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JACL
 

Weekly Digest
October 12, 2021

 

JACL Operating Status

JACL's physical offices remain officially closed. Staff continue to do the work of the organization remotely with some visits to the physical office.  Please direct all phone calls to our Washington, D.C. Office at (202) 223-1240 and we will get back to you as quickly as possible. Otherwise, we will all be available via email. All staff emails can be found HERE

Stay safe everyone and we hope to see you all in person again soon. 

- JACL National Staff

 

JACL is Hiring!

JACL is hiring for the position of full-time business manager and part business assistant for immediate hire. To view the position descriptions click the following links:

Business Manager

Business Assistant

To apply for either position, please send a detailed resume with a cover letter summarizing your qualifications as well as your interest in the position and JACL to jobs@jacl.org. Please send any questions about this posting also to jobs@jacl.org.

 

This Thursday - JACL Briefing on Minidoka

Save Minidoka! LS Power, a New York private equity company, is seeking approval from the U.S. Department of the Interior to build a giant wind project on the historic footprint of Minidoka in Idaho. LS Power's proposed Lava Ridge Wind Project includes 400 giant wind towers, 80% of which would be located within the viewshed of Minidoka National Historic Site. The closest towers would be within two miles of the park's new visitor center.    

With your help, we can stop this assault on our Japanese American and AAPI heritage.  The Bureau of Land Management has set a deadline for public comments on Wednesday, October 20.  

Please join us for a webinar on Thursday, October 14, at 9:00 PM ET/7:00 PM MT/6 PM PT at the link below. We plan to discuss: 

  • How to submit public comments to the Bureau of Land Management
  • What you can do to help.
  • Information we have for the team.

Your voice matters!  

 

JACL Back to School Weekly Feature Recap! BIG Announcement, BIG Thank You!

In case you missed it! For the last 6 weeks, we sent you short emails that highlights one part of our education program. We hope you learned more about our revitalizing Education Program. Please consider supporting our Education Program through the Centennial Education Fund that celebrates 100 years of JACL’s education work.

The National Endowment for the Humanities: Democracy demands wisdom.

JACL is happy to announce that we were one of the recipients of the 2021 National Endowment for the Humanities Landmarks of American History and Culture grants. We are happy to bring back Civil Liberties in Times of Crisis: The Japanese American Incarceration for teachers and educators to be a part of in Summer 2022. This one-week program will be available for two different sessions in late June and early July 2022 and will bring educators to Los Angeles' historic Little Tokyo community to take part in the program including guest speakers, trips to Santa Anita Racetrack, and Manzanar National Historic Site. We are so happy to bring this program back after 5 years and look forward to opening up applications to interested attendees in January 2022

 

JACL NY/SC JANM Tour in Los Angeles!

On behalf of the JACL NY/SC we would like to invite you to tour the Japanese American National Museum in Los Angeles, CA

Date: Saturday, October 23rd, 2021

Time: 3:00 PM to 5:00 PM PDT

Place: Japanese American National Museum

An all-youth Summit will be hosted at the historic Japanese American National Museum, that will begin with a tour of the museum, and will end with a mixer. The mixer will allow NY/SC members and other youth attendees the opportunity to further develop their interpersonal/networking skills and to share ideas about what they encountered during their tour of the museum. This Summit promises to provide exciting opportunities for networking and collaboration and empower the next generation of civil rights activists.

We are currently accepting up to 30 participants - First come, first serve. Applicants do NOT have to be a JACL member in order to attend. Anyone 25 and under is allowed to participate. Attendees will receive complimentary admission. The folks at JANM will provide a guided tour of their two current rotating exhibitions, A life in pieces and Miné Okubo’s Masterpiece.

Safety Protocols: We will be requiring all visitors, regardless of vaccination status, to wear a mask.

 

This Week - Celebrate the 100th Anniversary of Seattle JACL

Come join us for a night to celebrate the 100th Anniversary of the Seattle Chapter of the Japanese American Citizens League with current President Stan Shikuma, historian Bill Tashima, and resident expert on redress, Kyle Kinoshita. Through the night, attendees will go through the history of Seattle JACL and how the process of redress for Japanese Americans began. Expect to learn about how Seattle JACL made impactful changes in the Japanese American community in Seattle and beyond.

 

Registration Open for 2021 JACS Education Conference!

 

Minidoka Call to Action Deadline Extended!

THE DEADLINE TO SUBMIT COMMENTS EXTENDED TO OCTOBER 20TH! 

"Minidoka National Historic Site’s historic, natural, and cultural resources are being threatened. Magic Valley Energy has proposed the Lava Ridge Wind Project, a 400-unit wind turbine field on 73,000 acres of Bureau of Land Management (BLM) property adjacent to Minidoka, 25 miles northeast of Twin Falls, Idaho. If built, it will be one of the largest in the U.S. Several turbines are slated to be installed on the historic footprint of the camp, and almost all are completely visible from the WWII Japanese American incarceration site in Southern Idaho.

The proposed project includes up to 400 wind energy generating turbines, up to seven new substations, approximately 198 miles of 34.5 kilovolt (kV) collector lines, 34 miles of 230 kV transmission lines, 18 miles of 500 kV transmission lines, 381 miles of access roads, 47 miles of temporary crane walk paths, a battery energy storage system, three operations and maintenance facilities, five permanent met towers, and construction-related staging yards. Engineering is preliminary, but the turbines may have a maximum height (including the rotor) of up to 740 feet."

 

IN CASE YOU MISSED IT...

 

Multiracial Artists in Conversation hosted by Seattle JACL

Join us for a free Mixed Race Webinar on Saturday, Nov. 6, 2021, from 10AM - Noon (PST). As multiracial people, we are constantly put into narrow categories that try to define who we are. But what does it mean to tell your own story? To be able to claim and celebrate all parts of who you are? Speakers for this panel are defining their own narratives through the arts—including photography, visual art, and writing. Mixed Race youth, adults, and families—as well as the arts community—will benefit from this inspiring discussion about what it means to be a storyteller of your own narrative, be it on a canvas, in a book, in a photograph, onstage, or in everyday life.

 

Okaeri 2021 Virtual Conference

Event Announcement! Our friends over at Okaeri LA are bringing their biannual conference to the virtual space this year! With 24 workshops and a guest appearance from Gia Gunn, #OkaeriLA ’s mission is to create visibility, compassionate spaces, and transformation for LGBTQ+ Nikkei and their families by sharing personal stories and providing culturally-rooted support, education, community-building, and advocacy. Three workshops will be held in Japanese. The registration link is available below! We hope to see you there! 

 

2022 JACS Grant Applications Open Now!

Fiscal Year 2022 Japanese American Confinement Sites grant applications must be received by Tuesday, November 9, 2021, 5:00pm (Mountain Time). Note: this is not a postmark date.

Congress established the Japanese American Confinement Sites (JACS) grant program (Public Law 109-441, 120 Stat. 3288) for the preservation and interpretation of U.S. confinement sites where Japanese Americans were detained during World War II. The law authorized up to $38 million for the entire life of the grant program to identify, research, evaluate, interpret, protect, restore, repair, and acquire historic confinement sites in order that present and future generations may learn and gain inspiration from these sites and that these sites will demonstrate the nation’s commitment to equal justice under the law. 

 

Take Part in Onigiri Action with New England JACL and Table for Two

 

Berkeley Oral History Project Seeking Project Participants

UC Berkeley's Oral History Project is seeking Nikkei who have had parents/grandparents/great grandparents who have been incarcerated in Manzanar and Topaz concentration camps.  How do people heal? Through new oral history interviews, this project will document and disseminate the ways in which intergenerational trauma and healing occurred after the U.S. government's incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II. These interviews will examine and compare how private memory, creative expression, place, and public interpretation intersect at two sites of incarceration: Manzanar in California and Topaz in Utah. To nominate yourself or someone else for this project please complete the Nomination Form

 

JACL Anti-Hate and Hate Crime Resources

For resources, toolkits, articles, and more about anti-hate programs and hate crimes, you can visit our page on JACL.org by clicking the link below.

 

H.R. 40 Updates and Join in Support

Last Wednesday, April 14, the House Judiciary Committee voted for the first time in the bill's 30 year history to advance H.R. 40 to the House floor for a full vote! This is a monumental step in bill's life and a start towards righting another wrong in our nation's history. 

JACL Executive Director, David Inoue, discusses JACL’s support of H.R. 40. H.R. 40 would create a commission to examine the institution of slavery, its legacy, and make recommendations to Congress for reparations, beginning a process of repairing and restoring after centuries of enslavement. Click the image above to watch the full video statement. 

 
 
 
 
 

Follow JACL on:

 

JACL Headquarters
1765 Sutter Street
San Francisco, California 94115
(415) 921-5225 | mbr@jacl.org

JACL DC Office
1629 K Street NW, Suite 400
Washington, D.C. 20006
(202) 223-1240 | policy@jacl.org

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