Please note these dates if you are interested in attending any of the following events.
Jan. 19, 7:00 PM
Merrill-Cazier Library, Room 101
A reading and discussion will be held with former Oregon poet laureate Lawson Inada who was interned with
his parents in camps in Fresno , Arkansas and Colorado .
Jan. 20, 6:00 PM – 9:00 PM
Rio Gallery
The opening reception will include a screening of the
short documentary Days of Waiting, a reading by poet Lawson Inada,
recognition of survivors and descendants of the internment and an ikebana arrangement
by Theresa Sueoka. Days of Waiting is
about the experience of Estelle Peck Ishigo, a Caucasian woman who followed her
husband into internment. This Steven Okazaki film received an Oscar for best documentary
short subject.
Feb. 3, 7:00 PM
20 S West Temple , Salt Lake City
A screening of the documentary Unfinished Business, also by Okazaki
and a best documentary feature Oscar nominee. It will be followed by a panel discussion with Lawson Inada and civil
rights activist Mark Alvarez. Unfinished
Business is about three young Japanese Americans who refused to obey
Executive Order 9066, the Wartime Relocation Act.
Feb. 4, 4:00 PM
20 S West Temple , Salt Lake City
A screening will be held of American Pastime, a fictional account of the establishment of a
baseball league in an internment camp based on the in-camp league started by
Chiura Obata, who also founded the art school at Topaz.
Feb. 4, 7:00 PM
211 W 100 S, Salt Lake City
Plan-B
will perform a reading of BLOCK 8, an
original play about a young Japanese man struggling with the decision to enlist
in the military to prove his loyalty to America and who befriends a
librarian at Topaz whose son is fighting overseas. The production enjoyed a
sold-out, world-premiere run at Plan-B in 2009 in conjunction with Day of
Remembrance events. The reading features the original cast of Anita Booher (Ada ) and Bryan Kido (Ken)
directed by Jerry Rapier. The production will be followed by a post-show
discussion with the cast, director, playwright Matthew Ivan Bennett and poet
Lawson Inada. Online reservations are encouraged for the reading of BLOCK 8 and
can be made by clicking Script-In-Hand Series at planbtheatre.org.
The special events are free and open to the public. Stay tuned for additional events,
updates and opportunities to join the conversation!
At the Lawson Inada lecture reading on the 19th, we wrote short poems about the day. Loved everyone's. Here's mine:
ReplyDeleteIn the dark and the rain
we gather and wait
for the sun
He suggested writing a daily haiku