The North American Post
Takami Page 1
[Editor’s Note]: All names are rendered in the English First, Middle, Last name order.
Through Hardship and Lack of Ambition
A Call from Seattle
When writing this manuscript, I received a call from a close friend from Seattle, Roy Fumiya Hayashi, a second-generation Kibei[1]. It was February 3, 1993 (Heisei 5). For some reason, I was momentarily struck by the thought that someone had passed away, since lately I hadn’t received any good news from an international call.
“Hi, Roy? Where are you?”
“Seattle.”
“What happened?”
“Mr. Hibiya from the newspaper passed away.”
“When…”
“January 28th, just after 4am. He died at Providence Hospital in the city. There’s going to be a
memorial service at the church on the 6th.”
“I see. I’ll send a telegram of condolence to Mrs. Hibiya straight away. Thanks. You’re doing all
right aren’t you, Roy?”
“I went to see a doctor about my health last year, but I’m all better now. No need to worry.”
The conversation was along those lines. I hung up the phone. Mr. Hibiya had worked as a reporter and president of the Japanese-language newspaper The North American Post (Hokubei Hōchi) in Seattle since before the war. Roy, who had just called me, was educated in Japan. After the war, while he was interning at the newspaper company where I worked in Tokyo, he was able to regain his United States citizenship. He then returned to his birthplace of Seattle by boat from Yokohama by way of Hawaii. He’s a former colleague.
Well, that Mr. Takami Hibiya of whom Roy had informed me, was a second-generation Kibei, and while working as a reporter for the daily Japanese-language newspaper The North American Times (Hokubei Jiji), served as the director of the former Kibei Department of the JACL (The Japanese American Citizens League).
After graduating from Odawara Junior High in Kanagawa, Japan, he went to Tokyo and entered law school at Chūō University. While studying, he worked as a houseboy[2] for Kusuemon Tainaka, a returnee from America and member of the Diet[3] who had deep ties to Seattle and Tacoma. During his time there, he decided against becoming a lawyer after observing their underhanded practices and heartlessness. He went on to enroll in Waseda University’s second-class preparatory academy for law, and entered the Department of Politics and Economics. Before WWII, even among private schools it was difficult to gain admittance to both Waseda’s first and second-class preparatory academies (now called college prep). Applicants had to be exceedingly intelligent. If he were to remain in Japan, many opportunities would be open to him, but obligatory military conscription was also waiting because of his dual nationality. Considering this, he returned to the United States in 1931 (Showa 6).
For a short time he worked at the Furuya Company owned by Masajirō Furuya (from Yamanashi prefecture) in Seattle, but he was treated as an apprentice and the corporate culture got in the way of his personal life. Two weeks after he had joined the company, he fought with the store owner and promptly walked out.
At that time, the aftermath of the Great Depression still loomed and it was a difficult time for Issei[4], Nisei[5], and Americans alike. Mr. Hibiya rented four rooms in an apartment at Spruce Street and 13th Avenue in Seattle. He and his younger brother, Shōzō Hibiya, lived there along with George Ogata, another Nisei. The apartment was like a gathering place for the many Nisei who came and went. When he was alive, Mr. Hibiya remarked that, “Whenever I bought a bag of rice and left it in the apartment, someone always came along and ate it. Yoshitomi Junichi (from Fukushima prefecture), a hotel owner who later moved out to Los Angeles, took care of us Nisei. He often brought sushi and other food to the apartment.”
After quitting Furuya Company, Mr. Hibiya took on a number of jobs he was unaccustomed to, such as farming, to make ends meet. Before long he joined The North American Times, and began his career as a reporter.
♢
curious, I scan
the Japanese newspaper
for obituaries
–Soyō Takayama
[1] Japanese American born in the US and educated in Japan
[2] A student who is hired to do housework in exchange for living quarters while attending school. This system was somewhat antiquated from the 1890s on, as many students had begun to live in dormitories, so this type of situation would not have been as common as in the Meji period.
[3] the national legislature of Japan
[4] Immigrants of Japanese ancestry born and raised in Japan
[5] Japanese Americans born in the US (also includes Kibei)