Asian American Journalists Association Denver chapter (AAJA-Denver)

Asian American Journalists Association Denver chapter (AAJA-Denver) The Asian Amerixan Journalists Association doesn't currently have a chapter on Denver but there are a number of members who make up this ad hoc group.

See the short documentary and join the discussion after the  free screening at the Denver Botanic Gardens next week! RSV...
09/19/2024

See the short documentary and join the discussion after the free screening at the Denver Botanic Gardens next week! RSVP at the bottom of the flyer.

Flower of hope: Join us for a free screening of the short documentary film, "Amache Rose," about the miraculous rose tha...
09/11/2024

Flower of hope: Join us for a free screening of the short documentary film, "Amache Rose," about the miraculous rose that bloomed 80 years after the Amache concentration camp was closed. A cutting that was taken to the Denver Botanic Gardens bloomed. The director of this short (30 minute) film will speak with panelists (including me) after the screening. RSVP at https://tinyurl.com/bdcjf4rv

Picture this: Here's my review of "Corky Lee's Asian America: Fifty Years of Photographic Justice." It's a must-have for...
08/15/2024

Picture this: Here's my review of "Corky Lee's Asian America: Fifty Years of Photographic Justice." It's a must-have for your AANHPI bookshelf!

FIFTY YEARS OF PHOTOGRAPHIC JUSTICE: CORKY LEE’S ASIAN AMERICA By Corky Lee; edited by Chee Wang Ng, Mae Ngai (New York: Clarkson Potter., 2024, 320 pp., $50, hardcover) “Corky Lee’s […]

Well-thought-out and well-written announcement from national JACL:---------------------------------------------JACL Cond...
07/15/2024

Well-thought-out and well-written announcement from national JACL:

---------------------------------------------

JACL Condemns Political Violence, Renews Call for Assault Weapons Ban

July 15, 2024

For Immediate Release

Seia Watanabe, VP Public Affairs, [email protected]
Matthew Weisbly, Education Programs Manager, [email protected]


Washington, DC, July 15, 2024. Like all Americans, JACL members were horrified to hear of the attempted assassination of former President Donald Trump. We mourn the death of Corey Comperatore, who as a fireman, was accustomed to putting his life at risk for others, but should have never had to do so at a political rally to protect his own family. We hope for the quick and full healing of former President Trump and the others who remain in the hospital, and all those in attendance who have been traumatized by this all-too-common incident of gun violence.

JACL learned of the shooting amid our annual convention just a few hours away in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, as we began to enter our Sayonara Gala to close with what should have been a celebratory evening. David Inoue, JACL Executive Director interrupted the dinner to share the news with attendees and condemn what had happened as un-American and contrary to our values as Americans, particularly as JACL members. JACL values and employs concepts of the open debate of ideas as we joined OCA - Asian Pacific American Advocates and APIA Vote for joint programming this week to tackle challenging issues facing AANHPI voters in this year’s elections, and with APIA Vote’s leadership, hosted a Presidential Town Hall allowing both campaigns to speak to our community.

Unfortunately, this is not the first time our convention has been conducted under the cloud of a tragic shooting incident. Five years ago, our final day of convention in Salt Lake City was similarly interrupted by news of the mass shooting that took the lives of 23 people in El Paso, Texas. That hate crime is the largest mass shooting targeting Latino victims specifically. Later that evening, another nine people were killed in another mass shooting in Dayton, Ohio.

It is without doubt that gun violence has become too commonplace, and even with the protection of the Secret Service, arguably the most elite protective service in the world, it was not enough to prevent what happened on Saturday evening.

We reiterate our call for the long overdue renewal of the assault weapon ban.

The shooter sought to silence Presidential Candidate Trump. While JACL has often found ourselves in opposition to Mr. Trump’s policies as President, we value the opportunity to engage in public debate and engagement where we might voice our disagreements, but also find where we might find alignment and work together.

We must recognize the dangerous intersection of violent rhetoric and gun violence. Neither the First nor the Second Amendments are absolute rights. JACL held its convention in Philadelphia, the birthplace of our nation, and the Declaration of Independence that so eloquently states our inherent rights as people to “Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness.” These fundamental rights are now endangered by increasingly dangerous unrestrained speech and the ease of access to deadly fi****ms.


# # #

About The Japanese American Citizens League

The Japanese American Citizens League is a national organization whose ongoing mission is to secure and maintain the civil rights of Japanese Americans and all others who are victimized by injustice and bigotry. The leaders and members of the JACL also work to promote cultural, educational, and social values and preserve the heritage and legacy of the Japanese American community.

  The Nation’s Oldest and Largest Asian American/Pacific Islander Civil Rights Organization   Join our community in the movement for social justice! Join/Renew Your JACL Membership Here! The Japanese American Citizens League is a national organization whose mission is to secure and safeguard the...

Disgusting: Anyone who's visited Hiroshima's Peace Park has seen the statue there of Sadako Sasaki, a Hiroshima bombing ...
07/15/2024

Disgusting: Anyone who's visited Hiroshima's Peace Park has seen the statue there of Sadako Sasaki, a Hiroshima bombing survivor who died when she was 12 in 1955, from cancer. When she was sick she folded origami cranes to try and make a thousand so she might live a long life. according to legend. But she passed before she could make a thousand, and people (mostly children) around the world have sent the Peace Park hundreds thousands of the "tsuru." Most people know the story because of the 1977 children's book, "Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes," by Canadian-American author Eleanor Coerr.

A statue of Sadako was created and stood in a Peace Park in Seattle ... until a few days ago. Someone has stolen the statue after cutting it off at her feet. Really disgusting. Here's a story in the New York Times:
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/07/14/us/sadako-sasaki-hiroshima-statue-stolen.html

Here's the Seattle Times' story:
https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/seattle-peace-park-statue-of-hiroshima-bombing-survivor-stolen/

A statue of Hiroshima bombing survivor Sadako Sasaki, which has stood for decades at Peace Park in Seattle's University District, has been stolen.

The importance of local news: I love NHK WORLD-JAPAN and its many programs of news, features and entertainment. Here's a...
06/11/2024

The importance of local news: I love NHK WORLD-JAPAN and its many programs of news, features and entertainment. Here's a link to a wonderful series, "Document 72 Hours," which goes to various places in Japan and films at one location (a shop, a parking lot, a vending machine center) for three days. This episode struck me as a statement of purpose for all journalists. It follows a small daily newspaper in a town that was struck by the 3/11/2011 earthquake and tsunami, and how important the paper is for the town's residents, especially in the 72 hours leading up to the 12th anniversary of the disaster. Powerful and inspiring:

A small newspaper company with 30 employees in the city of Ofunato, Iwate Prefecture, which was devastated by the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake and tsunami, has been a valuable source of local news for 65 years. A team of seven reporters, many of whom are from the region, uncover and write storie...

History preserved: Amache, in southeast Colorado where more than 7,000 people of Japanese ancestry were incarcerated dur...
04/23/2024

History preserved: Amache, in southeast Colorado where more than 7,000 people of Japanese ancestry were incarcerated during WWII, is finally an official National Historic Site and part of the National Parks Service. This old sign has been replaced... Here's my article in the Pacific Citizen newspaper about Amache: https://www.pacificcitizen.org/nps-welcomes-amache-site-as-national-historic-site/

40 years of the best: It's hard to believe that my first journalism home, Westword, has just published its 40th annivers...
04/04/2024

40 years of the best: It's hard to believe that my first journalism home, Westword, has just published its 40th anniversary Best of Denver issue. I was asked to look back on the debut of the BoD way back in 1984 (yeah, yeah, I'm that old -- I started writing for WW in 1980 and was hired fulltime in '83), and wax nostalgic about the way we were.

Mobile hot tubs? Fuddruckers? New quarterback John Elway? They were all celebrated in the first issue in 1984.

Updating history: The new version of "Sh**un" does a great job of telling the fictionalized story of Japan's turbulent s...
04/04/2024

Updating history: The new version of "Sh**un" does a great job of telling the fictionalized story of Japan's turbulent samurai era. It also updates the 1980 hit TV miniseries by emphasizing the Japanese perspective more than the earlier take so the story isn't about the British sailor (based on a real-life person) who becomes a trusted advisor to the feudal lord who eventually become Sh**un, the ruler of a unified Japan, and more about the daimyo and other Japanese characters. And thanks to producer and star Hiroyuki Sanada, the 2024 model scrupulously captures every detail of Japan in 1600. Here's my review in the Nichi Bei. **un **un

On Feb. 27, FX/Hulu began streaming “Sh**un,” a 10-part limited series that’s based on James Clavell’s 1975 novel and is a much-improved take on the historical era that the story […]

Focus on Corky: Here's my feature story and interview with John Lee, about the book of photographs by his late brother C...
04/04/2024

Focus on Corky: Here's my feature story and interview with John Lee, about the book of photographs by his late brother Corky, The “undisputed unofficial Asian American photographer laureate.” It's an awesome, powerful book.

Nobody captured the rise and influence of the Asian American Native Hawaiian Pacific Islander community in the United States, and especially in New York City, more passionately than photojournalist Corky Lee, who called himself the “undisputed unofficial Asian American photographer laureate.” Si...

Slurp up the good news: Congrats to Jeff Osaka of Osaka Ramen (and Sushi-Rama) in RiNo for beating the competition in th...
04/03/2024

Slurp up the good news: Congrats to Jeff Osaka of Osaka Ramen (and Sushi-Rama) in RiNo for beating the competition in the Denver Post's March Ramen Madness competition, which started with a bracket of 32 ramen shops and over the past few weeks was voted on by readers. Some of my favorites didn't make it past the first rounds, but I'm glad Osaka Ramen came out on top! Jeff was up against Neko Ramen & Rice on north Colorado Blvd., which has attracted a loyal following in a short time since it opened.

After six weeks of blood, sweat, and miso ramen so spicy it could bring tears to your eyes, we have finally crowned a winner in The Denver Post’s annual food bracket challenge. This year, we pitted…

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Denver, CO

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