- Description
- Details
In this collection of photos and stories, Masako Fukawa brings to vivid voice the lives of Japanese Canadians as they moved from nineteenth-century Japan to coastal BC, and then from wartime internment to postwar reconstruction.
Following the bombing of Pearl Harbor in 1941, the Canadian government forcibly removed Japanese Canadians from coastal areas to internment camps. Their homes and possessions, fishing boats and farms, were seized and either sold cheaply or left to vandals. Respected Nikkei historian Masako Fukawa takes the reader behind the narrative of Japanese Canadian internment and dispossession during World War II to recount the impetus for immigration in Japan and the pre-war immigrant struggle to establish a place in British Columbia.
Beginning with the story of her own maternal grandfather, Yoshimatsu Shinde (arrived in Canada 1893), Fukawa follows her family and community members through five generations, from hard-luck Japanese village life to the establishment of Steveston—and the place’s reestablishment after the devastations of the war.
For the Sake of the Children is based on personal narratives gathered over many years from documents, photographs, oral interviews, written memoirs, government documents and research trips to Japan. For the Sake of the Children is an important addition to British Columbia’s historical record.
Harbour Publishing
ISBN: 9781998526482
Paperback / softback
6 in x 9 in - 192 pp
Publication Date: 05/05/2026
BISAC Subject(s): HISTORY / Canada / Post-Confederation (1867-),SOCIAL SCIENCE / Emigration & Immigration,HISTORY / Canada / Provincial, Territorial & Local / British Columbia (BC),HISTORY / Wars & Conflicts / World War II / General
Description
In this collection of photos and stories, Masako Fukawa brings to vivid voice the lives of Japanese Canadians as they moved from nineteenth-century Japan to coastal BC, and then from wartime internment to postwar reconstruction.
Following the bombing of Pearl Harbor in 1941, the Canadian government forcibly removed Japanese Canadians from coastal areas to internment camps. Their homes and possessions, fishing boats and farms, were seized and either sold cheaply or left to vandals. Respected Nikkei historian Masako Fukawa takes the reader behind the narrative of Japanese Canadian internment and dispossession during World War II to recount the impetus for immigration in Japan and the pre-war immigrant struggle to establish a place in British Columbia.
Beginning with the story of her own maternal grandfather, Yoshimatsu Shinde (arrived in Canada 1893), Fukawa follows her family and community members through five generations, from hard-luck Japanese village life to the establishment of Steveston—and the place’s reestablishment after the devastations of the war.
For the Sake of the Children is based on personal narratives gathered over many years from documents, photographs, oral interviews, written memoirs, government documents and research trips to Japan. For the Sake of the Children is an important addition to British Columbia’s historical record.
Details
Harbour Publishing
ISBN: 9781998526482
Paperback / softback
6 in x 9 in - 192 pp
Publication Date: 05/05/2026
BISAC Subject(s): HISTORY / Canada / Post-Confederation (1867-),SOCIAL SCIENCE / Emigration & Immigration,HISTORY / Canada / Provincial, Territorial & Local / British Columbia (BC),HISTORY / Wars & Conflicts / World War II / General