Page 1
fpanese View Themselves, The Changes, And The New Generation
W RV HIROSHI UEDA
i Yoshiyas'd Tanaka, a 17-year- getherness’ in the international -‘We tend to be tolerant of the and a teacher at a mission high
Ry
far as I know.
aid
young people who
Stokyo. - At the start of i old high school student, said: community.
most
high
school
students today
The. Japan Times . “Our grandfather’s generation
A 24-year-old
office
girl todav’s wild. permi
-^another y
istic, individualistic and
dnterv.c^ < I a cross section of . invaded the Asian continent to working in Ginza, Tokyo, said: because people of our generation are
,ng, and their . biggest
world af- : achieve the Greater East Asia “Women can liberate themselv knov a society that was
^Jaw-^-< concerning
es and be free of any social than this—the society that ex 1 concern is not the society’ they
K -Did their own life styles. i Co-Prosperity Sphere.
a freelance
1___ J | “Our father’s generation ,achi- restriction only’ after they aban- isted in this country during the are living in, but their girl
fe^hi
friends and passing university
“The eved economic prosperity7 in Ja- . don the concept of premarital World War II.
writer,
said:
?seenci io
life, ' pan, which now ranks third in
“It is meaningless to try’ to e u tra nc e examinations.”
way
of
^^n-orit
“This myth of society that a explain logically7 the behavior of | Hitoshi Aiba, professor of psy^ei th: n that of the individu- ; the world.
“But our generation
rn- woman must be a virgin prior young people. They are ruled by ! chology at. Waseda. University,
-ays been praised in
terested in
none of to marriage has long been re- then* heart; rather than by their ! said, “Today Japanese youth is
gaiiionh *. apan, Inc.’
rational, functional and
pleaJapan-versus-the-world larding women’s progress.”
minds.”
5 are changing and these
sure-oriented.
Takashi Mori, 27,
graduate
struggles. Rather, we
Junji Suzumoto, 38, an adver
want to lead lives free kind
I
(Cont. on Pane 8)
student
at
Waseda
University
i are interested in promoting 'to- tising company7 employee, said:
®i social restrictions now.”
|||iiiiiiiiniiiiinHHiiiii|Hnilllllli,llllllllllllllillilillllliliiiIlliiiilllillllIillllilllllllllill,llilllllil,llllllllllilIllllllillll,lllillIlilllllllllillllllllllllllIlllliilllilillllllllllllllllllllim
B
•‘SUKIYAKI”
Practical Japanese
Cookbook $1.65
WITH POSTAGE
The Dew Canadian
"A CHILD IN PRISON
CAMP”
Bv SHIZUYE
TAKASHIMA
$7.95 WITH POSTAGE
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
Toronto, Ont.
ImiiiiiiiniHiiiiiinniiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiininiinin^
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1972
Signs Of The 1970’s
-Ethnic Pluralism
Japanese Scientists Discover New
Cosmic Energy In Outer Space
Using relatively' rement of streams of subatomic j not been able to pinpoint the
TOKYO.
of reality7 that color makes a dif
particles traveling at the speed source of their cosmic energy.
ference. It is obvious that Asians inexpensive but efficient detec
“This discovery7 will stimulate
are not Whites, and the diffe tion and measuring instruments, of light in the range of four
EOPLE ARE asking whv rences are distinct and recogniz Japanese scientists have disco- sextillion electron volts—reading us to pursue further studies of
Speuiate ethnic groups : Why ed.
vered a very powerful cosmic in figures 4,000,000,000,000,000,- distant radio stars and pulsars
belaccentuate the difference;
From a positive standpoint, the
outer 000,000 (21 zeroes).
as possible sources,” said the
'tween the majority7 and minority7 Japanese American has a very7 energy, emanating from
By7 comparison, Stanford Uni physicists.
Gobind
^bups ? Why7 the stress upon good image of 'being intelligent, space,
according
to
Being proud of one’s culture and industrious, courteous, and law- Behari Lai, San Francisco Exa versity’s linear accelerator can
They speculate, however, that
this abiding.
(ethnic identities ? Doesn’t
produce a maximum of 20 billions far out in the universe there are
science
writer.
miner
and
^ate a greater polarity7
In school inevitably7 the JapaFour Tokyo university’ physi electron volts.
stars, such :-:.s pulsars, associated
■discrimmation in society?
nese Americans are in the top
The
Japanese
physicists
have
cists
have
reported
their
measuwith tremendous powerful mag
®Vhy develop caucuses that ten per cent, even though the
netic waves that speed up elec
faccentuate
cultural and physi- numbers are becoming increas
•
VAC
|ggiionuc difference Why don’t ingly less with time and becom
trically7 charged particles into a
iffiose of ethnic difference just ing closer to the American norm.
stream of cosmic ray.
Income a part of the American
In the secretarial field,
for
®iety by7 adopting the. culture the most part, Japanese Ameri
laid traditions of the dominant can girls are preferred as secre
Bmaioritv and just be “Ameri- taries because they are good
। excess of politeness — an old
By JEFF PENBEDTHY
Keans ?
workers — efficient and cons
■woman offering her seat — or
The clearest answer. I believe, cientious.
TOKYO. — Living in Japan alternately, in a crush — sense
fes given in 1965 by7 the late
And who is it that will not can give a white man new in : that there is a little extra vigor
^Daisuke Kitagawa in his article deny that every Japanese Ame sights into what it feels like to being thrown into the jostling
^Assimilation or
Pluralism ” rican is born with a greenthumb. belong to an unwanted racial
elbows coming his way.
g|when he stated’:
minority.
And so it goes.
Fundamentally, there is a dif
Matsushita ElecOSAKA.
long as society persists
It
’
s
not
that
the
Japanese
ference
between
the
Japanese
Persecuted
People
trie
Idustrial
Co.
announced re
Bin identifying Japanese Ameripeople have
strong
feelings treatment of foreigners as indi
On
the
negative
side,
studies
®ns by’ their physical charactecently that the company
had
against Caucasians in particular. viduals, .and as a group.
Wt!CS as Japanese Americans, have indicated that marked self
the
first
time
in
The Japanese uneasiness with
On a personal level, he is like developed for
is necessary7 to provide the consciousness and sensitivity are all “gaijin” — foreigners — is
feciety with something visible characteristic of minority7 group more encompassing than any of ly to meet more individual acts the world “a light beam weldtangible from which the ge- members having an ambiguous the world-wide prejudices on co of kindness than in almost any7 ing machine.” The new product
other country, but these are spe will be put on sale in April, the
public may7 draw an image social position in modern Ame lor, race or creed.
cial
events.
« Japanese American —
an rica.
Despite
tht
mercurial
changes
On
the group, or impersonal company7 said.
The dynamics underlying such
&uge which is as close to the
The new welding machine is
S^aBty of possible — if a whole- a situation are intensified among that have taken place recently, level, he faces daily the wall of
curious
mistrust
that
becomes
a
the
“
gaijin
go
home
”
syndrome
designed to weld metals or to
.integrating of Japanese the Japanese Americans because
major factor in the
everyday melt ceramics and plastic
by
hW^ericans into . . . society7 were in addition to their being a remains.
Sometimes, it is no more than lives of the 40,000 Westerners concentrating light beams from
small (591,290 in 1970) disting
be fulfilled.”
(with
the
innate (19,000 Americans
uishable minority7, their cultural a manifestation of the
a discharge lamp, the announce
®
C°l°l Makes Difference
British
the
second
largest
group)
Japanese
shyness,
and
can
have
background arose out of an
residing here.
H The basic question we must authoritarian hierarchy in which quite strange effects.
ment said.
In no other international city
ta-sk is, does color* make status was most important.
Compared
with conventional
The wife of a European col are the natives and the foreign
^t.UDerence in American socierecently
Added to these two ethnic league. for example,
welding machines, the light beam
• -'lore specifically7, does color problems, they7 have been vic took up a post with a Japanese ers so completely separated.
O^e any difference in employ- tims of a history7 of prejudice firm, and three days later was
Nowhere are the “outsiders” welder ensures better perfor
in housing, in relation- and discrimination, climaxed by7 moved into a spacious private forced to cling together in their mance because there is no need
»'i1?. in one’s dignitv as a the internment of 117,116 Ame office — in crowded Tokyo, an own few private clubs, bars and for any contact between it and
person '•
honor rarely given to executives parties (often muttering about the object being welded, MatsuWi ’^-up'Ber way to put it is, does ricans of Japanese ancestry7 into below directors’ ranks.
the Japanese in such an insular,
concentration
camps
during
shita explained.
loot that you are of Japa- World War II.
almost frightened way).
Several
weeks
later
the
mysteIn European countries, retncestl-y make any7 differA vast number of Japanese
Persecuted people, no less the I ry was solved. She learned that
te m terms of opportunities,
meeting and eatipg places are search and development is being
Sc?0Ur pursuit of freedom and Japanese Americans, are apt to | tjie other office workers had felt simply not open to gaijin.
carried out on similar welding
feoSep' in your
image of fuse negative images held up to j “hazukashii” (a kind of shy emThe Japan Travel Bureau still machines, but a practical ma
them by the d'Ominant majority' b amassment) about having
a
keeps a list of the Japanese inns chine has yet to be developed
with
tire
negative
identities
culj
foreigner
present
when
prey
7
went
..T1^ Blacks,
Chicanos, and tivated in their own group. The- ; through their twice-daily office which will accept foreigners.
there the company7 said.
unlike then* counterparts re is ample evidence of inferior ! exercise routines,
This subtle, relentless, imper
^(t’Jrope who have been able feelings and marked self-hate in
The new product is especially
The word “foreigner” has def vious wall is particularly hard on
annulate with the new Ame- all minority7 groups.
suited
for welding of electronic
initely
unpleasant
overtones. the wives of overseas business
!s forced to be
men
stationed
here.
parts, aircraft parts and parts
When muttered on a crowded
Second Consideration
^s race and iden‘
subway
train,
it
underlines
to
Shut
off
by
language,
unable
for space rockets, Matsushita
Be functions in
Whether positive oi* negative,
the
foreigner
that
he
is
conspi
to
accept
the
low
station
Japa
a ‘e7 .‘s.4etermined not by his the fact remains that color ma
said.
nese tradition provides for its
Lh wmmiye, but by7 the domi- kes a difference. The. natural cuous and odd.
He may meet an embarrassing own women and denied even the
-^s lows’ as thei’e second question then arises, what
relief of day-to-day. contact that Japanese Parents Have
&h‘^uaisunctlon based upon race kind of difference can we live
their
husbands make in business
acc.ePtance only on the
'Singer
Suicides
After
many
simply leave.
Same Problems, Too
term?, the
First of all, since color does *
The
number
of
foreign
mar
iecVs^hrv
strategy
becomes make a differenc, I must accept -Plastic Surgery Fails
TOKYO. — A ^oll of Japanese
riages that go on the . rocks, .ip
and recognize my color or iden
Japanese singer Japan, appears to he far above parents show about 40 per- dent
tity’. I am a Japanese American I TOKYO.
feel they do not understand
| anti I’m not going to deny it or Mami
hanged the norm.
Tsubaki,
26,
STEREOTYPES
In a recent newspaper poll 70 their children — but a similar
tend that I’m something else. herself because a plastic surgery j
iS under consideration ! Thi
_*.is is where a great deal of
per cent of the Japanese quesoperation on her face failed, po Itioned said they felt “superior” percentage believes there is not
racial diffe- identity
i
7 confusion takes place.
much of a generation gap.
^SvniJeT-treat€t^ negativelv or
I to Westerners.
lice said recently.
ly, but that it is a matter
(Conti on Paice 8)
By PAUL M. NAG;
(Pacific Citizen)
Canadian Writer Says "Gaijin Go
Home" Syndrome Still In Japan
Japan Company
Develops New
Welding Machine
W RV HIROSHI UEDA
i Yoshiyas'd Tanaka, a 17-year- getherness’ in the international -‘We tend to be tolerant of the and a teacher at a mission high
Ry
far as I know.
aid
young people who
Stokyo. - At the start of i old high school student, said: community.
most
high
school
students today
The. Japan Times . “Our grandfather’s generation
A 24-year-old
office
girl todav’s wild. permi
-^another y
istic, individualistic and
dnterv.c^ < I a cross section of . invaded the Asian continent to working in Ginza, Tokyo, said: because people of our generation are
,ng, and their . biggest
world af- : achieve the Greater East Asia “Women can liberate themselv knov a society that was
^Jaw-^-< concerning
es and be free of any social than this—the society that ex 1 concern is not the society’ they
K -Did their own life styles. i Co-Prosperity Sphere.
a freelance
1___ J | “Our father’s generation ,achi- restriction only’ after they aban- isted in this country during the are living in, but their girl
fe^hi
friends and passing university
“The eved economic prosperity7 in Ja- . don the concept of premarital World War II.
writer,
said:
?seenci io
life, ' pan, which now ranks third in
“It is meaningless to try’ to e u tra nc e examinations.”
way
of
^^n-orit
“This myth of society that a explain logically7 the behavior of | Hitoshi Aiba, professor of psy^ei th: n that of the individu- ; the world.
“But our generation
rn- woman must be a virgin prior young people. They are ruled by ! chology at. Waseda. University,
-ays been praised in
terested in
none of to marriage has long been re- then* heart; rather than by their ! said, “Today Japanese youth is
gaiiionh *. apan, Inc.’
rational, functional and
pleaJapan-versus-the-world larding women’s progress.”
minds.”
5 are changing and these
sure-oriented.
Takashi Mori, 27,
graduate
struggles. Rather, we
Junji Suzumoto, 38, an adver
want to lead lives free kind
I
(Cont. on Pane 8)
student
at
Waseda
University
i are interested in promoting 'to- tising company7 employee, said:
®i social restrictions now.”
|||iiiiiiiiniiiiinHHiiiii|Hnilllllli,llllllllllllllillilillllliliiiIlliiiilllillllIillllilllllllllill,llilllllil,llllllllllilIllllllillll,lllillIlilllllllllillllllllllllllIlllliilllilillllllllllllllllllllim
B
•‘SUKIYAKI”
Practical Japanese
Cookbook $1.65
WITH POSTAGE
The Dew Canadian
"A CHILD IN PRISON
CAMP”
Bv SHIZUYE
TAKASHIMA
$7.95 WITH POSTAGE
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
Toronto, Ont.
ImiiiiiiiniHiiiiiinniiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiininiinin^
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1972
Signs Of The 1970’s
-Ethnic Pluralism
Japanese Scientists Discover New
Cosmic Energy In Outer Space
Using relatively' rement of streams of subatomic j not been able to pinpoint the
TOKYO.
of reality7 that color makes a dif
particles traveling at the speed source of their cosmic energy.
ference. It is obvious that Asians inexpensive but efficient detec
“This discovery7 will stimulate
are not Whites, and the diffe tion and measuring instruments, of light in the range of four
EOPLE ARE asking whv rences are distinct and recogniz Japanese scientists have disco- sextillion electron volts—reading us to pursue further studies of
Speuiate ethnic groups : Why ed.
vered a very powerful cosmic in figures 4,000,000,000,000,000,- distant radio stars and pulsars
belaccentuate the difference;
From a positive standpoint, the
outer 000,000 (21 zeroes).
as possible sources,” said the
'tween the majority7 and minority7 Japanese American has a very7 energy, emanating from
By7 comparison, Stanford Uni physicists.
Gobind
^bups ? Why7 the stress upon good image of 'being intelligent, space,
according
to
Being proud of one’s culture and industrious, courteous, and law- Behari Lai, San Francisco Exa versity’s linear accelerator can
They speculate, however, that
this abiding.
(ethnic identities ? Doesn’t
produce a maximum of 20 billions far out in the universe there are
science
writer.
miner
and
^ate a greater polarity7
In school inevitably7 the JapaFour Tokyo university’ physi electron volts.
stars, such :-:.s pulsars, associated
■discrimmation in society?
nese Americans are in the top
The
Japanese
physicists
have
cists
have
reported
their
measuwith tremendous powerful mag
®Vhy develop caucuses that ten per cent, even though the
netic waves that speed up elec
faccentuate
cultural and physi- numbers are becoming increas
•
VAC
|ggiionuc difference Why don’t ingly less with time and becom
trically7 charged particles into a
iffiose of ethnic difference just ing closer to the American norm.
stream of cosmic ray.
Income a part of the American
In the secretarial field,
for
®iety by7 adopting the. culture the most part, Japanese Ameri
laid traditions of the dominant can girls are preferred as secre
Bmaioritv and just be “Ameri- taries because they are good
। excess of politeness — an old
By JEFF PENBEDTHY
Keans ?
workers — efficient and cons
■woman offering her seat — or
The clearest answer. I believe, cientious.
TOKYO. — Living in Japan alternately, in a crush — sense
fes given in 1965 by7 the late
And who is it that will not can give a white man new in : that there is a little extra vigor
^Daisuke Kitagawa in his article deny that every Japanese Ame sights into what it feels like to being thrown into the jostling
^Assimilation or
Pluralism ” rican is born with a greenthumb. belong to an unwanted racial
elbows coming his way.
g|when he stated’:
minority.
And so it goes.
Fundamentally, there is a dif
Matsushita ElecOSAKA.
long as society persists
It
’
s
not
that
the
Japanese
ference
between
the
Japanese
Persecuted
People
trie
Idustrial
Co.
announced re
Bin identifying Japanese Ameripeople have
strong
feelings treatment of foreigners as indi
On
the
negative
side,
studies
®ns by’ their physical charactecently that the company
had
against Caucasians in particular. viduals, .and as a group.
Wt!CS as Japanese Americans, have indicated that marked self
the
first
time
in
The Japanese uneasiness with
On a personal level, he is like developed for
is necessary7 to provide the consciousness and sensitivity are all “gaijin” — foreigners — is
feciety with something visible characteristic of minority7 group more encompassing than any of ly to meet more individual acts the world “a light beam weldtangible from which the ge- members having an ambiguous the world-wide prejudices on co of kindness than in almost any7 ing machine.” The new product
other country, but these are spe will be put on sale in April, the
public may7 draw an image social position in modern Ame lor, race or creed.
cial
events.
« Japanese American —
an rica.
Despite
tht
mercurial
changes
On
the group, or impersonal company7 said.
The dynamics underlying such
&uge which is as close to the
The new welding machine is
S^aBty of possible — if a whole- a situation are intensified among that have taken place recently, level, he faces daily the wall of
curious
mistrust
that
becomes
a
the
“
gaijin
go
home
”
syndrome
designed to weld metals or to
.integrating of Japanese the Japanese Americans because
major factor in the
everyday melt ceramics and plastic
by
hW^ericans into . . . society7 were in addition to their being a remains.
Sometimes, it is no more than lives of the 40,000 Westerners concentrating light beams from
small (591,290 in 1970) disting
be fulfilled.”
(with
the
innate (19,000 Americans
uishable minority7, their cultural a manifestation of the
a discharge lamp, the announce
®
C°l°l Makes Difference
British
the
second
largest
group)
Japanese
shyness,
and
can
have
background arose out of an
residing here.
H The basic question we must authoritarian hierarchy in which quite strange effects.
ment said.
In no other international city
ta-sk is, does color* make status was most important.
Compared
with conventional
The wife of a European col are the natives and the foreign
^t.UDerence in American socierecently
Added to these two ethnic league. for example,
welding machines, the light beam
• -'lore specifically7, does color problems, they7 have been vic took up a post with a Japanese ers so completely separated.
O^e any difference in employ- tims of a history7 of prejudice firm, and three days later was
Nowhere are the “outsiders” welder ensures better perfor
in housing, in relation- and discrimination, climaxed by7 moved into a spacious private forced to cling together in their mance because there is no need
»'i1?. in one’s dignitv as a the internment of 117,116 Ame office — in crowded Tokyo, an own few private clubs, bars and for any contact between it and
person '•
honor rarely given to executives parties (often muttering about the object being welded, MatsuWi ’^-up'Ber way to put it is, does ricans of Japanese ancestry7 into below directors’ ranks.
the Japanese in such an insular,
concentration
camps
during
shita explained.
loot that you are of Japa- World War II.
almost frightened way).
Several
weeks
later
the
mysteIn European countries, retncestl-y make any7 differA vast number of Japanese
Persecuted people, no less the I ry was solved. She learned that
te m terms of opportunities,
meeting and eatipg places are search and development is being
Sc?0Ur pursuit of freedom and Japanese Americans, are apt to | tjie other office workers had felt simply not open to gaijin.
carried out on similar welding
feoSep' in your
image of fuse negative images held up to j “hazukashii” (a kind of shy emThe Japan Travel Bureau still machines, but a practical ma
them by the d'Ominant majority' b amassment) about having
a
keeps a list of the Japanese inns chine has yet to be developed
with
tire
negative
identities
culj
foreigner
present
when
prey
7
went
..T1^ Blacks,
Chicanos, and tivated in their own group. The- ; through their twice-daily office which will accept foreigners.
there the company7 said.
unlike then* counterparts re is ample evidence of inferior ! exercise routines,
This subtle, relentless, imper
^(t’Jrope who have been able feelings and marked self-hate in
The new product is especially
The word “foreigner” has def vious wall is particularly hard on
annulate with the new Ame- all minority7 groups.
suited
for welding of electronic
initely
unpleasant
overtones. the wives of overseas business
!s forced to be
men
stationed
here.
parts, aircraft parts and parts
When muttered on a crowded
Second Consideration
^s race and iden‘
subway
train,
it
underlines
to
Shut
off
by
language,
unable
for space rockets, Matsushita
Be functions in
Whether positive oi* negative,
the
foreigner
that
he
is
conspi
to
accept
the
low
station
Japa
a ‘e7 .‘s.4etermined not by his the fact remains that color ma
said.
nese tradition provides for its
Lh wmmiye, but by7 the domi- kes a difference. The. natural cuous and odd.
He may meet an embarrassing own women and denied even the
-^s lows’ as thei’e second question then arises, what
relief of day-to-day. contact that Japanese Parents Have
&h‘^uaisunctlon based upon race kind of difference can we live
their
husbands make in business
acc.ePtance only on the
'Singer
Suicides
After
many
simply leave.
Same Problems, Too
term?, the
First of all, since color does *
The
number
of
foreign
mar
iecVs^hrv
strategy
becomes make a differenc, I must accept -Plastic Surgery Fails
TOKYO. — A ^oll of Japanese
riages that go on the . rocks, .ip
and recognize my color or iden
Japanese singer Japan, appears to he far above parents show about 40 per- dent
tity’. I am a Japanese American I TOKYO.
feel they do not understand
| anti I’m not going to deny it or Mami
hanged the norm.
Tsubaki,
26,
STEREOTYPES
In a recent newspaper poll 70 their children — but a similar
tend that I’m something else. herself because a plastic surgery j
iS under consideration ! Thi
_*.is is where a great deal of
per cent of the Japanese quesoperation on her face failed, po Itioned said they felt “superior” percentage believes there is not
racial diffe- identity
i
7 confusion takes place.
much of a generation gap.
^SvniJeT-treat€t^ negativelv or
I to Westerners.
lice said recently.
ly, but that it is a matter
(Conti on Paice 8)
By PAUL M. NAG;
(Pacific Citizen)
Canadian Writer Says "Gaijin Go
Home" Syndrome Still In Japan
Japan Company
Develops New
Welding Machine
Page 2
Tuesday, February 8 19
PAGE 2
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479 Queen St. V,’.,
Toronto 133, Ont.'
Phone 356-5005'
Second class mail
registration
number 0356
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Page 7
February 8. 1972
Tut
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
^3
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1972
Day
918 Bathurst St.
Religious School
Morning Service
Telephone:
Japanese Service
WORSHIP WHERE EAST MEETS WEST
11
^i
IB
s
Uss
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
ov?
South of Bloor
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1972
Japanese — Rev. C. Y. Horikoshi, 782-5267
Sunday Service and Sunday School 11:30 A.M.
English Rev. Ken Matsugu, 444-5159
A
warm
welcome
io
all.
r
Home
all:
HORI
REAL ESTATE
MEMBER OF TORONTO REAL ESTATE BOARD
14 Perivale Crss,
Phone: 261-5194
Scarborough
TOM’S TELEVISION & RADIO
RCA — ZENITH
SALES & SERVICE
1055 MIDLAND AVE. (ORIOLE PLAZA)
SCARBORO
Phone 759-1583
Between Eglinton & Lawrence Ave. East
Repairs To All Makes
«U9K
DANFORTH GARDENS
Famous Chinese Foods
^ ree local delivery over §3.00
off on pick-up orders over 82.00
Call now 699-1171 or 699-1172
5; t?X^V
Takara Jewelfers
"EAR PIERCING"
By Appointment
Mon. — Friday 9—6, Sat. 9—1.
Toronto, Suite 1294. Phone 363-0952
21 Dundas Sq
Eye. By Appointment
him Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe
sAVERN
TEMPURA
ALL MAJOR CRcDIT
CARDS HONOUKE
tONGE
I! to a good poU^f to
team* the EIGHT POLICt
Com mt
Father Knows Best?
Well, Sometimes
One of the occupational hazards of being a father (or■ a profeasor) is the temptation to play God. Being looked up to. •we find
it necessary to know all the answers — o/at least to pretend to.
Therefore, as parents or as professors, most of us have the tendency
to sound off before tne young on topics about which we don’t know
\ery much. In one way or another we try to maintain the fiction
tnat father knows best.
mas oeen a consiaeraoie. revolt a
authoritarian
iisure of the father, and this revolt is w
comic strip depicting domestic life. The f;
the legitimate butt of all jok
the victims of fa mil v
worked out by Mother and the children. Son
will recall Clarence Day’s
With Father,” whichi sums up
brilliantly and cruelly both father as
uthority figure and father
as damn fool. They are. of course, tl
same man.
One of the basic ideas taught
’
in
moral semantic: is that, no
one can know it all. Human
can enjoy life., which s a neverending quest, by increasin
knowledge and wisdom and
pi edictability through experience, and by keeping their minds open
ann flexible and hospitable to new information. General semantics
also teaches that emotional security based on anything other than
openness of mind and ability to learn and adapt to new situations
is illusory.
What, then, is the role of the fatiher or mother in this new
orientation? If, instead of acting like :in authority figure, the parent regrds himself simplv as a senior partner in a joint research
enterprise, he will have found a solution. He answers his children’s
questions with, “This much 1 know. This I've heard. This 1 don’t
know. Let’s investigate this whole problem together.” If he answers
questions in this way, he is preparing his children, step by step,
loi’ the day when they will have to get along without him.
Under such parental guidance it will not profoundly matter if
Father is misinformed or wrong- in some of his beliefs, because he
will have instilled in his children the curiosity to seek and find for
themselves, and he will have already implicitly told them that there
is no one place where they can expect to find all the answers. And
he will also have given them the ability to revise their opinions
with the passage of time and. the acquisition of new information.
One of tlie unhappy things about child psychologists is that
they make the job of being a parent seem hopelessly complex.
With vitamin deficiencies, Freudian theory, individual psychology
theory, Jungian theory, conditioned reflex theory gestalt theory,
and now g-eneral semantics theory to worry about, the problem of
bringing up children often seems just too much to contemplate.
without
least a Ph.D
But I really don't think one needs to worry so much. So much
of the literature about children is written on the basis of the study
of disturbed and neurotic children. Much of the emphasis in child
psychology has been on the disorders of psychological development.
Some people cannot read a. medical took without feeling the
symptoms of every disease described in the text. Similarly, when
people read books about the psychological disorders of children —
including extremely sick children
some readers cannot help
projecting their own experiences and their own children into the
case histories. .Anyone who does this can make himself extremely
miserable.
But there i also a lot of literature which is worth reading on
the subject of children in general — normal children, not sick
children. The implication I have found in much of this literature
is that children are amazingly hardy creatures. Hundreds of
mistakes can be made in the handling of children — and they
survive. Instead of being damaged, many of them just grow smar
ter. Given a reasonable amount of care and affection, especially
in their tenderest years, they grow, they mature, they develop
insight — sometimes, it seems, in spite of the best efforts of their
parents to gum things up.
Some of the finest young people I know were brought up by
parents whom I judged to be hopelessly incompetent. In one case
I remember — the children are grown up and married now---when the children were
I used to worry because their mother
was extremely lazy and shiftless. The mother was so shiftless that
the children learned to take care of themselves, so that they grew
up to be. the finest, most self-reliant young people you ever saw.
Another set of parents were over-solicitous to the point of sufLocating the child with .attention and love. However, the child
managed to escape suffocation by finding enough associates and
friends outside the home — and to chart his own course of selfdevelopment.
In other words, there are manv7 ways in which the child knows
better than we do what he need for his own development. So if
we provide the child' with the basic security of love, of attempted
understanding, and consistency of behavior towards him, we should
be able to relax. We should enjoy our children — and not bug them
any more than necessary.
William Wales Ltd.
Insurance Agents
2 C&rlton St. 10th floor
Toronto 2-A. Ont.
Phone 36S-4681
Buy and Sell
Your Home
Through
TOSH IWAI
MELL REAL ESTATE Ltd.
2006 Lawrence Ave. East
Scarboro, Ont.
Bus: 924-8153
Re
ERNEST JOMORI
Chartered Accountant
Suite
403
130 BLOOR ST. W.
RES. 231-0863
11 Ivy Lea Gres.
TORONTO
BUS. 783-4261
3101 Bathurst St.
MRS. SATOKO SATO
.All types of insurance
INSURANCE CO.
Framing
NISHIMURA
PICTURE FRAMES
1278 Yonge Street. Toronto 7. Ont
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
Tokio Nishimura
923-6877
KINO’S MARKET
Red & White
Food Store
Phone 355-2211
DANFORTH
SPORTING GOODS
Skate Sharpening
551 Danforth Ave.,
(neai Carlaw)
George Fukusaka
463-7400
OPEN FR1. UNTIL 9 P.M.
OF TORONTO
♦ FORMAL RENTALS
Custom Made Suits
& Trousers
TORONTO JAPANESE GOSPEL CHURCH
St. John's Presbyterian, Broadview at Simpson Ave.
SERVICES:
Sunday: Sunday School and Worship Services 2:00 P.M.
Tuesday: Prayer and Study Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
Friday: Yeung Peoples Christian Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
Phone Contact: Mr. S. Yokota 425-5128, Mr. ^H. Yoshida 4C1-1SK.
-
437 Danforth Ave. Toronto
Tel. 46^-8104
Tut
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
^3
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1972
Day
918 Bathurst St.
Religious School
Morning Service
Telephone:
Japanese Service
WORSHIP WHERE EAST MEETS WEST
11
^i
IB
s
Uss
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
ov?
South of Bloor
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1972
Japanese — Rev. C. Y. Horikoshi, 782-5267
Sunday Service and Sunday School 11:30 A.M.
English Rev. Ken Matsugu, 444-5159
A
warm
welcome
io
all.
r
Home
all:
HORI
REAL ESTATE
MEMBER OF TORONTO REAL ESTATE BOARD
14 Perivale Crss,
Phone: 261-5194
Scarborough
TOM’S TELEVISION & RADIO
RCA — ZENITH
SALES & SERVICE
1055 MIDLAND AVE. (ORIOLE PLAZA)
SCARBORO
Phone 759-1583
Between Eglinton & Lawrence Ave. East
Repairs To All Makes
«U9K
DANFORTH GARDENS
Famous Chinese Foods
^ ree local delivery over §3.00
off on pick-up orders over 82.00
Call now 699-1171 or 699-1172
5; t?X^V
Takara Jewelfers
"EAR PIERCING"
By Appointment
Mon. — Friday 9—6, Sat. 9—1.
Toronto, Suite 1294. Phone 363-0952
21 Dundas Sq
Eye. By Appointment
him Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe
sAVERN
TEMPURA
ALL MAJOR CRcDIT
CARDS HONOUKE
tONGE
I! to a good poU^f to
team* the EIGHT POLICt
Com mt
Father Knows Best?
Well, Sometimes
One of the occupational hazards of being a father (or■ a profeasor) is the temptation to play God. Being looked up to. •we find
it necessary to know all the answers — o/at least to pretend to.
Therefore, as parents or as professors, most of us have the tendency
to sound off before tne young on topics about which we don’t know
\ery much. In one way or another we try to maintain the fiction
tnat father knows best.
mas oeen a consiaeraoie. revolt a
authoritarian
iisure of the father, and this revolt is w
comic strip depicting domestic life. The f;
the legitimate butt of all jok
the victims of fa mil v
worked out by Mother and the children. Son
will recall Clarence Day’s
With Father,” whichi sums up
brilliantly and cruelly both father as
uthority figure and father
as damn fool. They are. of course, tl
same man.
One of the basic ideas taught
’
in
moral semantic: is that, no
one can know it all. Human
can enjoy life., which s a neverending quest, by increasin
knowledge and wisdom and
pi edictability through experience, and by keeping their minds open
ann flexible and hospitable to new information. General semantics
also teaches that emotional security based on anything other than
openness of mind and ability to learn and adapt to new situations
is illusory.
What, then, is the role of the fatiher or mother in this new
orientation? If, instead of acting like :in authority figure, the parent regrds himself simplv as a senior partner in a joint research
enterprise, he will have found a solution. He answers his children’s
questions with, “This much 1 know. This I've heard. This 1 don’t
know. Let’s investigate this whole problem together.” If he answers
questions in this way, he is preparing his children, step by step,
loi’ the day when they will have to get along without him.
Under such parental guidance it will not profoundly matter if
Father is misinformed or wrong- in some of his beliefs, because he
will have instilled in his children the curiosity to seek and find for
themselves, and he will have already implicitly told them that there
is no one place where they can expect to find all the answers. And
he will also have given them the ability to revise their opinions
with the passage of time and. the acquisition of new information.
One of tlie unhappy things about child psychologists is that
they make the job of being a parent seem hopelessly complex.
With vitamin deficiencies, Freudian theory, individual psychology
theory, Jungian theory, conditioned reflex theory gestalt theory,
and now g-eneral semantics theory to worry about, the problem of
bringing up children often seems just too much to contemplate.
without
least a Ph.D
But I really don't think one needs to worry so much. So much
of the literature about children is written on the basis of the study
of disturbed and neurotic children. Much of the emphasis in child
psychology has been on the disorders of psychological development.
Some people cannot read a. medical took without feeling the
symptoms of every disease described in the text. Similarly, when
people read books about the psychological disorders of children —
including extremely sick children
some readers cannot help
projecting their own experiences and their own children into the
case histories. .Anyone who does this can make himself extremely
miserable.
But there i also a lot of literature which is worth reading on
the subject of children in general — normal children, not sick
children. The implication I have found in much of this literature
is that children are amazingly hardy creatures. Hundreds of
mistakes can be made in the handling of children — and they
survive. Instead of being damaged, many of them just grow smar
ter. Given a reasonable amount of care and affection, especially
in their tenderest years, they grow, they mature, they develop
insight — sometimes, it seems, in spite of the best efforts of their
parents to gum things up.
Some of the finest young people I know were brought up by
parents whom I judged to be hopelessly incompetent. In one case
I remember — the children are grown up and married now---when the children were
I used to worry because their mother
was extremely lazy and shiftless. The mother was so shiftless that
the children learned to take care of themselves, so that they grew
up to be. the finest, most self-reliant young people you ever saw.
Another set of parents were over-solicitous to the point of sufLocating the child with .attention and love. However, the child
managed to escape suffocation by finding enough associates and
friends outside the home — and to chart his own course of selfdevelopment.
In other words, there are manv7 ways in which the child knows
better than we do what he need for his own development. So if
we provide the child' with the basic security of love, of attempted
understanding, and consistency of behavior towards him, we should
be able to relax. We should enjoy our children — and not bug them
any more than necessary.
William Wales Ltd.
Insurance Agents
2 C&rlton St. 10th floor
Toronto 2-A. Ont.
Phone 36S-4681
Buy and Sell
Your Home
Through
TOSH IWAI
MELL REAL ESTATE Ltd.
2006 Lawrence Ave. East
Scarboro, Ont.
Bus: 924-8153
Re
ERNEST JOMORI
Chartered Accountant
Suite
403
130 BLOOR ST. W.
RES. 231-0863
11 Ivy Lea Gres.
TORONTO
BUS. 783-4261
3101 Bathurst St.
MRS. SATOKO SATO
.All types of insurance
INSURANCE CO.
Framing
NISHIMURA
PICTURE FRAMES
1278 Yonge Street. Toronto 7. Ont
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
Tokio Nishimura
923-6877
KINO’S MARKET
Red & White
Food Store
Phone 355-2211
DANFORTH
SPORTING GOODS
Skate Sharpening
551 Danforth Ave.,
(neai Carlaw)
George Fukusaka
463-7400
OPEN FR1. UNTIL 9 P.M.
OF TORONTO
♦ FORMAL RENTALS
Custom Made Suits
& Trousers
TORONTO JAPANESE GOSPEL CHURCH
St. John's Presbyterian, Broadview at Simpson Ave.
SERVICES:
Sunday: Sunday School and Worship Services 2:00 P.M.
Tuesday: Prayer and Study Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
Friday: Yeung Peoples Christian Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
Phone Contact: Mr. S. Yokota 425-5128, Mr. ^H. Yoshida 4C1-1SK.
-
437 Danforth Ave. Toronto
Tel. 46^-8104
Page 8
Tuesday,. February 8, 1979
(Continued from Page lb
Ethnic Pluralism
(Continued From Page 1)
[
wer
from which Pl di or it ies ;
isei want
Second class mail registration
31
hist, commenting on
K
can
be
heard
and significant in- ।
number 0368
,rt of thd
ireu a
roads can be made
into
the :
re
dominant 2 jority
A member oi rUhnic Press A.ssoc,^.
established powe ■ structure.
an
Thus many
of Ontario.
It 1 = for the ake or the opher. He will back on their Japanese heritage
anv
s the oppressed
PUBLISHED ON EVERY TUESDAY
socialist, and and have attempted, to disasso pressor as well J as well as the
AND FRIDAY
—
the
majority.
ciate themselves with anything
and conceive Japanese. They sincerely believe minority. In this rt gard', it is
SUBSCRIPTION
worki is
nee can best be Inecessarv to identify with all
“ tropic of older generations
na
S9.00 a Year
in
order
d e - a c c e n tu a t i n g anv ; oppressed minorities
to
poetic nor re
always try to
speak
English
mutual
huwill be a
thought.
whenever they
to talk to
:
manizing
process
taxing- place.
T. UMEZUKI Publisher
One-Way Deal
of more significance is
but
the
foreigners in
K. C. TSUMURA
To
strengthen
one
.
ethnic
abamounts to
What th
that lie is intentionally
young pcople in the same situa- the
English
Section Editor
1
group
without
consideration
of
the majority
to be a siiecialist in sorption b
refu
lion :
KEN
MORI
Race.
others
is
ck writes in
mo nd V» . .
Japanese Section Editor
category tratification with the
these foreigners in quite a na
wer” (1963):
always on top.
ir ami murder
tural manner.
in
•• Assimilation is the partial or ■ dominant group of
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
subcultural
Fragmentation
"Middle-aged or■ older peoph
Toronto 133, Ont.
anu
lessen the leverage
A 2-1-year-old
EMpire 6-5005
inviting former member of a radical stu- mint groups. Assimilation, thus, Ao bring about mutualitv.
tend to hesitate about
:
ir homes, bu
is usually a one-way proposition, |
^ strategy of any dominant
:
with
very
little
reciprocity,
of
hnajority
would be to accentuate
the younger
lis girlfriend in an aparttradition.:
value
hange
of
!
the
divisions
between ethnic mieigners as 1
treat anybody ment said: "Living together is
customs. The minority group i norities to lessen the power base
more economical and convenient
peculiar and foreign for meaningful action. Simul
a noted
Shuji Terayan
iving separately in smaller
a price of complete taneous action is to strengthen
at a panel discussion i apartment rooms and
poet.
. . .
cooking i merger with, and disappearance
Business Opportunity
power of discriminated minorities
into the dominant social structu- so as to bring about mutuality
sahi Hall in Tokyo, lour meals separately.”
held it
re.
for all groups and especially in S3IALL Japanese restaurant for
Dec.
‘he young people like
that this relation with the larger majority. sale in downtown Montreal low
friend
Many sincerely
His 2-1-year-old
rock music because it has the
what ethnic minor- This is the primary reason for rent with a 5 years lease. Will
together
id: “We began
leave Canada soon, and would
toget
herness
which
of
ities must do in American soci- racialI caucuses as I see it.
, as an
ex
sell to a reasonable offer. Ideal
ct'- — become fused into the
they might feel in a commune
Initial
Reactions
g our own
ment in
for young couple. 3451 Saintwhole.
and also because
is the anti
a
development
of
ethnic
Denis
Montreal 842-5555
'There
are
several
fallacies
to
i
readymade
bei onnter
thesis of classic;
music which
.and
pluralistic
strategy
this
stance:
One
is
the
denial
pride
of societv.
havioral
Domestic Help Wanted
represents to them the authority
that the majority will not rec- mav on the surface be interpret?
dominant
"I
did
ognize the difference. and that ed as a retreat in race relations MOTHER'S helper, baby sitting an
of the establishment."
|
that girls in time
of necessity or com- and a strategy that will lead to light housekeeping. Live in. Phon
notion
in
Osamu Kitayama. 25. said in
consciousness 223-6165 (Toronto).
petition will accent the differ- a greater racial
married by
his best-selling- book “Sasurai.and
vision
eventuating
in an outenees.
History
is
constantly
lookye. nor did I wish to repeat 1
$400. monthly salary for expe
pegoats, and racial and-out racial chauvinism.
bito no Komoriuia" (Lullaby of
ing for.
rienced
English-speaking house
mv mot her';a life, who
! difference; is a most convenient
Whites who encounter it, as keeper with good cooking and
; ha vimg to make
handle for expediency.
i well as certain established Japa- serving for
not accept anything
Port Credit
a
r her husband and children/’
■ nese Americans, will
tend to business
Dehumanizing
Housekeeper
couple.
but this attitude is wron
Osamu
Kitayama
supported
Secondly, this stance necesst- ; react with surprise and indigna- also gets her own three and a
ise our real heart md soul
half small room apartment with
to the ; tion.
e theory of trial ma riages, as tales the acquiescense
in
an
How
can
the
Japanese
AmeriTV. Apply Box 10, The New
: terms and authority of the ma
vacated bv noted
cannot
area which
worked so hard Canadian, with references.
, jority. usually resulting in a cans who
-Margaret; subservient posture and
in to
dehu- for what they have today undo
all that they have gained by re
!
Mead.
that.
■
manizat
ion.
all
•
manization
"W
read many book
denial of treating back into their ethnic
Thirdly it is
Yamaha Music Course
persons
have
;
any more
we once did, be
subculture?
man's
cs
ential
God-given
dig'
their
For Children
cause> life
ast and there i
; nity as a person with a unique
They have paid the supreme
nd
once
they
have
4 to 8 years
i background to the impoverish- price, from .a position of extreme
no time to do hi. 1 nforniat hm i
over 1
ige of 20 thev can decide . ment of the majority’s cultural
World
Famous
injustice they have
million
graduates.
richness
and
mature
pluralistic
really suited.
proven themselves as worthy and
new media
Free Film demonstration or.
ippreciation
of life and mutuali- deserving first class citizens of
Kitayama said:
mar
See a class in operation
y within differences.
America. As a group they can be
iges should be
an
any
day.
an
example
to
all
other
minori
To concede, to the assimilation
LLoyd Edwards
for
teen-r
like ; strategy and deny one’s essential ties to be educated, work hard,
behave
and
attain.
It
is
irrational
dentity
is
to
substitute
an
ex
■
education.
mrws media
Yamaha
u a , . • ,
pedient, secondary measure
to to accentuate their ethnic identi
along with
It .1 » put into pndKt, the ;he ideal and higi;er
] of
Music Academy
fications again.
informal iom
myth of virginity
will disap- ; sonhood and humanness. It is to
231 Danforth Ave.
Anti-Racist Racism
a
pear."
forfeit one's autonomy as a per461-2468
Enrol today
The answer to these reactions
i son with integrity and wholesome
is
simple:
finding
one
’
s
identity
-------------- self esteem. It is reacting and
; responding to the expectations of is not entirely irrational; it is
existentialist
one’s environment and pressures what the French
philosopher
Je.an-Paul
Sartre, i
rather than being innermotivatspeaking
of
the.
Blacks,
calls j
ed.
“anti-racist racism.”
Chinese Foods
311 NOR ITY STRATEGY
‘•'Before differences
can
be
THIS STRATEGY of ethnic abolished, they must be respectpluralism for the Japanese Ame ed: given a past history, neither
ricans is not for the perpetuation Negroes nor whites will learn
Rd. (between
of
customs, traditions, etc., but to respect blackness unless the
Toronto. Ont.
Danfort h
Kingston Rd.)
basically for the
ke of a posi- virtues of being- black are em
five identitv.
phasized and over-emphasized.
SHOP
Nancy Ariza 261-7040
Once
racial
differences
are
the
larger
society
Free Deliv
maintain
own
pluralism,
the
respected,
however,
people
can
OHAG1 N OSIH SHI
is the proceed to ignore them, or trans
On Thurs.. Fri. X Saturdays
only viable position
to
take. cend them.’’
733 Danforth Ave..
Open Sundays 10 A.M.-6 TAI.
Gordon Allport concluded in his
Toronto
Whole rationale
1954 stw
“The
Nature.
of
BEHIND THE whole rational
Prejudice
of
ethnic pluralism is the basic
“When tne
Phone Store 463-342b
dominant group)
marked prejudice it is fa- perspective cf what it means to
Home 469-0293
vorable neither to cultural pla be a person.
ml ism nor to
If one is satisfied
issimilation.
It
in
says in i
lifeWe don’t want making- his way through
Japanese Food
All Forms Of
you to be
u ?. but you must accommodation, not ‘•rocking-theDeliver Evenings
not be different.'
boat”.— for "expediency^
and Saturdays
.and
nority to do?”
qualified acceptance, then there
J he. minority can only deter is no need to emphasize one s
mine its own dost inv bv reco0- identity in terms of race or as
mm ng its identity and by devel- a person.
9wn self-respect and
. However, if one believes in the
Realto
to bring about acceptance dig-nity of personhood, and that
on an
all men are created equal and
Eglint on Ave. East
759-S317
deserve the right to pursue fre
3Iutual Respect
r determined one's iden- edom and happiness, then ethnic
affirming what one re- pluralism, despite its demand for
to be. is the onlv viable
then .wisdom must be courage
alternative.
trategies and
power leverage' to
bring- .J111? strategy of ethnic plural
abor
and
respect ism is the . method by which the
Income Tax Reduction
within
Japanese American
pressed, minoritie.
Retirement Income
can become
Family Protection
only for ethnocentric iden- authentic persons
nd provide
all
men
Disability
Pay Cheque
:
well
as
to
but to develop a
Mortgage Redemption
This is the
historical sig
College^ Tuition Fund
i of such' a
stance in A:
societv and
— ° —
in the world
EXCLUSIVE COVERAGE
in closing. I might-..add. that*
; :‘-r,nie,rin'iri? ft life is not only
NATIONAL LIFE
•e. V est
LB. MATSUDA
425-5211
: ci luc nope ot justice and eouali- '
block W
OF CANADA
: uy among men, but in the strugTORONTO
. PHONE FOR SAMPLES
TORONTO
;
S
e
achievement.
which
is
10
St.
Marv St„ Toronto
651-8060
Res. 621-1989 | the battleneld where one becomes
923-0916
447-s9^
s the person one is meant to be. I
“Rut their way of life is a lit
tle different from that of Amer
ican and European youth in that
they sometimes try to be purely
Japanese, for example by com
promising with their olders.
CLASSIFIED
O.K. CAFE
Sandown
Market
GIFT
Auto-Fire-Life
Mils Kuroda
Kiyo Tamura
PHOTOGRAPHY
COUNTER
INFLATION
BY PLANNED
MONEY
MANAGEMENT
WEDDING SPECIALISTS
MITS TANOUYE
(Continued from Page lb
Ethnic Pluralism
(Continued From Page 1)
[
wer
from which Pl di or it ies ;
isei want
Second class mail registration
31
hist, commenting on
K
can
be
heard
and significant in- ।
number 0368
,rt of thd
ireu a
roads can be made
into
the :
re
dominant 2 jority
A member oi rUhnic Press A.ssoc,^.
established powe ■ structure.
an
Thus many
of Ontario.
It 1 = for the ake or the opher. He will back on their Japanese heritage
anv
s the oppressed
PUBLISHED ON EVERY TUESDAY
socialist, and and have attempted, to disasso pressor as well J as well as the
AND FRIDAY
—
the
majority.
ciate themselves with anything
and conceive Japanese. They sincerely believe minority. In this rt gard', it is
SUBSCRIPTION
worki is
nee can best be Inecessarv to identify with all
“ tropic of older generations
na
S9.00 a Year
in
order
d e - a c c e n tu a t i n g anv ; oppressed minorities
to
poetic nor re
always try to
speak
English
mutual
huwill be a
thought.
whenever they
to talk to
:
manizing
process
taxing- place.
T. UMEZUKI Publisher
One-Way Deal
of more significance is
but
the
foreigners in
K. C. TSUMURA
To
strengthen
one
.
ethnic
abamounts to
What th
that lie is intentionally
young pcople in the same situa- the
English
Section Editor
1
group
without
consideration
of
the majority
to be a siiecialist in sorption b
refu
lion :
KEN
MORI
Race.
others
is
ck writes in
mo nd V» . .
Japanese Section Editor
category tratification with the
these foreigners in quite a na
wer” (1963):
always on top.
ir ami murder
tural manner.
in
•• Assimilation is the partial or ■ dominant group of
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
subcultural
Fragmentation
"Middle-aged or■ older peoph
Toronto 133, Ont.
anu
lessen the leverage
A 2-1-year-old
EMpire 6-5005
inviting former member of a radical stu- mint groups. Assimilation, thus, Ao bring about mutualitv.
tend to hesitate about
:
ir homes, bu
is usually a one-way proposition, |
^ strategy of any dominant
:
with
very
little
reciprocity,
of
hnajority
would be to accentuate
the younger
lis girlfriend in an aparttradition.:
value
hange
of
!
the
divisions
between ethnic mieigners as 1
treat anybody ment said: "Living together is
customs. The minority group i norities to lessen the power base
more economical and convenient
peculiar and foreign for meaningful action. Simul
a noted
Shuji Terayan
iving separately in smaller
a price of complete taneous action is to strengthen
at a panel discussion i apartment rooms and
poet.
. . .
cooking i merger with, and disappearance
Business Opportunity
power of discriminated minorities
into the dominant social structu- so as to bring about mutuality
sahi Hall in Tokyo, lour meals separately.”
held it
re.
for all groups and especially in S3IALL Japanese restaurant for
Dec.
‘he young people like
that this relation with the larger majority. sale in downtown Montreal low
friend
Many sincerely
His 2-1-year-old
rock music because it has the
what ethnic minor- This is the primary reason for rent with a 5 years lease. Will
together
id: “We began
leave Canada soon, and would
toget
herness
which
of
ities must do in American soci- racialI caucuses as I see it.
, as an
ex
sell to a reasonable offer. Ideal
ct'- — become fused into the
they might feel in a commune
Initial
Reactions
g our own
ment in
for young couple. 3451 Saintwhole.
and also because
is the anti
a
development
of
ethnic
Denis
Montreal 842-5555
'There
are
several
fallacies
to
i
readymade
bei onnter
thesis of classic;
music which
.and
pluralistic
strategy
this
stance:
One
is
the
denial
pride
of societv.
havioral
Domestic Help Wanted
represents to them the authority
that the majority will not rec- mav on the surface be interpret?
dominant
"I
did
ognize the difference. and that ed as a retreat in race relations MOTHER'S helper, baby sitting an
of the establishment."
|
that girls in time
of necessity or com- and a strategy that will lead to light housekeeping. Live in. Phon
notion
in
Osamu Kitayama. 25. said in
consciousness 223-6165 (Toronto).
petition will accent the differ- a greater racial
married by
his best-selling- book “Sasurai.and
vision
eventuating
in an outenees.
History
is
constantly
lookye. nor did I wish to repeat 1
$400. monthly salary for expe
pegoats, and racial and-out racial chauvinism.
bito no Komoriuia" (Lullaby of
ing for.
rienced
English-speaking house
mv mot her';a life, who
! difference; is a most convenient
Whites who encounter it, as keeper with good cooking and
; ha vimg to make
handle for expediency.
i well as certain established Japa- serving for
not accept anything
Port Credit
a
r her husband and children/’
■ nese Americans, will
tend to business
Dehumanizing
Housekeeper
couple.
but this attitude is wron
Osamu
Kitayama
supported
Secondly, this stance necesst- ; react with surprise and indigna- also gets her own three and a
ise our real heart md soul
half small room apartment with
to the ; tion.
e theory of trial ma riages, as tales the acquiescense
in
an
How
can
the
Japanese
AmeriTV. Apply Box 10, The New
: terms and authority of the ma
vacated bv noted
cannot
area which
worked so hard Canadian, with references.
, jority. usually resulting in a cans who
-Margaret; subservient posture and
in to
dehu- for what they have today undo
all that they have gained by re
!
Mead.
that.
■
manizat
ion.
all
•
manization
"W
read many book
denial of treating back into their ethnic
Thirdly it is
Yamaha Music Course
persons
have
;
any more
we once did, be
subculture?
man's
cs
ential
God-given
dig'
their
For Children
cause> life
ast and there i
; nity as a person with a unique
They have paid the supreme
nd
once
they
have
4 to 8 years
i background to the impoverish- price, from .a position of extreme
no time to do hi. 1 nforniat hm i
over 1
ige of 20 thev can decide . ment of the majority’s cultural
World
Famous
injustice they have
million
graduates.
richness
and
mature
pluralistic
really suited.
proven themselves as worthy and
new media
Free Film demonstration or.
ippreciation
of life and mutuali- deserving first class citizens of
Kitayama said:
mar
See a class in operation
y within differences.
America. As a group they can be
iges should be
an
any
day.
an
example
to
all
other
minori
To concede, to the assimilation
LLoyd Edwards
for
teen-r
like ; strategy and deny one’s essential ties to be educated, work hard,
behave
and
attain.
It
is
irrational
dentity
is
to
substitute
an
ex
■
education.
mrws media
Yamaha
u a , . • ,
pedient, secondary measure
to to accentuate their ethnic identi
along with
It .1 » put into pndKt, the ;he ideal and higi;er
] of
Music Academy
fications again.
informal iom
myth of virginity
will disap- ; sonhood and humanness. It is to
231 Danforth Ave.
Anti-Racist Racism
a
pear."
forfeit one's autonomy as a per461-2468
Enrol today
The answer to these reactions
i son with integrity and wholesome
is
simple:
finding
one
’
s
identity
-------------- self esteem. It is reacting and
; responding to the expectations of is not entirely irrational; it is
existentialist
one’s environment and pressures what the French
philosopher
Je.an-Paul
Sartre, i
rather than being innermotivatspeaking
of
the.
Blacks,
calls j
ed.
“anti-racist racism.”
Chinese Foods
311 NOR ITY STRATEGY
‘•'Before differences
can
be
THIS STRATEGY of ethnic abolished, they must be respectpluralism for the Japanese Ame ed: given a past history, neither
ricans is not for the perpetuation Negroes nor whites will learn
Rd. (between
of
customs, traditions, etc., but to respect blackness unless the
Toronto. Ont.
Danfort h
Kingston Rd.)
basically for the
ke of a posi- virtues of being- black are em
five identitv.
phasized and over-emphasized.
SHOP
Nancy Ariza 261-7040
Once
racial
differences
are
the
larger
society
Free Deliv
maintain
own
pluralism,
the
respected,
however,
people
can
OHAG1 N OSIH SHI
is the proceed to ignore them, or trans
On Thurs.. Fri. X Saturdays
only viable position
to
take. cend them.’’
733 Danforth Ave..
Open Sundays 10 A.M.-6 TAI.
Gordon Allport concluded in his
Toronto
Whole rationale
1954 stw
“The
Nature.
of
BEHIND THE whole rational
Prejudice
of
ethnic pluralism is the basic
“When tne
Phone Store 463-342b
dominant group)
marked prejudice it is fa- perspective cf what it means to
Home 469-0293
vorable neither to cultural pla be a person.
ml ism nor to
If one is satisfied
issimilation.
It
in
says in i
lifeWe don’t want making- his way through
Japanese Food
All Forms Of
you to be
u ?. but you must accommodation, not ‘•rocking-theDeliver Evenings
not be different.'
boat”.— for "expediency^
and Saturdays
.and
nority to do?”
qualified acceptance, then there
J he. minority can only deter is no need to emphasize one s
mine its own dost inv bv reco0- identity in terms of race or as
mm ng its identity and by devel- a person.
9wn self-respect and
. However, if one believes in the
Realto
to bring about acceptance dig-nity of personhood, and that
on an
all men are created equal and
Eglint on Ave. East
759-S317
deserve the right to pursue fre
3Iutual Respect
r determined one's iden- edom and happiness, then ethnic
affirming what one re- pluralism, despite its demand for
to be. is the onlv viable
then .wisdom must be courage
alternative.
trategies and
power leverage' to
bring- .J111? strategy of ethnic plural
abor
and
respect ism is the . method by which the
Income Tax Reduction
within
Japanese American
pressed, minoritie.
Retirement Income
can become
Family Protection
only for ethnocentric iden- authentic persons
nd provide
all
men
Disability
Pay Cheque
:
well
as
to
but to develop a
Mortgage Redemption
This is the
historical sig
College^ Tuition Fund
i of such' a
stance in A:
societv and
— ° —
in the world
EXCLUSIVE COVERAGE
in closing. I might-..add. that*
; :‘-r,nie,rin'iri? ft life is not only
NATIONAL LIFE
•e. V est
LB. MATSUDA
425-5211
: ci luc nope ot justice and eouali- '
block W
OF CANADA
: uy among men, but in the strugTORONTO
. PHONE FOR SAMPLES
TORONTO
;
S
e
achievement.
which
is
10
St.
Marv St„ Toronto
651-8060
Res. 621-1989 | the battleneld where one becomes
923-0916
447-s9^
s the person one is meant to be. I
“Rut their way of life is a lit
tle different from that of Amer
ican and European youth in that
they sometimes try to be purely
Japanese, for example by com
promising with their olders.
CLASSIFIED
O.K. CAFE
Sandown
Market
GIFT
Auto-Fire-Life
Mils Kuroda
Kiyo Tamura
PHOTOGRAPHY
COUNTER
INFLATION
BY PLANNED
MONEY
MANAGEMENT
WEDDING SPECIALISTS
MITS TANOUYE