Summary of the December 12 Lecture
"Japan in Canadian Culture", by Dr.
John Howes
On the initiative of Canadian diplomat Timothy Skye, the December meeting
was held in the auditorium of the Canadian embassy, and hosted by Mrs. Catherine
Campbell, wife of Ambassador Donald W. Campbell. The speaker was the noted
Canadian Japanologist Dr. John F. Howes, and his subject was "Japan
in Canadian Culture". Our President, Dr. Ronald Suleski, opened the
meeting by expressing our appreciation for being invited to one of the loveliest
embassy buildings in Tokyo and greeting the other persons present at the
embassy's invitation, and then proceeded to a number of announcements, beginning
with the sad news of the death of Council member Alfred
Smoular. He then gave the floor to Mrs. Campbell to introduce our speaker.
Dr. Howes began his presentation by saying that he proposed to give instances
of the influence of Japan on Canada as gleaned from five decades of research.
There were two monuments in Vancouver, B.C. which typified these influences.
One was the cenotaph in Stanley Park, which commemorated the Japanese immigrants
who fought for Canada in World War I. The second was the memorial garden
to Nitobe Inazoh.
The first Canadian to encounter Japanese culture was Ranald MacDonald, who
was born in 1824 at what later became Astoria, Oregon, at the mouth of the
Columbia River, and died on an Indian reservation near Spokane, Washington,
seventy years later. When a young man, he made his way to Japan and became
the first English teacher here. What we know of his life is contained in
his diary, which was not published until nearly thirty years after his death.
His father was an officer of the Hudson's Bay Company, which could reach
the Pacific coast by water with just a few portages. His mother was the
daughter of an important Indian ruler, but she died soon after he was born,
and he grew up thinking his father's second wife was his own mother, until
he was refused by a girl he proposed to, on the grounds of his race. After
going to school in Winnipeg, Manitoba, and working as an apprentice in Ontario,
he travelled down the Mississippi, and then became a sailor and, after a
number of voyages, sailed to Hawaii in 1845, and eventually to the west
coast of Hokkaido in northern Japan. There, in August 1848, he asked to
be set adrift in a small boat. He was picked up and taken under guard to
Nagasaki in southern Japan, where he was kept in confinement until he could
be sent home on the next Western ship. For seven months he acted as teacher
to a class of fourteen interpreters, the best of whom later interpreted
for Commodore Perry. MacDonald was always grateful to the Japanese for their
generous treatment of him, and Japanese sources confirm that he behaved
as a gentleman (unlike other sailors who had been washed up) and appealed
to the common humanity of the Japanese. Various entries in his diary indicate
his belief in the dignity of all individuals and his respect for all those
with whom he came in contact.
He cannot be said to have exerted any influence from Japan on Canadian culture,
but the same cannot be said of the next group of people that Dr. Howes spoke
about, the Canadian missionaries. By the time MacDonald died in 1894 the
Canadian Pacific Railway was running, and steamship lines linked Canada
to Yokohama. The missionaries came to spread their faith, but the scale
of their activities also affected secular history (and even dietary habits
- we are told that Canadians first introduced apples to northeast Japan).
The three "Eiwa" schools, in Tokyo, Shizuoka and Kofu, were pioneered
by Canadian missionaries, and Canadians participated in founding St. Luke's
Hospital, Tokyo Women's Christian College, and International Christian University.
Notable names in the early days were Daniel Norman in Nagano, and Percival
Powles in Niigata. The missionary activity in Japan was supported by the
rapid increase in disposable income in Canada, and the growth of reliable
means of transportation (the quickest route from London to Japan was by
way of Canada). Early missionaries, such as Duncan Macrae in Korea, who
defended his many converts against the excesses of Japanese colonial administrators,
and Martha J. Cunningham, who helped establish Shizuoka Eiwa School for
Girls, were supported individually by church members at home, and later
missionaries were financed by mission boards, which developed as part of
the Protestant missionary movement. These boards channelled the donations
of individual church members, and examined those who presented themselves
as candidates for the mission field. Missionaries worked six years "in
the field", and then had one year's furlough at home; this year was
not a rest, however, as they had to make the rounds of the various congregations
supporting them.
The relevance of the missionaries to Dr. Howes' theme lay firstly in the
knowledge about Japan that they imparted to their supporters. Down to the
1930s the reports sent from missionaries and published by the mission boards
provided the greatest volume of information on Asia available anywhere in
North America. Their visits to local communities while on furlough gave
the people there their only direct information about life in the rest of
the world; the missionaries were not only the best show in town, they were
the only show, and gave their audiences the sense of participating personally
in exciting and worthwhile ventures.
Canadian missionaries were highly educated. Many were university graduates,
and other members of their families would be well connected in government
or big business, so that missionary letters sent home would also go to architects
of national policy. The children of missionaries also frequently rose to
positions of importance; until recently the Canadian ambassadors to China
were all the sons of missionaries. Percy Powles' son Cyril became Professor
of Japanese History at the University of Toronto. Daniel Norman's elder
son, Howard, continued in his father's footsteps as a missionary, and during
the war served on a number of committees to better the conditions of Japanese
interned in Canada. The younger son, Herbert, had a brilliant career which
ended in tragedy. From the Canadian Academy in Kobe he proceeded to Toronto,
Cambridge and Harvard Universities. His doctoral dissertation at Harvard,
published in 1940, served as the principal textbook for the Occupation authorities
after the war. He became the Chief of the Canadian Mission under MacArthur,
and impressed everyone he met with his brilliance, charm and hard work.
He became the first postwar President of the Asiatic Society of Japan, and
early in 1948 presented a paper on "Andoh Shoh'eki and the Anatomy
of Japanese Feudalism" at a meeting held in the Canadian ambassador's
residence (still without heating, is the radiators had been requisitioned
for scrap). Unfortunately, perhaps because his success created jealousy
among his colleagues, he was branded as a communist sympathizer. Eventually
he was cleared of all the charges, and appointed to mediate the Suez crisis
of 1956-57, but was again accused of being a communist. Concerned that the
accusations might endanger the negotiations, Norman took his own life. But
his achievements remain as a testimony to the effectiveness of his missionary
upbringing.
The third cultural contact between Japan and Canada was associated with
the events connected with World War II. During the 1930s the major influence
of Japan on Canadian culture came from the Institute of Pacific Relations.
This was founded in 1925 by missionaries and businessmen who foresaw the
possibility of hostilities between Japan and America, and hoped to avert
them. Membership was open to individuals who were not diplomats or government
officials, and biennial conferences were planned, the major ones being in
Kyoto in 1929, Shanghai in 1931 (just after the Japanese invasion of Manchuria),
and Banff in 1933. The Banff conference presented the Japanese with the
last opportunity to make their case for the occupation of Manchuria. The
man chosen to do this was Nitobe Inazoh, fluent in the major European languages,
with an American Quaker wife and five years' experience as Undersecretary
of the League of Nations. When he came to Banff at the age of 71, events
had already gone beyond the point where individual efforts could have any
effect. Shortly after, he fell ill and died in Victoria. Canadian friends
erected a stone lantern in his memory at the University of British Columbia,
and this was incorporated into the Nitobe Memorial Garden after World War
II.
In 1941 a Canadian contingent of 2,000 was sent to shore up the defences
of Hong Kong, but they were captured on the way and used as labourers for
the rest of the war. The bad treatment of prisoners of war has often been
used to justify the internment of Japanese in Canada during the war. But
the heart of the problem was the fact that the Canadian authorities at that
time were unaware of the distinction between first- and second-generation
Japanese; anybody with a Japanese name was considered a Japanese citizen
and thus an enemy alien to be treated according to the conventions of international
law. British Columbia, where 20,000 Japanese resided, did not grant full
citizenship either to Japanese who became Canadians or to the children of
Japanese who wore born in Canada. This attitude had a historical basis.
The first immigrants came in the 1870s as labourers. In the early 20th century
they began to bring over their wives, and soon were prosperous berry producers.
Their children went to the regular schools, but also attended special Japanese
schools. In so doing, they were only following the example of European immigrants
in wishing to keep their old customs alive, but were never integrated in
the way the Europeans were. They wore barred from most professional groups,
did not have the vote, and were segregated in public facilities such as
theatres.
The Japanese tried to work to acquire full citizenship by showing their
devotion to Canada; thus a number volunteered to fight in the First World
War. But their way was barred by a few racist politicians, notably Ian Mackenzie,
a Member of parliament from Vancouver, who constantly lobbied during the
war for the permanent removal of the Japanese from the west coast. Early
in the war a Japanese submarine lobbed a few shells at a Canadian lighthouse.
This started an anti-Japanese panic, and all Japanese were "relocated"
- forced to move 100 miles further east. Most of them landed up in primitive
quarters in old mining communities high in the Rocky Mountains, and it was
not until 1943 that they had managed to improve their living conditions.
All their property was sold off, and they received very little recompense.
Some were allowed to move further east, on condition that they not return
to British Columbia. This period saw the emergence of differences between
the immigrants and their children, and the entry into English of the terms
issei and nisei. The issei still felt strong ties with Japan, which were
made all the stronger by the discrimination they were suffering, while the
nisei felt themselves to be Canadian. The greatest contribution of Japan
to Canadian culture has come with the success of the nisei in establishing
their rights in accordance with the Western constitutional tradition. As
a minority of only two-tenths of one percent of the population, they have
manoeuvred the Canadian government into a public apology for wartime actions,
pronounced by prime Minister Mulroney in 1987, and created a powerful precedent
for other minorities who may face discrimination later. They also obtained
considerable repayments to each of the individuals who had suffered. Even
so, the nature of the problem has not always been clear to Canadians, as
evidenced when Prime Minister Trudeau apologized in Tokyo for what he thought
Canadians had done to the Japanese in World War II, rather than apologizing
to the Canadian citizens of Japanese descent, ironically so, when he was
so concerned about the rights of the French Canadian minority.
Part of the impetus for the "Redress Movement" has come from the
literary works of a number of Japanese Canadians. The first work to appear,
in 1971, was "A Child in prison Camp" by Shizue Takashima, in
which she gave a charming account of life in an internment camp. In 1980
the diary of Takeo Ujo Nomura, a labourer who had ended up in the only camp
in which the Japanese were treated as prisoners, was published posthumously
by his daughter. In it he tells how he later joined his wife and daughter
in Toronto, and finally took out citizenship, his emotions about which he
penned in a "tanka" poem which won a prize in the Emperor's poetry
contest. The one outstanding writer is Joy Kogawa, whose works, "Obasan"
and "Itsuka", describe the relocation and the redress movement.
The two works together show how the Japanese character traits have merged
with Canadian values to reinforce the fabric of Canadian society. Though
Kogawa was not a political activist, her work provided much of the momentum
behind the redress movement. A stronger challenge to the Canadian majority
community was provided by Muriel Kitagawa, who pointed out that racial discrimination
of any kind hurt the aggressor as well as the victim. Dr. Howes also mentioned
two other persons whose writings were directed more closely to swaying political
opinion, Roy Miki and Judge Maryka Omatsu.
Japanese Canadians had also been active, he said, in other professions,
such as architecture. Raymond Moriyama was the architect of the building
in which the ASJ meeting was being held, in designing which ho had been
affected by his memories as a boy in internment camp. Donald Matsuba had
converted the one-storey Sanyo pavilion at the Osaka Expo of 1970 for use
as a three-storey building at the University of British Columbia by sinking
the other storeys underground and lighting them with a sloping garden. The
efforts of the nisei to heal the wounds caused by the relocation reflect
Japanese values combined with a faith in the Canadian political process.
On the other side of the community, William Allister, who spent the war
period in a prison camp in Hong Kong, describes in his memoirs, "Where
Life and Death Hold Hands", how in the succeeding decades he worked
his way from bitterness to reconciliation with his captors through the medium
of painting.
In conclusion, Dr. Howes said that Ranald MacDonald, the Canadian missionaries
and the Japanese Canadians had each in their own way enriched Canada.
After a short question time, Dr. Suleski thanked the speaker and also offered
the Society's thanks to Mrs. Campbell, Timothy Skye and all the staff of
the Canadian embassy who had contributed to making the evening such a success.
The meeting was followed by a reception, and an opportunity was also given
to see the exhibition "Masters of the Arctic: Art in the Service of
the Earth" held in the adjoining gallery.
Adapted from "The
Asiatic Society of Japan Bulletin No. 1", January 1995, compiled by
Hugh Wilkinson.
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