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History of the Japanese in Metro Detroit

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In 2002, there were 6,413 people of Japanese origin, including Japanese citizens and Japanese Americans, in the Wayne-Oakland-Macomb tri-county area in Metro Detroit, making them the fifth-largest Asian ethnic group there. In that year, within an area stretching from Sterling Heights to Canton Township in the shape of a crescent, most of the ethnic Japanese lived in the center. In 2002, the largest populations of ethnic Japanese people were located in Novi and West Bloomfield Township.[1] In April 2013, the largest Japanese national population in the State of Michigan was in Novi, with 2,666 Japanese residents. West Bloomfield had the third-largest Japanese population and Farmington Hills had the fourth largest Japanese population.[2]

History

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The first Japanese people came to Detroit in 1892. There were no particular waves of immigration.[3]

However, after World War II ended and the Japanese internment camps were disbanded, the first significant wave of those with Japanese origins came to Metro Detroit,[1][4] with many coming from California. By 1951, there were about 900 Japanese in Detroit. A concentration of Japanese existed in Highland Park and others were throughout the city of Detroit.[3]

Shotaro Nakahama (中浜 昭太郎, Nakahama Shōtarō),[5] the executive director of the Japan Business Society of Detroit (デトロイト日本商工会 Detoroito Nihon Shōkōkai), stated that in the 1970s many of the first Japanese groups settled in the Troy area. According to Nakahama, as time passed, additional rental apartments, condominiums, and houses opened first in areas such as Walled Lake and West Bloomfield and later in the Ann Arbor and Novi areas, so the Japanese population moved to the west.[6]

The Japanese Society of Detroit formed around 1972.[7] The Japanese School of Detroit was founded in 1973 by local Japanese companies.[6] That year, the Japan Festival in Metro Detroit was held for the first time.[8] In 1982, there were 50 Japanese companies with branches in Detroit.[9]

By the 1980s, as the Japanese automobile industry became increasingly common in the U.S., domestic automobile companies named Japanese companies the culprit behind declining work opportunities, and as a result anti-Japanese sentiment appeared in Metro Detroit.[10] An oil price hike of 1978 made Americans more interested in more fuel-efficient Japanese cars.[11] John Campbell, a political science professor of the University of Michigan, stated that in the 1980s "There really was this kind of undifferentiated panic.[12] People could say the worse [sic] things about Japan and nobody knew if it was true."[12] For entertainment area residents destroyed Toyotas with sledgehammers.[12] Local unions sponsored events in which Japanese automobiles were destroyed. Individuals fired bullets at drivers of Japanese cars on freeways and other individuals vandalized Japanese automobiles. There were bumper stickers that read "Honda, ToyotaPearl Harbor". Anti-Japanese slurs appeared on Metro Detroit streetcorners, radio channels, and television channels. Helen Zia, author of Asian American Dreams: The Emergence of an American People, wrote that "Politicians and public figures made irresponsible and unambiguous racial barbs aimed at Japanese people."[11] John Dingell, a U.S. House member from the State of Michigan, assigned blame to "those little yellow men" and Lee Iacocca, the chairperson of Chrysler, made a joke suggestion of dropping nuclear bombs on Japan.[11]

Zia wrote that, due to the anti-Japanese sentiment, "it felt dangerous to have an Asian face."[11] Japanese corporate employees and their families felt anxiety upon learning about the sentiment in Metro Detroit. [13] In 1982, in Metro Detroit autoworkers killed Vincent Chin, a Chinese American mistaken as a Japanese American. An October 27, 2009 article by the Detroit Free Press stated that "It took the slaying of ... Vincent Chin by a disgruntled autoworker in 1982 to awaken Detroit of the ugliness and danger of anti-Asian racism."[14] People within Japan perceived of Chin's killing as an example of a savagery within American culture.[15] In the period after Chin's death, Japanese news reporters visiting Detroit told people they visited the same bar that Vincent Chin visited.[15]

By the mid-1980s, anti-Japanese sentiment in Detroit had decreased. The level had especially decreased among young working age people. Leaders in government and business had toned down remarks regarding Japan. Japanese cars became increasingly common in Detroit, including within blue collar communities.[16] In 1991, Sharon Cohen of the Associated Press wrote that anti-Japanese sentiment had largely decreased from 1981 and American automobile industry trade union members were working for Japanese companies.[12] She added that "Japan-bashing" still occurred in Metro Detroit, with politicians and Iacocca making public statements against the Japanese automobile industry.[12]

Mazda's operation at the Flat Rock Assembly Plant in Flat Rock, Michigan, was the first Japanese auto operation in the U.S. industrial heartland.[16][17] In 1991 the plant had 250 Japanese employees out of its total of 3,600 employees.[12]

In a ten-year period ending in 1992, the Japanese population in Metro Detroit had tripled.[7] Sharon Cohen wrote in a 1991 Associated Press article that "The Japanese community [in all of Michigan] is tiny and transient: estimates range from 6,000 to 8,000."[12] In 1990, there were 3,500 Japanese expatriates in Metro Detroit.[18] In 1992, there were about 5,000 Japanese nationals in Metro Detroit and there were estimates of up to 270 Japanese companies there.[7] By 1990, Chrysler was purchasing steel from Mitsui which had an office in Southfield. By 1990, since the number of Japanese companies with Detroit branches had increased to almost 300, with most of them related to the automobile industry, major accounting firms including the "Big Six" hired Japanese employees and catered to the new Japanese business populations. For the same reason, Dickinson, Wright, Moon, Van Dusen & Freeman, one of the largest law firms in Detroit, hired Japanese employees.[9] Area hospitals began catering to Japanese patients.[18] A hotel in Novi, the Sheraton Oaks, hired a "director of Japan marketing".[9] By 1990, the Saturday Japanese school operated in three locations.[18]

In the 1990s, several Japanese automobile firms had opened offices along M-14.[6] Nissan Motor Co. opened its Farmington Hills office in November 1991.[6][12] In addition, Toyota established a technical center in Ann Arbor.[6] In 1993 the Consulate-General of Japan, Detroit, was established partly due to an increase in the numbers of Japanese businesses and residents in the states of Michigan and Ohio.[19] In 1996, 4,084 Japanese nationals lived in Metro Detroit. By 1997, the number of Japanese nationals in Metro Detroit was 4,132.[20] In 1999, the majority of the 8,100 Japanese in Michigan lived in a corridor in southwestern Oakland County along Interstate 696 consisting of Farmington Hills, Novi, and West Bloomfield.[21]

The executive director of the Japan Business Society of Detroit, Tateyuki Eguchi, estimated in 2000 that the Detroit area had 5,000 "native Japanese".[22]

Japanese American Citizens League Detroit Chapter

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Founded on June 17, 1946, the Detroit chapter of the Japanese American Citizens League (JACL) began its mission to "fulfill the Japanese community's unique needs as a small, displaced group in a new community"[23] after moving to Detroit post World War II relocation camps. Led by Peter Fujioka, the chapter's first president, the Detroit chapter collaborated with chapters nationwide to form the Midwest District Council. However, the mission of the national JACL during World War II and the mission post the war are vastly different.

The Japanese American Citizens League was founded in 1929 with a goal of improving the image of Japanese Americans following the bombing of Pearl Harbor. In the early 1940s, the JACL joined the United States government, FBI, and the Office of Naval Intelligence to identify disloyal Japanese Americans. The JACL wanted to improve the image of Nisei, second-generation Japanese Americans and reported those who resisted. With the JACL becoming such an exclusive organization, many Japanese opposed the organization completely and it received harsh criticism for its role during the war. After the war, the JACL nationwide began to support changing laws regarding citizenship, equal rights, and abolishing derogatory terms. Along with legal action, the JACL aided with gaining monetary reparations for those who experienced the camps, as well as land reparations and relocation assistance.[24]

In the early 1950s, the chapter and the national JACL began its efforts to support the Japanese American community by campaigning Congress to pass the McCarran-Walter Omnibus Immigration and Naturalization Bill. The bill eliminated racial restrictions on immigration and naturalization, granting citizenship to immigrants and also removed the exclusion ban on Asian immigrants, providing them with a quota. With the support of the chapter, the bill was passed and allowed Issei, first-generation Japanese, to become American citizens.

Detroit also played a large role in advocating for scholarships and loans for Japanese American students. The chapter became a "beneficiary of a $10,000 Educational Loan Fund from the Detroit JACLer Taizo Kokubo".[23] A second fund was created under the Educational Loan Fund for $20,000 to build the Japanese Room at Wayne State University in the 1980s. The fund still exists today and remains a main source of loans and scholarships for college students.

One of the main achievements of the Detroit JACL is the many events that they host, including the 18th Biennial National JACL Convention in Detroit in 1964. In addition, the chapter hosted the a convention in 1968 which conducted an oratorical contest for young adults, "What Evacuation Means to Me." With hosting events, came increased involvement with the Detroit Far Eastern festivals in the 1970s. Other events the chapter embarked upon include hosting Japanese language and cooking classes, forming an education and building committee, starting a bowling league, and creating discussions about redress, reparations given to the Japanese for relief.

In working with other ethnic groups, the chapter played "a major role in the formation and operation of these festivals for nearly ten years".[23] These festivals included cultural festivals across the nation including the well-known Cherry Festival and other holiday festivals. Close connections formed and eventually laid the foundation for contributing to multi-ethnic associations such as the American Citizens for Justice. Later, in the 1980s, the JACL worked closely with the American Citizens for Justice during the case involving the murder of Vincent Chin.

The Detroit JACL's work continued into the 1990s when the Civil Rights Act of 1990 was passed and authorized "$20,000 redress payments to former internees of the World War II Relocation Center".[23] Moving to Detroit was difficult, "the Japanese population arrived here in the mid-1940s with fresh memories of wartime internment in federal detention camps".[25] Recollections of the camps were vivid, as Kaz Mayeda the head of Michigan's Japanese American Citizen's League committee of reparations recalls that "'As a 14-year-old, it was a lark for me... But the older people who were just starting to establish themselves were crushed. Their property was expropriated. They lost everything'".[25] After coming to Detroit, James Shimoura recalls that "the FBI used to park a car outside our home every day and keep track of everyone who came in or left the house".[25] Discrimination was clear and the JACL had a large role in creating a community and attempting to disarm that discrimination. Elaine Prout said, "I think there will always be a need for JACL because there'll always be discrimination".[25] The chapter started a letter-writing campaign requesting support for the full and timely distribution of funds for the redress payments.

Today, the chapter continues its work by "providing a forum for educating school and church groups about the WWII internment experiences of Japanese-Americans".[23] The JACL is continuing to make an impactful difference today and the Detroit chapter is still active. As the mission statement for the Detroit Chapter states "the JACL Detroit Chapter has been committed to aiding and celebrating the Japanese American community in Michigan since 1946"[26] therefore making a significant impact of the lives of Japanese Americans in Detroit.

Lifestyle

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By 1999, many male employees of Japanese companies are sent to live in Oakland County in Metro Detroit for three- to five-year periods, taking their wives and families with them, before returning to Japan.[21] By 1992, most women in Japanese companies did not hold job types or a high enough rank to be sent to the United States, so few professional Japanese women were sent to Metro Detroit. In 1992, most of the Japanese women residing here were homemakers who stayed at home. By this time, many of the women, despite language barriers, had formed social networks in the United States. The Japanese Society of Detroit Women's Club (JSDウィメンズクラブ JSD Wimenzukurabu) was formed in May 1991 and in March 1992 it had 230 members. Most of the members were wives of employees from companies such as Mazda, Mitsubishi, and Toyota.[7] Most of the Japanese K-12 students in Southeast Michigan, like their parents, stay for three- to five-year periods and do not immigrate to the U.S.[27]

In 1991, Sharon Cohen of the Associated Press wrote that many Japanese people living in Michigan "enjoy the suburban lifestyle with its open land, big houses and rolling golf courses. They live the American dream — but they don't want to become Americans."[12] Izumi Suzuki, an operator of a translator service quoted in a 1991 Associated Press article, wrote that Japanese people returning to Japan would face difficulty if they acted too much like Americans.[12] Mazda also suggested to Japanese employees not cluster in one community.[12] Cohen used Mazda's suggestion as an example that Japanese were encouraged to not be "clannish".[12]

Commerce

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One World Market (ワンワールドマーケット), a Japanese grocery store in Novi, Michigan

Many Japanese companies operate offices in Metro Detroit.[6] In 1999, most of the 320 companies owned or controlled by Japanese in Michigan were in Metro Detroit.[21] The Japan Business Society of Detroit, in 2003, had 352 Japan-related businesses as members. It operates the Japan Festival, which has occurred since 1973.[8]

In 1987 Miyuki Mascot of West Bloomfield started a Japanese language newspaper in Michigan. The Japan Detroit Press was published monthly from 1985 to 2000. It gave advice on enjoying life in Michigan. It was the only Japanese language newspaper in Michigan until the 1990s.

Media

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Ayako Kinoshita, the wife of a partner of Coopers & Lybrand, started a newsletter in Japanese to area expatriates giving cultural advice regarding life in the United States.[18] Currently, the Japan News Club is the primary local Japanese-language newspaper in Michigan.[28]

Transportation

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Delta Air Lines currently has nonstop flights to Tokyo International Airport (Haneda Airport) in Tokyo (previously at Narita International Airport near Tokyo before 2020[29]), and Chubu International Airport in Nagoya from Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport.[30] Delta inherited the Detroit hub from Northwest Airlines merger in 2008.[31] The Detroit to Nagoya flight serves two cities with major automobile industries.[32]

Northwest began nonstop Detroit to Narita flights on April 17, 1988,[33] and flights to Osaka Itami International Airport began in 1993, later transferred in 1994 upon the opening of Kansai International Airport.[34] Northwest's Detroit to Nagoya Komaki Airport flight was scheduled to begin on June 2, 1998, later transferred to the new Chubu Centrair International Airport in 2005.[32] On February 28, 2008 Delta's flight from Detroit to Osaka Kansai International Airport was scheduled to end.[31] Delta briefly operated a flight to Tokyo Haneda Airport from Detroit that began on February 19, 2011, but ended in March of that year.[30] However, the flight route resumed operation on March 28, 2020; flights to Narita permanently ended on March 27, 2020.

Signage through the McNamara terminal of Detroit Airport is, along with English, in Japanese due to the large number of business travelers from Japan; Izumi Suzuki, a Sheraton employee, and several colleagues provided the Japanese translations used by the airport. In previous eras many Japanese travelers going through Detroit missed connections due to a lack of English comprehension.[35]

Education

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There are no full-time nihonjin gakkō Japanese international schools in Metro Detroit, so Japanese national students attend American schools.[27] In 2011, the Novi Community School District enrolled over 1,700 Japanese and Japanese-Americans.[36]

Japanese School of Detroit, providing supplementary Japanese education, is located in Novi. It was founded in 1973 by the local Japanese companies. It moved to Novi from Birmingham in the northern hemisphere summer of 2011.[6]

The Sundai Michigan International Academy, affiliated with the Sundai Center for International Education (駿台国際教育センター Sundai Kokusai Kyōiku Sentā, see 駿台予備学校), is located in Novi.[37] The school's purpose is to prepare Japanese children who have lived in the United States for a long time for a return to Japan, and to assist newly-arrived Japanese children who have no fluency of English.[38]

In 2010, a Japanese-English elementary school, Hinoki International School, was founded in Livonia as a public charter school [39] growing from 13 to 135 students in 2014, when Livonia Public Schools revoked its charter.[40] In 2014, the Niji-Iro Japanese Immersion Elementary School, a Japanese-immersion magnet elementary school of the Livonia Public Schools district, opened in Livonia[41] with 125 students.[42][43] Hinoki International School re-established itself in Farmington Hills but it closed in 2015.[44]

Religion

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In the 1950s, the Trinity Methodist Church in Highland Park had a Japanese Mission.[3]

Notable residents

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See also

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References

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  • Darden, Joe T.; Thomas, Richard W. (March 1, 2013). Detroit: Race Riots, Racial Conflicts, and Efforts to Bridge the Racial Divide. Michigan State University Press. ISBN 9781609173524.
  • Fucini, Joseph J (June 30, 2008). Working for the Japanese. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 9781439106488.. [a]
  • Ingrassia, Paul; White, Joseph B (May 14, 2013). Comeback: The Fall & Rise of the American Automobile Industry. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 9781476737478.
  • Mayer, Albert (1951). Ethnic groups in Detroit, 1951. Wayne University: Department of Sociology and Anthropology. [b]
  • Zia, Helen (May 15, 2001). Asian American Dreams: The Emergence of an American People. Macmillan. ISBN 9780374527365. [c]
  • Kelly, Natalie; Zetzsche, Jost (2012-10-02). Found in Translation: How Language Shapes Our Lives and Transforms the World. Penguin Books. ISBN 9781101611920.

Notes

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  1. ^ The section starting at p. 101 discusses Japanese employees from Mazda working in the Flat Rock Assembly Plant in Flat Rock, Michigan along with Americans in the 1980s.
  2. ^ Content re-posted to: Feinstein, Otto (1970). Ethnic Communities of Greater Detroit. Monteith College, Wayne State University. p. 159..
  3. ^ Content from the chapter "Detroit Blues: "Because of You Motherfuckers" by Helen Zia was re-published in: Wu, Shen; Yu-Wen, Jean; Chen, Thomas C., eds. (March 8, 2010). Asian American Studies Now: A Critical Reader. Rutgers University Press. p. 35. ISBN 9780813549330..
  1. ^ a b Metzger, Kurt and Jason Booza. "Asians in the United States, Michigan and Metropolitan Detroit Archived 2006-06-20 at the Wayback Machine." Center for Urban Studies, Wayne State University. January 2002 Working Paper Series, No. 7. p. 12. Retrieved on November 6, 2013.
  2. ^ Stone, Cal (April 11, 2013). "State's Japanese employees increasing". Observer & Eccentric. Detroit. Archived from the original on April 13, 2013. Retrieved May 5, 2013.
  3. ^ a b c Mayer 1951, p. 30, 1; 2: "JAPANESE There are approximately 900 people of Japanese descent in the city of Detroit. They first arrived to Detroit in 1892, but there have been no peaks of immigration to this city. However after World War II a number of Japanese persons came to Detroit from California. Many Japanese are located in Highland Park, whereas, the rest are scattered all over the city." and "Several Japanese attend the Japanese Mission which meets at the Trinity Methodist Church, 13100 Woodward."
  4. ^ Baulch, Vivian M. (September 4, 1999). "Michigan's greatest treasure -- Its people" () Michigan History, The Detroit News. Retrieved on April 4, 2009.
  5. ^ "2010年度 JBSD新年会用景品のご提供、ご寄付のお願い." (Archive) Japan Business Society of Detroit. December 17, 2009. Retrieved on November 15, 2013. "事務局長 中浜 昭太郎"
  6. ^ a b c d e f g Burden, Melissa. "'Little Tokyo' thrives in Novi as Japanese population expands." () The Detroit News (posted at Northern Equities Group). Monday December 19, 2011. Nation p. A1. Retrieved on November 7, 2012. Available in the archives of The Detroit News and in NewsBank as 'Little Tokyo' thrives in Oakland", Document ID: det-129398628
  7. ^ a b c d Jeffrey, Nancy Ann (Knight-Ridder Newspapers). "Japanese Wives Help Each Other In New Land." Chicago Tribune. March 1, 1992. Retrieved on November 10, 2013.
  8. ^ a b "Metro Japanese celebrate culture." The Detroit News. October 2, 2003. Retrieved on November 10, 2013. ID: det17370193. "Nakahama now is the executive director of the Japan Business Society, and on Sunday, the group, which boasts a membership of 352 Japanese-related businesses, will celebrate its 30th anniversary at the Japan Festival."
  9. ^ a b c Ingrassia & White 2013, p. 335
  10. ^ Darden & Thomas 2013, page unstated (starts with "This is a crucial point in understanding the anti-Asian motives...")
  11. ^ a b c d Zia 2001, p. 58
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Cohen, Sharon. "Metamorphosis in Motown." Associated Press at The Ledger. Thursday December 26, 1991. p. 7C. Retrieved from Google News (95 of 121) on November 19, 2013.
  13. ^ Helweg, Arthur W. Asian Indians in Michigan (Discovering the Peoples of Michigan). Michigan State University Press, March 1, 2012. ISBN 1609170482, 9781609170486., Page unstated (Google Books PT79). "When they learned of assignments here, Japanese officials and their families once fretted over reports of Japanese cars being stoned or pursued the streets, ritually pounded into scrap with sledge hammers or crushed beneath a creaking Sherman tank in a local car dealer's commercial that played widely in Asian news programs."
  14. ^ Darden & Thomas 2013, page unstated (starts with "Dingell was not alone in the sentiment..."),
  15. ^ a b Helweg, Arthur W. Asian Indians in Michigan (Discovering the Peoples of Michigan). Michigan State University Press, March 1, 2012. ISBN 1609170482, 9781609170486., Page unstated (Google Books PT79). "The 1982 murder of Chinese-American Vincent Chin outside a Highland Park striptease bar was seen in Japan as another example of our cultural savagery; in fact, Japanese reporters visiting Detroit once made a point of macho pride to say they had a drink in the bar Chin visited that night."
  16. ^ a b Fucini 2008, p. 98
  17. ^ Fucini 2008, p. 101
  18. ^ a b c d Ingrassia & White 2013, p. 336
  19. ^ "Consul General's Greeting." () Consulate-General of Japan, Detroit. Retrieved on May 6, 2013.
  20. ^ Lewis, Shawn D. "'Good wives' help bridge U.S. culture." The Detroit News. Sunday April 4, 1999. Metro Section, Final Edition, p. 3B. Record number det3139967. Available from NewsBank.
  21. ^ a b c Creager, Ellen. (Knight Ridder Newspapers) "Language of motherhood connects participants in special support group." The Vindicator. Thursday August 5, 1999. p. D7. Retrieved from Google News (30 of 43) on November 10, 2013. Also published in the Detroit Free Press as "BABY TALK IN TWO LANGUAGES JAPANESE MOMS SHARE EXPERIENCES IN BOTSFORD HOSPITAL SUPPORT GROUP." on April 27, 1999 in Features p. E1.
  22. ^ Higgins, Lori (2000-02-25). "Embracing Japanese". Detroit Free Press. Detroit, Michigan. p. 1B. - Clipping from Newspapers.com.
  23. ^ a b c d e Detroit JACL History Project Committee (2019). Exiled to Motown A Community History of Japanese Americans in Detroit. Thomson Shore.
  24. ^ "Japanese American Citizens League | Densho Encyclopedia". encyclopedia.densho.org. Retrieved 2019-11-25.
  25. ^ a b c d "MSU Authentication | Michigan State University". login.msu.edu. Retrieved 2019-11-25.
  26. ^ "Japanese American Citizens League – Est. 1929". Retrieved 2019-11-25.
  27. ^ a b "HANDBOOK For Teachers of Japanese Students." () Japanese School of Detroit. 7 (7/12). Retrieved on April 17, 2011. "Japanese children who come here with their parents attend their neighborhood local schools, since there are no full-time Japanese schools in the area."
  28. ^ "Home Page". japannewsclub.com. Japan News Club webpage. Retrieved November 29, 2014.
  29. ^ "Delta to shift all U.S.-Tokyo flights from Narita to Haneda in March". The Japan Times. 2019-08-10. Retrieved 2021-08-04.
  30. ^ a b Creager, Ellen (March 18, 2011). "Delta suspends flight to Tokyo-Haneda as Japan tourism plummets". Detroit Free Press. Archived from the original on March 20, 2011. Retrieved August 12, 2015.
  31. ^ a b Masson, Mary Francis. "Delta to cancel nonstop to Osaka." Detroit Free Press. November 12, 2008. Retrieved on August 12, 2015. Alternate URL.
  32. ^ a b "Northwest to Launch Nagoya-Detroit Regular Flights in June." Jiji Press English News Service. Date: 03/20/1998 Start Page: 1. "...it will launch regular nonstop flights between Nagoya and Detroit, the center cities of the Japanese and U.S. automobile industries, on June 2."
  33. ^ "Northwest Airlines expands trans-Pacific operations with inauguration of nonstop service between Detroit and Tokyo." PR Newswire, April 13, 1987, p.SE3.
  34. ^ "Northwest inaugurates Detroit-Osaka-Sydney service". Aviation Daily. October 4, 1993.
  35. ^ Kelly & Zetsche 2012, p. PT118-119: "Back in the 1980s, waves of Japanese businessmen started to arrive in Detroit...one local hotel, part of the Sheraton chain, was lucky enough to have an employee, Izumi Suzuki, who spoke Japanese...Eventually, she and some colleagues translated all of the signs that appear in the more modern airport that Detroit boasts today..."
  36. ^ "Novi Area Home To Many Affected By Earthquake In Japan". WWJ-TV (Detroit CBS). March 11, 2011. Retrieved March 4, 2014.
  37. ^ "ミシガン国際学院]. Sundai Center for International Education. Archived from the original on August 23, 2014. Retrieved March 4, 2014.
  38. ^ McNeil, Velvet S. "Japanese-style private school preserves culture" (Archive). The Detroit News. Retrieved on June 25, 2015.
  39. ^ "New Hinoki School in Livonia Blending Languages and Cultures". WDIV-TV (Click on Detroit). July 28, 2011. Archived from the original on October 18, 2014. Retrieved November 29, 2014.
  40. ^ Dixon, Jennifer (August 15, 2014). "Livonia School District's Decision to Revoke Charter Draws Ire". Detroit Free Press.
  41. ^ Chambers, Jennifer (August 14, 2014). "Livonia district removes charter, takes over Japanese immersion school". The Detroit News. Archived from the original on 2014-10-17.
  42. ^ ""New school year opens new chapter for Japanese school". Hometown Life. September 3, 2014. Retrieved October 18, 2014.
  43. ^ "New school year opens new chapter for Japanese school". Archived from the original on 2014-10-18.
  44. ^ "学校は解散中 [School Closed]. Hinoki International School. Retrieved April 16, 2016.
  45. ^ Ito, Joichi. "Joichi Ito". Color Magazine. Interviewed by Joanne Choi. Archived from the original on 2014-11-29. Retrieved November 25, 2014. JI: I grew up in a suburb of Detroit during the downturn in the U.S. auto industry, the mid 70s. It was a hard time to be growing up as the only Japanese kid in a school where most kids only heard bad things about the Japanese at home.
  46. ^ Barnas, Jo-Ann (March 20, 2011). "Yuka Sato's plans on hold while Japan recovers". Detroit Free Press. Archived from the original on March 20, 2011. Retrieved June 20, 2015.
  47. ^ Abe, Robinson, & Cheung, Frank, Greg, Floyd (2018). John Okada: The Life & Rediscovered Work of the Author of No-No Boy. University of Washington Press.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
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