US-Japan Relations Should be a Japanese American Priority
Rob Buscher Rob Buscher

US-Japan Relations Should be a Japanese American Priority

With so many resources available it is easier than ever before to get involved in US-Japan relations. It is deeply satisfying to be involved in this work, and I encourage others within our Japanese American community to seriously consider how they might become more involved in strengthening and maintaining this critical relationship over generations to come.

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Ireicho Dedication Ceremony
Rob Buscher Rob Buscher

Ireicho Dedication Ceremony

Over the weekend of September 24 I had the opportunity to participate in an event held at the Japanese American National Museum in Los Angeles that commemorated each of the individuals who experienced the Japanese American wartime incarceration. Known as Irei or the National Monument for the World War II Japanese American Incarceration, the event was the culmination of several years of arduous labor by Buddhist scholar, Duncan Ryuken Williams, who serves as Director of the Shinso Ito Center for Japanese Religions and Culture at University of Southern California. 

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Building Black-Asian Solidarity through the Shofuso Cherry Blossom Festival
Rob Buscher Rob Buscher

Building Black-Asian Solidarity through the Shofuso Cherry Blossom Festival

In the past nine months while working for Japan America Society of Greater Philadelphia, I have had the opportunity to ponder at great length the ways in which public programming that is meant to celebrate Japanese culture while also strengthening US-Japan relations can both cater to the specific interests of a localized audience and also retain the spirit of Japanese culture. As a result, this year’s Shofuso Cherry Blossom Festival of Philadelphia looked a great deal different from previous years, as we highlighted the overlap among Japanese and African American musical cultures.

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A History of Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders in Philadelphia
Rob Buscher Rob Buscher

A History of Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders in Philadelphia

In May 2020, PBS broadcast a groundbreaking five-part documentary series called Asian Americans that chronicled the contributions and challenges of Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders (AAPIs) throughout our nation’s history. This was a significant milestone for AAPI representation in public television and an excellent educational resource unto itself. Acknowledging the rich untold AAPI history in Philadelphia, WHYY then began work on a local series – Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders: A Philadelphia Story

From the initial research stage, Japanese American media scholar and historian Rob Buscher was brought into the series as a consultant. To help guide the series production team as they developed episodes with thematic correlations across time periods and communities, Rob compiled a consolidated historical timeline from various community history sources in the Greater Philadelphia region. The timeline is a good resource for general education on these subjects, and makes an excellent companion piece to the series by providing context and granular detail on specific events referenced in each episode.  

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Cultural Overlap and Historical Parallels
Rob Buscher Rob Buscher

Cultural Overlap and Historical Parallels

This is the second in a series of articles related to the many shared connections among the African American and Japanese American communities that are being explored through Japan America Society of Greater Philadelphia’s Reimagining Recovery Project.

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Shared Spaces
Rob Buscher Rob Buscher

Shared Spaces

This is the first of several articles for The Parkside Journal about the many shared connections among the African American and Japanese American communities that are being explored through Japan America Society of Greater Philadelphia’s Reimagining Recovery Project.

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Cultural Diplomacy in the spirit of our Community: Shofuso and Japanese Americans
Rob Buscher Rob Buscher

Cultural Diplomacy in the spirit of our Community: Shofuso and Japanese Americans

Culture is a powerful tool when used to build empathy among diverse communities. This is particularly effective in regions like Philadelphia where we do not have a large Japanese American population. For that reason, it is important for Japanese Americans to have a say in how Japan is being represented, and this project is our opportunity to reclaim the narrative in a way that is inclusive of both overseas Japanese and multigenerational Japanese American perspectives.

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Asian American Activism Across Generations
Rob Buscher Rob Buscher

Asian American Activism Across Generations

If ever there was a moment to join together and build a truly inclusive movement among our peoples this is it. Only together will we be able to overcome the many challenges our communities face.

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Asian American Sex Symbols in Early Hollywood
Rob Buscher Rob Buscher

Asian American Sex Symbols in Early Hollywood

In the aftermath of the Atlanta Spa Shootings, there has been a renewed interest in the role that Hollywood movies and other popular media portrayals of Asian Americans have in reinforcing negative stereotypes pertaining to sexuality and gender. Although cinema and new media have an undeniable impact on racial stereotyping, Western fascination with the exotic (and often erotic) East is nothing new, given the long history of literary orientalism that extends back to the earliest encounters with the West.

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Philly Solidarity Rally
Rob Buscher Rob Buscher

Philly Solidarity Rally

For the first time after the deadly Atlanta shootings I breathed a breath of collective release alongside hundreds of anti-racism activists who took the streets of Philadelphia during the Philly Rally for Solidarity that took place on March 25, 2021. In the decade-plus that I have been organizing in Philly’s Pan-Asian American space, this was by far the largest turnout of AAPIs I have seen at a protest.

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Redemption for Dr. Seuss?
Rob Buscher Rob Buscher

Redemption for Dr. Seuss?

Over the past couple weeks since the estate of children’s author Theodore Seuss Geisel announced they would be retiring six of his early titles from publication, the media has been awash with opinion pieces on the subject. At face value, this is an admirable move worthy of the celebrated children’s author’s legacy, but one has to wonder how much of the decision is driven by profit?

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“Look Toward the Mountain” Podcast Preview
Rob Buscher Rob Buscher

“Look Toward the Mountain” Podcast Preview

When I first visited Heart Mountain during the annual pilgrimage in the summer of 2018, I would not have guessed that several years later, I would be given the opportunity to produce a podcast series about the camp. Then again, so much of the last year has become unpredictable with the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic, which resulted in both a spike in anti-Asian violence and civil unrest in our country. This post offers a behind-the-scenes look at the making of this 10-part podcast series.

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Ruth Asawa: A Nisei Artist Luminary Remembered
Rob Buscher Rob Buscher

Ruth Asawa: A Nisei Artist Luminary Remembered

The late-Ruth Asawa’s legacy as an artist and arts education advocate is revisited as her works are a testament to the importance of art benefitting the greater good. This post takes stock of the posthumous celebration of Asawa’s work that was epitomized by the USPS stamp release featuring her sculpture works in Summer 2020.

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Hiroshima at 75: A Japanese American Perspective
Rob Buscher Rob Buscher

Hiroshima at 75: A Japanese American Perspective

At a time when disease runs rampant throughout most of the country without any clear plan for curtailing the current COVID-19 pandemic, the U.S. has seemingly vacated its status as world leader. It is in this unique moment that we commemorate the 75th anniversary of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki on Aug. 6 and 9, 1945, respectively. As Japanese Americans we must interrogate the extraordinary cruelty and blatant disregard for human life that the atomic bombings represent if we are to guarantee that they are never again used in war.

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Tadaima! A Community Virtual Pilgrimage
Rob Buscher Rob Buscher

Tadaima! A Community Virtual Pilgrimage

In the midst of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, each of the annual pilgrimages to sites of wartime Japanese American incarceration were canceled. These pilgrimages provide important educational and community-building opportunities for incarceration survivors, their descendants, the Japanese American community as a whole and the public at large.

Recognizing the ongoing significance of these pilgrimages, a broad coalition of Japanese American Confinement Sites and community organizations across the country came together under the leadership of Japanese American Memorial Pilgrimages to host “Tadaima! A Community Virtual Pilgrimage,’ which ran for 9 weeks of consecutive daily programming throughout the summer of 2020.

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‘Reality is hitting me in the face’: Asian Americans grapple with racism due to COVID-19
Rob Buscher Rob Buscher

‘Reality is hitting me in the face’: Asian Americans grapple with racism due to COVID-19

Conversations about race and racism in the United States tend to focus on anti-Blackness and white supremacy. At times, this binary has obscured anti-Asian racism from public view. However, in the early months of the pandemic, coronavirus-related hate crimes against Asian Americans spiked dramatically nationwide. This article summarizes some of the many hate incidents experienced locally in Philadelphia during that time.

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Tod Mikuriya: JA Father of the Medical Marijuana Movement
Rob Buscher Rob Buscher

Tod Mikuriya: JA Father of the Medical Marijuana Movement

Born and raised in Fallsington, Pennsylvania, Dr. Tod Mikuriya’s lifelong research laid the foundation upon which all medical marijuana legislation is based. This extended format article explores the history of his life’s work to get medical marijuana restored in the American pharmacopoeia.

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‘American Peril’ and InterEthnic Solidarity at the Philadelphia DOR
Rob Buscher Rob Buscher

‘American Peril’ and InterEthnic Solidarity at the Philadelphia DOR

JACL Philadelphia hosted its annual Day of Remembrance on Feb. 22 at Philadelphia City Hall at a time when Japanese American communities across the country were coming together. The events of last month seem distant in the wake of the growing COVID-19 pandemic that is sweeping our nation, and it is difficult to accept this may be the last time for a long while that we will experience community in such great numbers.

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Reflections on Four Years of Service
Rob Buscher Rob Buscher

Reflections on Four Years of Service

Nearing the end of his term as a commissioner on the Advisory Commission on Asian Pacific American Affairs, Buscher speaks to Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf about key issues facing the AAPI community.

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