By J.K. YAMAMOTO, Rafu Staff Writer
Madame Kangiku Sanjo, choreographer for this year’s Nisei Week celebration, wants the new dances to be fun but at the same time to carry a serious message —?remembering the victims of the earthquake and tsunami that struck northeastern Japan in March 2011.
“I don’t think the American public is that much aware that the struggle still goes on,” she said at a recent luncheon with the Nikkei press. “We’re all fickle that way, I think. When an incident occurs, for maybe about a month we’re aware, but after that it’s like ‘It’s done’ and we go on to the next disaster. And unfortunately, there’s a lot of natural disasters lately.”
Although media coverage and fundraisers have dwindled over the last two years, Madame Kangiku heard that as many as 67 percent of the people who were displaced by the tsunami can’t go back to their homes yet.
With that in mind, she chose two pieces: “Tohoku Ondo” by Yukio Hashi and Ayako Fuji’s “Ayako no Okuni Jiman Da yo — Ganbarou na Tohoku!”
“It’s kind of geared toward the Tohoku region,” Madame Kangiku said of the latter song, “and Ayako sings about the six prefectures and all their matsuris.”
The hardest-hit prefectures were Fukushima, Iwate and Miyagi. The other prefectures are Akita, Aomori and Yamagata. The entire region has suffered a drop in tourism due to “Fukushima fear” caused by the nuclear disaster.
“I’m trying to make the American public aware that there is still a problem,” Madame Kangiku said. “I don’t know what anyone can do — maybe go visit there and help them with their economy … I have friends who have gone up there, stayed at onsenand things like that.”
Her hope is that “someone somewhere, anyone, will have a brainstorm.”
For “Ayako no Okuni,” each dancer will carry a Japanese flag and an American flag. “Tohoku Ondo” will bete-odori, meaning that you only need your hands.
“I think that children or young people or anyone will enjoy it,” Madame Kangiku said, adding that she incorporated “jan ken po” (rock, paper scissors) into the dance “to kind of perk everyone up.”
Miles Hamada, Nisei Week ondo/closing ceremony chairperson, noted that the Sendai Buddhist Federation has been using “Tohoku Ondo” in its Obon celebrations, but that the choreography for Nisei Week will be different.
As for her personal connections to Tohoku and Japan, Madame Kangiku said, “My grandparents on my mother’s side are from Fukushima, but we have lost contact with any relatives. My mother was totally Nisei, never went to Japan. She was born in an era that was kind of anti-Japanese because of the war and discrimination, but then she married my father, who came from Japan when he was 30.”
She previously served as Nisei Week choreographer in 2009, as her sensei had before her. There is a different choreographer every year; at this year’s closing ceremony, the new one will be announced.
“Originally there were 10 Nihon buyosenseis, so rotation didn’t come around for 10 years,” she recalled, but her next turn as choreographer may come much sooner than that. And when that time comes, Tohoku may still need help.
Dancers will appear in the Grand Parade on Sunday, Aug. 11, starting at 4 p.m. in the streets of Little Tokyo, and in the ondo/closing ceremony on Sunday, Aug. 18, at 4 p.m. on First Street between San Pedro and Central.
Black Ops 6 sees lowest Call of Duty player count in years despite recordGo For Broke, AAJABlack Ops 6’s plummeting player count could be the end of Warzone & fans are delightedBest FFAR 1 loadout in Black Ops 6Royal Visit Remembered'Bronzeville Sessions' at JACCC Sept. 16Japan Expresses Condolences on Passing of Queen ElizabethHow to get tokens fast in Black Ops 6 & Warzone Ballerina eventSmiles Amid SprinklesWarzone & Black Ops 6’s new KillCam feature makes cheaters easier to spot Domain registry moves to ban cryptocurrency names What Intel's 10th Disney honors 'Descendants 3' star Cameron Boyce with emotional video 'Star Wars: Galaxy's Edge' proves Disneyland for childless millennials 'Once Upon a Time in Hollywood': The truth about Brad Pitt's Cliff Trump's 'infested' tweets violate Twitter's dehumanizing language rule Instagram tests new green screen effect in Stories Apple suspends program that let humans listen in to Siri conversations In defense of Parmesan cheese from a can Tesla offers free supercharging to Model S and X buyers
0.1814s , 14356.7890625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【xxx sex video abducted and raped by aliens】Enter to watch online.Choreographer’s Message: Don’t Forget Tohoku,Feature Flash