8NoFish wrote:Last week, Cory and writer Richard Imamura were in Washington, D.C. for a special screening of The Manzanar Fishing Club hosted by Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus at the Capitol Visitor's Center. In attendance were members of Congress and other dignitaries.
Well known Hot Creek expert fly fisherman, Mas Okui, is one of the former Manzanar internees interviewed in the documentary.
For all of you who fish the Mammoth-Bishop area, I highly recommend that you stop by the Manzanar Internment Center Museum & Interpretive Center near Independence on Hwy 395. The exhibits are really nice and do a great job of documenting and showing life at Manzanar. I'm Japanese-American and no matter how many times I've been there, I always get emotional and choked up. Guaranteed to make me cry is a visit to the cemetery - there's a headstone for a little boy who I think was 2 or 3 years old when he died - which means that he might have spent his entire life there, behind barbed wire. When I see the photos in the museum of the internees going about their lives in the camp I am always struck by the fact that, other than the color of their skin and shape of their eyes, they look very American. That's because they were Americans...and proud to be American despite their imprisonment.
My girlfriend and I both finally decided it was time to go to Manzanar and it was as hard to be there as I had thought. We both were glad we had gone, and were pleased to see so many people there but both agreed that it was most likely our last time there, we both had family interned and thinking about what they endured was just a little too tough to handle. Quite a sad chapter of American history.
Cory had mentioned his trip to DC at Higashi's Obon when I was there, and had mentioned that it will be airing in New York pretty soon. It's great to think how well received it has been thus far!
"The real truth is, convincing a fish to strike is like playing string with a cat: the exact size and color of the string is probably less important than how you wiggle it. And little cats are easier to fool than big ones." - John Gierach