2018 / Pasadena Buddhist Temple to host “Growing up Sansei” Community Event, April 28

Jean Toshima (Temple President), Soji Kashiwagi (playwright), Shelley Shinmoto (event chair).

Forwarded for Pasadena Buddhist Temple

“Growing up Sansei,” a community event and dialogue about our Japanese American upbringing, will take place on Saturday, April 28 beginning at 2 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. at the Pasadena Buddhist Temple’s Sakai Hall located at 1993 Glen Avenue, Pasadena.

Presented by the Pasadena Buddhist Temple in partnership with the Grateful Crane Ensemble, “Growing up Sansei,” combines a live play reading of Soji Kashiwagi’s comedy/drama, “Garage Door Opener,” and a community dialogue facilitated by Dr. Satsuki Ina, a Northern California-based psychotherapist who specializes in cross-cultural counseling and trauma.

“It’s what I call my “Japanese American dysfunctional family play,” said Kashiwagi, playwright and Executive Producer of the Grateful Crane Ensemble.  “Just the mention of this has brought smiles and sometimes hysterical laughter from baby-boomer Sansei who grew up in the post-war JA family environment.  Our Growing up Ssansei events delve into why this topic resonates so deeply.”

In 2016, the San Fernando JACL hosted the first Growing up Ssansei event at the San Fernando Japanese American Community Center with 300 people—most of whom were Sansei—in attendance.

In 2017, 400 showed up in Sacramento, 425 in San Jose and 400 in San Francisco.  In total, over 2,000 people state-wide have attended the event thus far­.

In the play, the audience meets a Sansei brother and sister faced with the daunting task of cleaning out their parent’s garage and house after they have passed away.

As they sift through dozens of tofu containers, kamaboko boards and broccoli rubber bands, they begin to uncover items from their past they knew nothing about.  In the process, they begin to gain a better understanding of their parents—and themselves—by the items their mom and dad left behind.

Dr. Ina will be on hand to discuss these issues as well as the trauma Japanese Americans faced in camp, and how it manifested itself in the ways the Nisei brought up their Sansei children.

For many years, she has conducted groups for Japanese Americans who, like herself, were children in camp.  She has seen first-hand how trauma has affected the Nisei, and how it was unknowingly transmitted to the Sansei and subsequent generations.

The cast for the reading includes long-time Grateful Crane members Haruye Ioka, Dian Kobayashi, Kurt Kuniyoshi, Shaun Shimoda, with stage directions read by Ping Wu.  Members of Grateful Crane’s Yonsei acapella group, “The Grateful 4,” will also be on hand to sing a couple of 60’s/70’s era songs to set the tone for the reading.

General admission is $35 for the reading, followed by discussion and dinner.  For reservations, visit www.PasadenaBuddhistTemple.org or request an order form by calling the Temple at (626) 798-4781.