Interview with Kay Shimizu

タイトル
Interview with Kay Shimizu
Accession number
2012.310
Interviewer
Elizabeth Fujita-Kwan
Videographer
Elizabeth Fujita-Kwan
Date of Interview
Language
English
Description

Kiyoshi (Kay) Shimizu was born on February 16, in the 1920s in British Columbia. This interview is about Kay and her family’s life in Kingcome Inlet, BC (prior to World War II), Vancouver, relocation to New Denver (during World War II), and Toronto. Shimizu discusses the living conditions and social life at the longhouses by the barns during her childhood. Shimizu’s work is traced back to her experiences as an interpreter during elementary school, as she was a racial minority and specifically one of the few Japanese Canadian children who was bilingual. Shimizu won a scholarship during her teens, which allowed her to pursue higher education at the University of British Columbia. She intended to pursue a path of becoming a librarian, but then experienced discrimination and decided to become a social worker in the pursuit of change for Japanese Canadians. 

Format
Videotape
Video File
Length of Interview
82 minutes
Period
1920s
1940s
Event
Relocation
Attack on Pearl Harbour
Location
Victoria, BC
Vancouver, BC
Ottawa, ON
Toronto, ON
New Denver, BC
Topic
fishing
canneries
logging
education
children
language
church
Buddhism
United Church
transportation
career
Japanese language school
social life
gardening
family
festivals
social activity
religion
Anglicanism
food
newspaper
propaganda
living conditions
recreation
marriage
work
discrimination
enemy alien
displacement
relocation centres
Number of Physical Tapes
2
Permission
For uses other than research or private study, researchers must submit a Request for Permission to Publish, Exhibit or Broadcast form.
Citation
Kay Shimizu, interview by Elizabeth Fujita-Kwan, November 5, 2012, 2012.310, Sedai: The Japanese Canadian Legacy Project Collection, Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre.