Photos & Captions Sent Lorimer
Description
Title Proper | Photos & Captions Sent Lorimer |
Date(s) of material from this resource digitized | |
General material designation |
From this file, LOI has digitized a textual record.
|
Scope and content |
This file includes a folder labeled "Photos & Pictures Sent Lorimer" with a sticky
note with the number 12 on it. This folder contains 30 photographs from Library and
Archives Canada and UBC Archives. This folder also includes two documents from the
Royal Canadian Mounted Police and the Minister of Justice untitled "To Male Enemy
Aliens Notice" and "Notice to all Persons of Japanese Racial Origin".
|
Name of creator |
Ann Gomer Sunahara B.Sc., M.A., L.L.B., is the author of The Politics of Racism, published by James
Lorimer and Company in 1981. Sunahara’s book was one of a number of texts that was
pivotal in the successful campaign for redress. In Sunahara’s own words, the book
was intended as a “neutral, historical work,” (Bulletin interview) and was vital for
educating the wider Canadian public about the injustices suffered by Japanese Canadians
in World War II. Sunahara is of English and Anglo-Irish descent. She is the second
of six children (five girls and a boy) born to a Royal Canadian Air Force veteran
and his English-Irish war-bride in 1946. Her parents met while her mother, a Catholic,
was a radar operator and her father, an Anglican, was a radar technician for the RAF.
She grew up in Mississauga, Ontario in the 1950s and early 1960s. The only Japanese
Canadian whom she had contact with growing up was Bev Oda, the Company Leader of her
Girl Guide troop. In 1965, her Grade 13 history teacher, Mr. Fullerton mentioned experiences
of Japanese Canadians during his lecture on African American history.
She volunteered for CUSO (Canadian University Students Overseas) after her older sister,
Mary, had volunteered with the organization in Zambia. There, she taught Second Form
Science and English in Malaysia, and met David Sunahara. She left the program after
a year as she was the victim of an assault. Additionally, she had discovered that
there were local teachers who were unemployed because of the presence of volunteers.
She then moved to London, Ontario after she returned from Malaysia in September 1970
at David Sunahara’s invitation. She found work as a laboratory technician at the Chemistry
department at UWO (University of Western Ontario).
She started researching Japanese Canadian history after Pierre Trudeau had invoked
the War Measures Act to combat the Quebec Liberation Front (FLQ) in October 1970.
David’s family were interned in Slocan during the Second World War, and as the FLQ
crisis unfolded, he mentioned to her that the same actions had been used against Japanese
Canadians. She began taking history courses at University of Western Ontario part-time
while David Sunahara was getting his MA. In 1975 David started a PhD program in Sociology
at the University of Alberta and she began a MA in History at the University of Calgary.
The university’s faculty provided her a research grant while studying and a travel
grant to do research at the National Archives in Ottawa; government documents pertaining
to Japanese Canadian internment had just become available under the 30-year access
rules that were then in place. Self-funded visits to David Sunahara’s sister in Vancouver
also allowed her to complete research at the University of British Columbia and the
Vancouver City Archives. David and Ann worked at the “Learned Societies” events, which
gave Ann the scholarly credentials to see archival material unavailable to the general
public – including personal materials that cannot be accessed today under the Freedom
of Information and Protection of Privacy Act due to privacy concerns. The Learned
Societies events are where she met Gordon Hirabayashi and other Japanese-Canadian
sociologists. Gordon was on the faculty of the department where David Sunahara was
studying. She was also helped by a thesis supervisor, Howard Palmer, and by Roger
Daniels, an expert on the Japanese American experience, who had a sabbatical at the
University of Calgary while she was doing her studies. When she completed her thesis,
she realized it mainly consisted of government documents from Ottawa, and resources
from the Japanese Canadian community were missing from her analysis.
She applied for, and received, a Canada Council Explorations Grant and spent six months
travelling across Canada interviewing Japanese Canadians and researching archives
in 1976 (and 1977). During her research, she met influential Japanese Canadians such
as Thomas Shoyama, Kay Shimizu, Gordon Hirabayashi, George and Kinzie Tanaka, and
other various long-time Japanese Canadian Citizens' Association members. She then
worked at a variety of jobs in historical research and government before publishing
The Politics of Racism in 1981. After writing her book, she went to law school for
her legal education. Her book was published at the beginning of her second year in
law.
In 1984, she became an articling student at the Alberta Court of Appeal and with an
Edmonton law firm. By the early 1990s, she was working at Justice Canada in the Acts
and Regulations division. Although she requested not to be assigned to the Gulf War
emergency draft team, her supervisor asked that she provide the drafters with a copy
of The Politics of Racism and National Association of Japanese Canadians materials
to prepare the team for recognizing problematic laws.
Sunahara obtained the publishing rights to The Politics of Racism in the late 1980s,
after Lorimer went bankrupt. After purchasing the remaining 25 copies and the publishing
contract, she created a copy with an updated chapter on redress for online access.
The book can be viewed at www.japanesecanadianhistory.ca. She also intended to donate
copyright of the book and the website to the Nikkei National Museum & Cultural Centre
in 2016.
As Sunahara was not Japanese Canadian herself, she refrained from giving an opinion
on what compensation should include during the redress campaign. However, she was
active in the movement to replace the War Measures Act. In 1987, she tested the government’s
proposed new act, the Emergencies Act, and produced a report from which the government
adopted 65 amendments before enacting the new law. In 1988, after redress was achieved,
Sunahara was employed by Justice Canada in Ottawa. There she specialized in health
protection and consumer safety law. She retired in 2007.
David Sunahara completed his doctorate in sociology at the University of Alberta in
1980. He was then employed by the Law Enforcement Division of the Alberta Solicitor
General as a researcher and policy analyst. In 1989, he left to become a civilian
member of the RCMP. He then became a research officer at the Canadian Police College.
He has published numerous articles on police ethics, strategic planning, alternate
dispute resolution, and Japanese Canadian history. Throughout their marriage, David
has actively supported Ann’s research and work for the NAJC.
This biographical sketch adapted its materials from a two-parts interview (June 23
and July 14, 2016) of the Greater Vancouver Japanese Canadian Citizens Association’s
The Bulletin and the Canada-Japan Society of Ottawa’s membership biography.
|
Immediate source of acquisition |
The digital copies of the records were acquired by the Landscapes of Injustice Research
Collective between 2014 and 2018.
|
Structure
Repository | Nikkei National Museum |
Fonds | Sunahara Collection |
Series | Publication Records for The Politics of Racism |
Metadata
Download Original XML (16K)
Download Standalone XML (20K)
Title
Photos & Captions Sent Lorimer
Publication Information: See Terms of Use for publication and licensing information.
Source: Nikkei National Museum
Terminology
Readers of these historical materials will encounter derogatory references to Japanese
Canadians and euphemisms used to obscure the intent and impacts of the internment
and dispossession. While these are important realities of the history, the Landscapes
of Injustice Research Collective urges users to carefully consider their own terminological
choices in writing and speaking about this topic today as we confront past injustice.
See our statement on terminology, and related sources here.