Who was Setsuko and what was her secret?
“[Setsuko’s Secret: Heart Mountain and the Legacy of the Japanese American Incarceration is] an encyclopedic narrative on the mass incarceration of Japanese Americans during WWII and its haunting sway still on the conscience of the nation. Interwoven throughout is a moving personal family history of pain, loss, and resilience. This is an essential American story.”—George Takei
Shirley Ann Higuchi, chair of the Heart Mountain Wyoming Foundation and author of Setsuko’s Secret: Heart Mountain and the Legacy of the Japanese American Incarceration discussed her book on the Ranch’s December “Chats with Barry.” She’s back to talk more about writing the book and the broader implications of this history. Join Shirley for a film screening of Setsuko’s Secret: The Origin Story (6 minutes) by Vanessa Yuille, a short film that focuses on the historical background of Setsuko’s secret: the Japanese American incarceration and Shirley’s impetus to write the book. The film is a quick historical dive through the lens of Shirley’s family’s experience pre- and during WWII. After the film, David Ono, Los Angeles ABC7 news anchor will lead a lively conversation with Shirley, Vanessa Yuille, and Kathy Saito Yuille who was born at Heart Mountain. Saito Yuille is Setsuko’s younger sister and Shirley’s aunt. Vanessa is Kathy’s daughter.
Short Film (6 minutes) screening followed by discussion.
Website: https://www.setsukossecret.com/
What was Heart Mountain Incarceration Site?
“Heart Mountain is a spectacular and beautiful backdrop to a story of triumph and tragedy. Seventy nine years ago, an incarceration camp filled with 10,000 Japanese Americans sat in the shadow of the mountain. From heart warming to heart breaking, their experience of life in an American concentration camp reminds us of the fragility of freedom.” This is The legacy of Heart Mountain.
Many Americans have never heard of the American concentration camps during World War II. Few have been taken inside to see what life was like. The Legacy of Heart Mountain is a documentary about the Heart Mountain Incarceration Site and the people who were confined there. This film takes us there and through first person narratives and interviews shows how it changed these innocent people’s lives forever. Join us for a film screening of The Legacy of Heart Mountain followed by a panel discussion with the Award-winning filmmaker and ABC7 news anchor, David Ono, Shirley Ann Higuchi, Kathy Saito Yuille and Vanessa Yuille.
Full length film screening followed by discussion.
Website: http://www.heartmountainfilm.com/
FACEism
“You see the face of a stranger. In the blink of an eye, your mind is made up. You’ve taken in their skin color, ethnicity, sex, age, clothes and accent. You think you know who they are as a person. That’s FACEism.” David Ono’s newly released Faceism series, several 5-minute episodes, engages us in difficult but necessary conversations “exposing often-ignored history, erasing stereotypes.”
Part of the Faceism series will be presented by David Ono who will share the genesis of the series and its evolution to what it is today. Followed by a Q and A session.
Short film screenings followed by Q and A.
Series at ABC7 News website: https://abc7news.com/faceism-series-david-ono-racism-stereotypes/6699748/
Book Talk
Inside Setsuko’s Secret: Heart Mountain and the Legacy of the Japanese American Incarceration
join author Shirley Ann Higuchi in conversation with Ray Locker, author and journalist as they discuss the central characters in her book, their lives after WWII and lessons learned for today. Book signing to follow.
Since joining ABC7 in 1996, David Ono has witnessed history worldwide, covering Hurricane Katrina, Haiti’s earthquake and Japan’s tsunami. He traveled across Europe and Asia chronicling brave acts of the Nisei soldier from World War II. He attended the Royal Wedding in London, tracked drug runners through Central America and reported from Paris on a terrorist plot to bring down the Eiffel Tower. Ono has trained with the FBI and the elite Los Angeles Sheriff’s SWAT team. President Obama invited him to the White House for an exclusive interview. And he witnessed white smoke at the Vatican twice – in 2005 for the selection of Pope Benedict the 16th and 2013 for the selection of Pope Francis. Ono surfaced in Boston, chronicling the marathon bombing. He has won seven Edward R. Murrow awards and 23 Emmys. David grew up in Texas and is a graduate of the University of North Texas. His career has included stops at KOVR in Sacramento, KDBC in El Paso, KOSA in Midland/Odessa and KXAS in Dallas. He has also hosted ABC7’s half-hour show Eye on L.A. This year, he led his network with his multiple Emmy Award-winning FACEism series.
Shirley Ann Higuchi discovered the deep connections her parents had to Heart Mountain when her mother was on her deathbed and requested that her memorial contributions be sent there. It was then that Shirley discovered her mother’s secret dream of having “something built there” to memorialize what happened to her family and others during that period of time. Setsuko’s dream was realized when the Heart Mountain Interpretive Center opened its doors to the public in August 2011. Yet out of each negative experience emerges a silver lining and had the Higuchi and Saito families not been uprooted from their homes in the midst of wartime racism and hysteria, Shirley would not be here. Today, Shirley works to ensure that the WWII Japanese American incarceration experience is not forgotten by organizing public programming and speaking engagements around this important topic. Her book tour of Setsuko’s Secret: Heart Mountain and the Legacy of the Japanese American Incarceration continues well into 2022.
Vanessa Saito Yuille is a documentary filmmaker and a third generation Japanese American. Her mother was born at the Heart Mountain site. Her film An American Contradiction explores the historical context of the Japanese American camps through her own investigation and family history. It was screened at international film festivals and continues to be viewed as an educational resource today. She recently completed her first documentary feature Doctor Who Am I, and it’s currently out for festival consideration. Vanessa graduated from Barnard College with a BA in Astronomy and earned an MFA in film studies from the Academy of Art University. She lives in Los Angeles and is a freelance filmmaker and editor.
Kathleen Saito Yuille was one of the 556 children born at Heart Mountain, where her parents, two older brothers and older sister were incarcerated. After the war, the Saito family returned to San Francisco, where Kathleen graduated from high school before attending the University of California, Berkeley. She now lives in Milwaukee, where she became an active member of the Milwaukee Art Museum and served as board president of the Contemporary Art Society and as co-chair of two Contemporary Art Auctions, a major fundraising event for the purchase of art for the museum. She currently serves on the Milwaukee Art Museum Board of Trustees. She is now a tireless advocate for the preservation of the memory of the Japanese American incarceration, an interest that began when her daughter’s fifth grade class assignment rekindled her sense of family history.
Ray Locker is the editorial consultant for the Heart Mountain Wyoming Foundation. He has a master’s degree in journalism from Ohio University and a B.A. in political science from the University of Cincinnati. Before joining the foundation, he was an editor in the Washington bureau of USA TODAY, the managing director of the Investigative Project on Terrorism, the Sacramento bureau chief of the Associated Press, and an editor and reporter at the Los Angeles Times, Tampa Tribune and Montgomery Advertiser in Alabama. He is the author of two books about the administration of President Richard Nixon – Nixon’s Gamble: How a President’s Own Secret Government Destroyed His Administration and Haig’s Coup: How Richard Nixon’s Closest Aide Forced Him from Office. He also worked with foundation chair Shirley Ann Higuchi on her history of the Heart Mountain concentration camp.