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The New Canadian — November 6, 1968

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Page 1

H* ll(±^

Howe, Master Descendent

G(«™

Senei Ikenobo
uni 4er, Ikenobo School of Flower Arrangement)
aid that in the 7th century Ono-no-Inoko,
■,^on as Sennu, developed from the custom
Serins’ flowers to the Buddha a school of flower
^Jement called Ikenobo. Today, Senei Ikenobo
^.0 be the 45th generation, direct-line descend­
ed that 7th century master and founder.
"t cue age of four when Senei was initiated into ike^ he did not like it. “I wanted to be a pilot,” he
^. But as he grew older and realized that the
^ii of 45 generations could not lightly be shifted,
Accepted the responsibilities of his inheritance, and

- come through smiling.
He is so very boyish and una

timing that he often
& s unrecognized through the
impressive halls of
the modern Ikenob
i
0 Institute at Ochanomizu. For-all
his oa years, he looks as if he
school baseball team. Indeed, at could still be on his
Doshisha University
he was an .active sportsman. To 1
ove of sport he adds
an unexpected interest in Grecian sculpture,
‘‘But tn
ikebana,” he says, ‘T have
given my life.”
Ikebana, of course, has
been a demanding master.
but one that has rewarded
. .
him welL As a boy, Senei
Ikenobo had to s
foi tlie priesthood concurrentlv
taiXh th*"' He kn0WS ,he
o£ Temtai

MlMIIIUIUIIlUUirUHIlUinilHIIIHI^^

i-s the temp]
that has been home for all
the Ikenobo
ince the first one. On the property
an ancient stone that marks the heart of the original
Kyoto, the foundation point from where the city grew.
All the Ikenobos have been priests as well as flower
masters. Senei Ikenobo entered holy orders at the
age of 13, just about the time that his father died.
He had to wait until he was 20 before he could as­
sume the role of head priest in his temple.
Ikenobo women have no part in the man’s world
of Ikenobo Ikebana. And Senei Ikenobo has no part
in the business management of the enterprise that has

Hh Kyoto home.

(Continued on Page S)

"""'’““'nnininiiniiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiimtiiniiniinuiHiiiiiH^

V OBUNSHA’S
Kendal Japanese-Eng
DICTIONARY
1540 Postage Included.

The IM) Canadian f
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Oriain

g XXXII—No. 84
fiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiniiiiiii

O EUNS HA’S

Essential Eng.-Japanese
DICTIONARY
$;».4O Postage Included.

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER R

nMinmnwnnii.umuu.uuiinu.HmnuHnuuHHnnn^

,‘,‘,,,,nH,,,,,,,,H,,,im ‘""""Hllllllllhlllllllllllll l|||I||llHli^

New Immigrants Offered Standby
Ont. Hospital & Medical Health Plan
TORONTO.—A plan to give hospital and medi­
cal insurance to new immigrants until they can
be covered by Ontario Hospital and Medical Serv­
ices Insurance plans went into effect recently.
The Blue Cross plan for hospital coverage last
three months or until the effective month date
of the government hospital plan. (The Ontario
hospital plan does not start until the first day
of the third month after the date of the appli­
cation).

The temporary plan for medical-surgical in hospital care lasts 4 months or until OMSIP becomes effective.
The immigrants-only plan does not apply to
sanitoriums, mental hospitals or hospitals for
the chronically ill. Maternity cases are covered
only if the woman is enrolled under a family’
plan. This eliminates unwed mothers.
It becomes effective the day the application and
money are received in the Blue Cross office but
it does not apply if the patient
m Seeds To Japan Presented
At Flower Show
js already in hospital. The hos­
W°pZ' a sanwl’in^^
J°hu Roxborough
pital coverage is sold alone with
Lilli Annual
^
ci °^ Canadian tree seeds to Japan at
HIROSHIMA. — After read­ registered and receiving regular a single person paying between
$17.43 and $21.91 and a family
aS
ing a transcript of Gen. Curtis diagnosis. An average of 500 to between $34.86 and $43.82 for
W
Jl* Ro'lboS fLY'SesU^ff^
Kurata, E. LeMay’s Oct. 3 news confer­ 600 die each year from the pos­ the insured period but the medi­
effects of the bomb, the cal-surgical
care
cannot
be
ence after he had accepted the sible
mayor said.
bought unless the applicant also
nomination as vice presidential
Speaking more in sorrow than enrolls for the hospital coverage.
candidate on the American In­
The medical fee is $7.50 for a
anger, the mayor continued:
dependent Party ticket, Hiroshi­
single person and $22.90 for a
“If he came to Hiroshima, I family.
ma Mayor Setsuo Yamada, 69,
don’t think he could make such
recently shook his head declar­ a statement. Not only as the
ing:
mayor but
one
of the many
who
have
experienced
the effect's
“I just don’t understand why of the bom
Gen. LeMay would say a nuclear
Ry, lam
I am absolutely ...
in
»*w«6m
bomb is no different from other and physically,
disagreement
with
Gen.
LeMav

.
v
TOKA
O.

The
newspaper
weapons”.
Yorimuri
said
recently
the reLeMay’s comments were little
? 'H
(LeMay had said: “We seem
mains of about 2000 Japanese
the only soldiers
to have a phobia about nuclear publicized in Japan,
have been
discovered
weapons.
I
think
that
most
milicountry
which
has
sutained
a
^*
nce
4ug
1
on
Iwo
Jima
— scene
final iustalment of “The Ministry of
tary men think nuclear peapons nuclear attack. LeMay is not of one of the fiercest battles beCTda Am°nSSt
Canadians
in are just another weapon in the well known here even though he tween Japan
and
the United
Um^NN by the Rev- T*dJapanese
~=hi Mitsui,
B.A., B.D.
arsenal”.)
states in World War II.
commanded the B-29 raids on
F^s Wrk.U k Wncouyer’s Renfrew United Church. This
The report said cooperation by
93,000 Survivors
Japan during World War II and the u.S; Coast Guard stationed
pUieolon
I? • e'r Mitsui for tke degree of Master of
The mayor noted there are as U.S. chief of staff, he receiv­ on the island has speeded up a
Re Rev U C°1Iege °f B Csome 93.000
survivors of the ed the Order of the Rising Star survey being conducted by 16 Ja­
his
’ W ^° Has born in Japan 35 years ago, has atomic bombardment of 1945, all in 1964.
panese government
officials in
the past three davs.
Fa nw state in ^Af.-daUffhtei f°r missionary work in LeAdditional bodies of Japanese
pknadians fOr ovw yCa' ^e ^as been a minister to the Japa-4
soldiers still are scattered undis­
covered
throughout the island
?he survey "’ill continue un9’ !t added- About 20.000
Japanese
soldiers died in the
WASHINGTON. — The Smith- section is an 11-foot model of
By THE REV. TADASHI MITSUI
fighting there.
sonian Institution opened a spe­ the Tenchi Maru, the state bargi
Iwo Jima is in the Bonin chain
^8
c /ye observer!
cial exhibit recently commemo that brought imperial representa­ of islands which reverted recentN‘;n;;A''of the ]°f the church as carried out racing Commodore
Mathew C. tives from Tokyo to meet with
to Japanese control after a
Jckb "'as bemm
°f Canada among one minori—
^-year
U.S. administration.
Perry’s voyage to Japan more Ferry. The original was 165 feet
i 4 loundino- mamk
^ n the work of one of
? * »1 S’ ‘he.. Methodist Church of the United than a century ago.
long and was towed by row boats.
Canada in
;]«4 between 1049 ^'“ij Columbia. It was dispersed
For the first time, three hand­ The model is on Ioan from the
I* “Japan J” t
and this put an end to-the
>a> the “k™'” ,?‘?h Columbia. After this period of written volumes of Perry’s per- Tokyo Transportation Museum.
OSAKA. — A 19-year-old wo­
There is a suit of red armor men s college student of Oyodo^.t^^ °t the
became “Japanese-Canadians” and sonal journals of the histori
ure.
- ■ ■ egta-.ed mosaic of the multi-racial Cana- voyage that opened Japan to the worn by a samurai in the House ku, Osaka, demanded'at the Osa•District Court compensation
United’ States and the West are of li. There is a lock of Perry’s
f bistorv of y
^J^Ha, tX XnrS?’°5king among and with Japanese being shown. The journals have hair, his wedding ring and but­ of 2,600,000 yen from Hong Man,
A01, Hie Kinidem
XOVe very hard for the gradual been edited by Smithsonian ex­ ton from his uniform given bv owner of the Daitoyo sauna bath
I” ‘“td, BrAN r i
u- uP°n the earth in one selected pert Roger Pineau and will be his widow to the Japanese Na- because she was seriously scalded
Tbe church’s motivation was
with boiling water on April 28.
tional Museum.
YX ^hich ^N, hU ’
human effort. The attitude published next month.
She was in a hospital for two
One of the finest pieces of art
t°W'" had bhAn'on Galled “Liberalism,” or concern for
weeks
and under medical carncludes some 448
The exhibi
is the scroll
•^■ips between -u c°uraged by her experience with the
showing Perry
until
Sept.
18.
objects that Perry brought ba
lile churches in Canada and the s ate.
black ships standing off the
She claimed she was injured
from his expeditions to Japan.
°f the work of the church such
coast of Japar s as he landed and through tne carelessnes of Hong’s
items on lo
employees and that her marriage
There
teSt<’ Md this test becam most
was met by the representativ
he
ox dispersement, 1942 to 1949. We shall, from Japan. Dominatin
prospects and consequently her
of the emperor.
future would be affected.

if

Hiroshima Mayor Appalled at LeMay

United Church Ministry
Amongst JC’s In B.C.

2000 Dead Japan
■L V-? p^1?0’0^ Soldiers Found

Smithsonian Commemorate Perry

Scalded Girl Sues

Page 2

PAGE 2

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VANCOUVER. 845 HORNBY ST.
TEL. 688-6611
TORONTO. 199 BAY ST.
TEL. 364-7226

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Page 3

AA±!^ November _6.

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IX
7

Page 7

^ja^ November 6, 1968

NEW

CAN A DIAN

PAGE 7

Japan's Cooking Husbands

It ie a good policy to
have the BIGHT POLICY

Coaiult

William Wales Ltd.

I Koyanagis Arts & Crafts of Japan" Starts Nov. 8
TOKYO.—Not so
Insurance Agents
' TORONTO—Burlington Nisei architect, Jim Koyanagi, who Japanese husbands to long ago, it was considered a disgrace for
loiter around
the kitchen or peek into
464 Yonge Street, Toronto
Kved in Japau and the Far East for several years, will present a butcher shoos.
Phone 921-3171
libition of his collection of art objects and paintings of Japan.
. But things have changed.
Today,
a
gi
owing
number
of
^Entitled “Arts and Crafts of Japan”, Koyanagi’s collection husbands are taking
up cooking. The popular weeklies even run
mH be shown from November- 8th to 26th at the Ontario Craft simple recipes on their
Fecundation, 663 Yonge Street in Toronto, Gallery hours are 10 of ideas or those who pages tor husbands who have run short
wished to try then- skill with a frying
to 4 p.m- Monday to Friday.
pan on Sundays.
At 5:30 p.m., male white-collar
almost outnumber
housewives at the food counters
Wiring, Installation, Repairs,
of
terminal
department
store
16th Tol Japanese Garden Club Show Success
etc.
A 51-year-old husband, for example, was caught buying 150
I
Ry MRS. HANAE NISHI
yen worth of pork and admitted that he often buys his meat at
Kenji Tsuruda
TORONTO.—The 16th Annual Flower Show of the Toronto
the station store and his vegetables at a
Phone 4S9-3341
Japanese Garden Club was opened on Saturday, October 26th at
shop near his home.
the Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre by Mr. John Roxborough
How Is It Made?
Smith. M.P.P. for Hamilton Mountain.
M
hen
he
likes
a
particular
dish in a Japanese restaurant,
Mr. Smith the youngest member of the Legislature and also
Vice-President of the Ontario Horticultural Society, was introduced he asks how it’s made and tries it out at home.
AUTO — FIRE — LIFE:
‘ h Magistrate Lucien Kurata, Master of Ceremonies
A 29-year-old salary man who goes to .a cooking' school main,
ALL FORMS
On behalf of the Government of Ontario, Mr. Mamoru Nishi. tains women aren’t as good as meiHn making
OF
"high
class
things”
President of the Toronto Japanese Garden Club, presented Mr. IL like appetizers for Sake because they don’t
relish liquor in the
Ishikawa Consul General of Japan a gift of seeds from our native
evergreens and deciduous trees to be sent to Japan, to mark the first place.
He looks forward to nights when his wife visits her mother
100th anniversary of the Meiji Restoration. The seeds were pres­
ootwuif
ented to the club by the Honourable Rene Brunelle Minister of for a few hours. He then raid's the refrigerator,
up yams
KIYO TAMURA
Lands and Forests.
like French fries and dips them into a mixture
TORONTO
Mr. Smith brought .a gift of Trilliums from the Ontario and
Sake.
Horticultural Society which was presented by Mr. R. Ishikawa,
Bum. 366-5812 Res. Pl. 9-831 /
“Nothing like it as an appetizer for Sal
Consul General of Japan
Winners of Trophies were announced by Miss Tosh Oikawa
A professor at Kyushu University who
popular
and trophies presented by Mr. Roy Oyagi.
commentatoi, always makes his own relishes. He ’S also an expert
The winners are:
Bu*i 824-8153
822-1353
at making fluffy omelets with a special frying pan.
Mrs. C. Katsuno, Consulate General_ R.
.... 1Ishikawa, Best Display
Cooking School
and G. Nakamachi Memorial, Best Chrysanthemum.
One young husband attends the Ginza Cooking- School because
Mrs E. Shin, K. Nagao Memorial, Best Novelty, Chrysanthe­
ERNEST JOMORJ
mum; Toronto Japanese Garden Club, Best Specimen.
of a piomise he made when he proposed to his wife. He agreed
Mr. T. Omoto, Garden Research, Best Bloom Chrysanthemum, he would prepare the meals every other day.
Chartered
Accountant
John Bassett (Telegram) Best Specimen.
Some homes even have cook books marked “His” and “Hers”.
The show drew large crowds on both Saturday and Sundav,
Suit* 403
According to a Tokyo cooking school director, most male
and many out of town guests were presented.
130 BLOOB ST. W.
TOBONTO |
Guest lecturer for the show was Mr. George Tanaka, well students who attend such schools are either in their mid 20
known Landscape Architect who described his various projects or past 50.
rah many slides of the gardens he had created, to an excellent
A salesman at a food counter in a leading department store,
audience.
however,
says most of his male customers are in their 30’s and
An unusual exhibition of Ikebana emphasing traditional, con­
Custom Picture
temporary and the “New Concept,’' attracted much interest and 40’s — which seems to indicate that kitchen-minded husbands t
favorable comments.
Framing
spread over every age group.
Special attraction was the “Sogetsu” arrangement created bv
The vast increase in working wives is considered the primar
I
guest members.
NISHIMURA
reason
for
advent
of
husband-cooks.
1st Mr. Y. Abe — Draftsman
2nd Mr. K. Hisaeda — Landscape Architect
Another reason could be the widespread adoption of dinning3rd Mr. K. Mariyama — Landscape Architect
kitchens which gives Japanese husbands easy access to the sink
1278 Tong. Street, Toronto 7, Ont
Excellent Ikebana arrangements by the schools of Misho, So
and refrigerator.
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
gehu, Ikenobo, Shofuryu, Kakko, Ohara, and Takeya and demons­
No
one
would
dare
admit
that
Japanese
men
are
ToHo
NHiimura
just be923-687)
trations by the following:
coming a little more henpecked and/or unmanly.
Mrs. K. Abe — Teacher of Sogetsu
Mrs. F. Hamazaki — Teacher of Misho
Mrs. K. Izumi — Teacher of Misho
Mrs N. Mitsui — Teacher of Kakko
Buy & Sell
Your Home
n addition Mrs. K. Izumi demonstrated the art of Bonseki,
exhibition included beautiful displays by the
Through
mil
n°nSaii Society, the Canadian Chrysanthemum Society, as
Box Garden, Children’s Displays, Drift wood
ranting and Potted Plants.
to take this opportunity to express sinS ° >
Centre, and to all of those, whose donations,
PRESIDENT
• hard work made this the most successful show
■I me club’s history.
Hanae Nishi (Mrs. Mamoru)
Slocan City, B.C.
Publicity Chairman
The Toronto Japanese Garden Club
1527 O’Connor Dr., Toronto, Ont.
Phone 355-2211

KENJI ELECTRIC

INSURANCE

KINO'S MARKET

TOSH

IWAI

Red & White
Food Store

MELL REAL ESTATE LTD
Phone 757-5184 — Res. 757-7578

TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1968

A.M. Religious School
11:00 A.M. Morning Service
2:00 P.M. Japanese Service

3'8 Bathurst St.

IPs Private! No Time Limit!
Telephone:

534-4302

Get the most enjoyment from your wedding
reception or anniversary
Plenty of delicious food! Plenty of free parking!

When Buying Or Selling A Home
Call: KEN HORI

CHINA

K. HORI
REAL ESTATE

RpoI/or

925 Eglinton W. Toronto

member OF TORONTO REAL ESTATE BOARD
Bs-

HOUSE
RU. 1-9123

SPORTING GOODS
SKATES
Hockey Equipment
Skate Sharpening
(near Carlaw)
George Fukusaka

Phone: HO. 3-7400
OPEN FRI. UNTIL 3 p.m.

Phone: 261-5194

Scarborough

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KEMPO-TAI KARATE-KUNG FU
filiated- International Federation Karate
Motherland F. A. K.
:

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John Steevensz, Y. T. Horiuchi,
G. Morris

TORONTO
LONDON
355A Spadina Ave.
’>61) Glasgow Ave,
‘59-3810
439-5622

366-1418
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11 Q^en Street

DANFORTH



Lichee Garden
(Dining Lounge)
118 Elizabeth St.
Toronto, Canada

Phone 364-3481
(4 Lines To Serve You)
CATERING SERVICE — "TAKE-OUT” ORDERS

Banquet Facilities
For Business Or Private Parties
WEDDING RECEPTIONS (Large or Small)
DINNER MUSIC NIGHTLY

Formal
Rentals
Reserve

I

Now For
Weddings
Dances Etc.

J
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ALNA 1
Of Toronto
custom made suit

Sus Nagai
437 DANFORTH AVE
PHONE: 468-8114 "

Page 8

PAGE 8

History of J.C. United Church . . .

Cont. from Page One

The New Canadian

dus^onmary’ 366 the teSt °f hist°ry Upon the church in this con-

The invasion of the Japanese army into Manchuria and fh^
Authorized as «

China mainland created a test for Japanese Christianity__ they
Post Office DeS alC!tSt ^
in
Gospel among the Japanese immigrants had to decide whether to pledge their loyalty to Canada or Japan
°nd for payment of postage^,
nan^P Province of British Columbia was sown in 1892 bv the Ja- Though they desired to assimilate into Canada, abandoning loyal­
30 « cash
m p!tahliEVT 1 n camr by way of the United States, before ty to their mother country was a painful process. The Christian
orUbpTrltn d chuuh in Canada recognized either their existence Japanese chose Canada.
leni thS
"aS the Prevalence of immorality that chalThe mope decisive test came with the Canadian government’s
~‘J Pi
e^ang;elists to join the immigrant communiexpulsion
of the Japanese race from the British Columbia coas+al
behe
AX Con\TatlVe c0” Action in the Gospel led them
o oelieve that once these poor souls are saved thev will Hvp ^oE^ES61? dlS?erS^ across Canada- During the period from
to 1u49’ the church 'vas forcsd to separate the Democratic
Tey Were convinced that the Gospel would
UMEZUKIEnft,.
Public
u
a
°^ ^ne state, with which the church, was in agreement from KEI T.TSUMURA
f P
1 MaJesty’s subjects of Japan from disgrace be­
fore the foreigners. It was this same conviction that Ted them the actual_ reality of state politics which had been carried out
on the basis of political interplay and compromise. And thev had
to pioneer such, ventures as schools and hospitals.
-^dxerLjgjfig,
nee/Vor^aX^^^
the ^ventieth century Canada, from her to separate the ideal “invisible church” from the earthly church
which was striving to reach its ideals while embracing the same
migrants T
a ^eat influx of Japanese im479 QUEEN ST. WEST
, / ants' At this time the Christian work among the Jananesp people who were carrying out the policies of the state These
separations
were
the
most
painful
processes
for
both
the
Japanese
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
the Methodist Church of Canada which was the
Sv^to^ vyt,tut>on to help the Japanese to adjust and Occidental ecclesiastical communitv.
EMpire 6-5005
Christian Japanese retained their faith because of the de­
T n
X 111 the strange land. But to the greater part
migAu^^
the impaCt of sizeable Japanese im- termination and leadership of the church. Therefore, the chur-h
the AraVe
E PaniC and hTstei’ical hatred against again became the sole channel of communication between Japanese
j olxlng
little brown man.
There were economic Canadians and Occidental Canadians who still retained reason­
leasons that drove them to this attitude, as well a* early political ableness and conscience despite the war situation. Though the
Iv^heVo?^^^^
T maj°r instance. But it ivas main church had to face its own deficiencies it found a way to be effective
and communitt
deSU’e to remain in British Columbia ; in co-operative actions with other secular interests under one com- _ Male Help Wanted
nu community piejudice against a different race.
n~n PurPose. The church found co-operative action of this kind most
The people of the church reacted differently than expected effective—it was somehow, indirect but most proper. Through LICENSED bodyman or
estimating collision damaX
SnET”," ’ declared that since Canada received these people
anl Preaching within each congregation and through preferred. Prefer single, willing to"a£?
S°;te \ influence, the church on earth should become first of / re^uired m 6 to 12 months
all, true to itselt according to the Gospel; of a growing nature Aut° Accident Services 487-2868' "foe,
in its spirit and ethos, morally sensitive, following true value! Uyeda.
in the community;, and be fully aware of criteria and goals in EXPERIENCED ’is maker for
the
issues of the times in the light of Christian truth. Thus the extrusion plant. Contact Ken" O^-”
uSgOrientals.
1SSUK °f the missi“ °f the ^
most powerful direct action of the church comes from individual phone 625-3333 (Toronto).
ii.,?! co^egations. The answer to political and social issues has
Female Help Wanted
always been clear on the collective level but abstract and va^e

CLASSIFIED

of
ing to

It practlce- But ^e church is finding it most effective to address
its own congregation rather than those outside of the church

L^?Yf for inv2icin9, h'Pina, and??
r? h?hre?l Part Hme- Centre of ch
Apply Mr. Davis, 921-7740 (Toronto)

sociAtv
arfu™eat, about the responsibility of the church to
most Scant” ’
“d ^ ,’h" B“ett’s

COOK-HOUSEKEEPER tor family oi iw
Convenient to bus, subway, and sho?'
mg. Comfortable room, bath, and T
cleaning woman twice weekly. Box .1
The New Canadian.

C0.nYerts did not have to take account
S°CIe y
which they had been striv-

n
church
called to mediate the love and the iud°-ment
of God to every phase of human life. Its members are citizens
dfen^So
citizens they have a vocation involving obenation
S
f°r the nation. As members are citizens of the TWO rooms and kitch
with rance,
GocPs wi ^
a vocation involving obedience to own basement to rent, Clean subu'S
home. Phone after 6 cm . 221-3190 (To.-helnpRnatlon* fs members of the church they should onto).
wisdom
gVld^nce for this vocation. Christian faith brings
° L
eS the Presuppositions and the goals of
fe hiXrv^T eX‘Sted b^ween these ‘"-° ’Xs §™rt ui
Articles For Sale
'ide
Til
u J
m
?
‘e sp-c,flc social tasks- It Should not
? y f Japanese residence in Canada. The impact
this
,,
.
Over- SALE of Sinaer Sewing Machines,
sciences and
autonomies of politics and economics, of the I ,Straight, Zig-Zag, Demos,
and Tradeth/ Jirnese

arts and prescribe Christian solutions for all iins. For home demonstration, call Mrs.
pioblems but those who pursue these interest should be helped R.
“ Tsujimura — 621-0684 (Toronto).
^the
t0 fit them into their total view of life
-ichness to that total view and being illuminated by it The church
the rii iSS” Z ttnld^
wherever there is a human need ™
X r »d
means that the church has been a great
ta “ri»” mp Sn "^
"?" “ f,rmm“l1 Christie, s pioneei and initiator in many areas of life where now other
-Cle\haVe TSUnied maj'or responsibility, but we can never
T
where that pioneering and initiating will no longer
ta”™ S'fn^YY
«™s greatly "limit Si th
church among the Orientals had its merit*
d
tside lts own d°ors but it can never accent such
Id X
^comings. Undoubtedly, the church repiXt
of comin- aboT?’f d:Pven underground, it must seek ways
pU^ed
S
and
h i e plound again and work once more to bring light
and love and healing to society as a whole ... The church cannot I
tlie goodwill of the country. Through the efforts
be content with either the inclusive or the exclusive ideal alone.”

XS “ ”™ — " ™=£

are s fcxs2 & ? ~»“ x

with^od^Twn wn-rlTT
5 mission in accordance
of proclamation
f^tablish His Kingdom. It is not because
Hie proclamation W
Kingdom is brought about, but it is when
thi
coming
a ^alltX’ which is the divine sign of
Chri^fe ^^ S: ^^
to God bv whi Klngdom- Man is only an instrument. Glorv be.
partici^a^
“rs, are allowed to
dicated people was too abstract
h
ano by a handful of depeople in the local congregations Therein tO°1 b> the ordinary
in the implication of the wo^ ^
?n ambiguity

Ikenobo . .

TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH

(Cont. from Page One)
to forget the old way of life and
-P £ meant,
not realize that assimilation
,
k Chadians.” They did
tegration of different people in
neces&an y bring about in- grown to mammoth proportions,
have the slightest notion
in
They dM not three hundred branches function
or "standing on pride in their
keeping identity” ? Japan, apart from the lead­
accomplish integration in a real
in Order to ing operations of the two great
the Japanese in Canada
church s effort among institutes in Kyoto and Tokyo.
Ikenobo has captured foreign
missionary enterprises before Word'w II
periahsm of the west in this
L
r
h t
cultural nn-I tancy to such an extent that. a=
Protestant
Canada ‘ But theV0’?1
th-e British and
Protestant factors
factors of
c establishing the Ikebana
of Canada.
appear on the surface
because of
^’o^comings did not
not Ait Center in New York, the
Ce Dec^e of the protected situation in the
Japanese communitv
organization has fathered 15
community.
S^?Ler-S in the U.S. and sister
The efficiency of the work

Pf pS
the h
church
carried on among bodies in other countries around
Japanese ras dependent upon the*
"^
world.ikenobo conducts the
lHl>n„a^
ch^eh ti'XC^
in Japan. When theSenei
Put S

Nisei Service and Church School — Sun.

4-

Japanese. I interests.

He has

Japanese-Canadians would be accen^A k
assimilated
Canadians.
accepted by Occidentals as fellow —
Under
.,
,
the leadership of
VT ,"ble Vnited Church people
iHe church led ’
people
and Occidentals to
accept thi = new breed and tr-Yribo.h Japanese ?
“u vintegrate
'ccicient-a
them
Canadian ; ociety. In reaHtvX ^
‘ into
Occidental
. ,an
impossibility,
n
.
Canadians were nm readv ? ?
an impossih
Oriental Canadians outside of
'
a
"Mr me new breed as
accept
on a superficial level?in
community. But at
vies, the Nisei were winning some XpadlS.' Md “ academic

PRINTING

S. of Bloor

Specializing In Chinese Food

SAI

WOO

Businessmen Luncheon

We Cater To Parties And Banquets
TAKE OUT SERVICE

Japanese „ ES «H ^^

viuan, i.e. Japanese-Uanadinns

11:30 A.M.

English — Rev. G. S. Imai, 444-5159
Japanese — Rev. Y. C. Horikoshi, 766-5632
701 Dovercourt Rd.
A warm welcome to all.

reconstruction The test’fb C°rUset °^ HcAon—separation and I ?i,P ^^ent °f all the ikebana
One was the problem of
N 6
°f three deferent issues ±hS ln- Kyo^ He travels conCanadians: another wit L^?61’ h? second ^^hon Japantee
exhibits intersituation in the Orient" and
E°Ward the international I R-pk^3 t A tbou»b be saYs that
with the second w”h^ the third and most ^isive ones canJ L^^
developed him psyThe
,
-noiogicalh and philosophically.
questions
-e remains a"?
natural,
wholesome
‘hot there was. two
iHX^tfX
j" pane”" E
^“

• ~

ARE YOU A
BLOOD DONOR?

Phone: EM. 3-7646 — EM. 8-0035
123A Dundas St. West
Toronto 2, Ont.
Parking At Bay & Dundas

nnp



OFFSET ANO LETTERPRESS

OFFICE FORMS, BROCHURES, LETTERHEADS

HARRI S. KONOO ^^^^^^
627 BAY ST.. TORONTO

Phene 365-9768

I

"EAR PIERCING"
By Appointment

|
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Open Mon.. M ed„ Thur, evenings until 8 p.m. Sat. until 3 P-m—1 Dundas Sq. Toronto. Suite 1402. Phone 363-095-

:
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Eve. By Appointment
Hiro Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe

I