agreement which acknowledged that the treatment of Japanese Canadians during and after World War II was unjust and violated principles of human rights.
Examples of such themes include "Kiri's Piano", about the internment of Japanese Canadians, and "October 70", about the FLQ crisis, inspired by events and figures in Canadian history.
Japanese language | Japanese people | Second Sino-Japanese War | Imperial Japanese Navy | Imperial Japanese Army | Japanese yen | Japanese television drama | Canadians | Russo-Japanese War | Korea under Japanese rule | Japanese tea ceremony | Japanese garden | Japanese cuisine | Japanese American | Japanese name | Japanese mythology | Japanese literature | Japanese Government Railways | Japanese Communist Party | Japanese art | Japanese National Railways | First Sino-Japanese War | Japanese poetry | Japanese idol | Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service | Japanese White-eye | Japanese Red Cross | Japanese occupation of Hong Kong | Japanese occupation of Malaya | Japanese invasion of Manchuria |
MacNeil was appointed Executive Secretary of the British Columbia Security Council (BCSC) board and only accepted the position in an attempt to ensure the fair treatment for Japanese Canadians being uprooted from their homes on the West Coast after the Pearl Harbor attack during World War II.
--Miyazaki says Frank--> which employed Japanese-Canadians who had been Japanese Canadian internment relocated to McGillivray Falls (now McGillivray) which was just inside the 100-mile "quarantine zone" from the British Columbia Coast.
While Hogan's Alley and the surrounding area was an ethnically diverse neighbourhood during this era, home to many Italian, Chinese and Japanese Canadians, a number of black families, black businesses, and the city's only black church, the African Methodist Episcopal Fountain Chapel, were located there.
Japanese Canadian internment, the internment of Japanese Canadians in Canada during World War II
In 2002, Takahashi was decorated by the Emperor of Japan with the Order of the Sacred Treasure, Gold Rays with Rosette, in recognition of his service to improving the status of Japanese-Canadians through his lifelong commitment to the promotion and development of Judo in Canada.
In 2002 he was decorated by the Emperor of Japan with the Order of the Sacred Treasure, Gold Rays with Rosette, in recognition of his service to improving the status of Japanese-Canadians through his lifelong commitment to the promotion and development of Judo in Canada.