Raymond Chang Profile picture
Jul 19, 2022 18 tweets 8 min read Read on X
Day 2 of @aachristcollab #reclaimtrip:

Starting in Little Tokyo with Bill Watanabe, who is giving us a tour of some Japanese American history displayed here.

Here we are at the “Go for Broke” memorial. Image
When WW2 ended, there was a large debate among the Japanese American community as to whether they should create a memorial to honor the soldiers who had fought. Those who survived were torn, feeling like they shouldn’t erect a memorial to themselves as they were still alive. Image
Others felt like they should erect a memorial because their story was unique, especially as many fought in the war while their families were incarcerated in mass because of widespread suspicion.

Bill Watanabe is taking us to school! Image
Legend has it that this is the location where the California roll was invented around 1962. Image
The @eastwestplayers theater was the historic Union Church. It is now one of the only Asian American theaters in the country.

It was named the Union church because three different congregations came together from three different denominations to form one congregation. Image
There is a plaza (parking lot) named after Rev. Howard Toriumi, the senior pastor of Union church. He didn’t divorce social action from his Christian faith. Bill served on the Little Tokyo community council and suggested that the plaza be named after Toriumi. Image
Bill (Yoshiyuki) was born in Manzanar. In his family, he had two members who was was “pro-Japan,” someone who was neutral, and someone who fought with the 442nd military unit.

Three months after he was born, his family was sent to Tule Lake with 15,000 others. Image
Several Japanese Americans sought to purchase land in Boyle Heights, about 1 mile away from Little Tokyo. But the government stepped in and said Japanese couldn’t buy property in areas that weren’t designated for them.

The alien land law was overturned because of Sei Fuji. Image
Came back to the location of the Azusa Street Revival where I noticed the only tree that didn’t grow was dedicated to the Seymours.

Today, I learned that they had tried replanting the tree at least 5 times since 1990. Something’s going awry. Image
Here with Dr. Emily Anderson, who curates at @jamuseum. She and another person curated an exhibit about the role of religion during the mass incarceration during WW2. Image
The general pattern of Christianity that the Japanese observed after Christian missionaries entered into the country. Missionaries arrived, then the military arrives, then they go to war and if they lose, become colonized.

The Japanese resisted Christianity for this.
*Correction: it was formed by two congregational churches and one Presbyterian church.
Rev. Masahiko Wada created this hand carved wooden devotional panel with Psalm 121:1 while incarcerated at the Santa Fe Incarceration camp.

“I lift up my eyes to the hills-- where does my help come from? My help comes from the LORD, the Maker of heaven and earth...” Ps 121:1 Image
Bilingual Bibles with the translations handwritten and completed by Captain Masuo Kitaji in Poston concentration camp (black Bible) and at Gilroy Yamato Hot Springs (brown Bible).

The cover of the Bible with the black leather has 1 Cor. 1:18 on it. ImageImage
Japanese Americans didn’t respond to the rising anti-Japanese hate and the orders to be incarcerated en masse the same way. There was a diversity of responses based on the hopelessness many felt. Here are four categories: cooperation, challenge, resistance, and disillusionment. ImageImageImageImage
When Japanese Americans were finally realized to not be a threat, they were released and many had lost EVERYTHING from being incarcerated. When they returned home (usually on the west coast), they weren’t usually welcome and everything had changed, so many moved elsewhere. ImageImageImage
With a deacon of Union Church, who put together a book outlining the history of the church.

She turned to 1942 & saw how the pages around the Japanese incarceration were blank with the words: This will be our last entry. We can no longer document beyond this point. Image
This is the sanctuary of the Union Church, which is the oldest Japanese American Church in LA. It was established in 1918. They moved to this location from the East West Players theater in 1976 after the city of LA enacted imminent domain. Image

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More from @tweetraychang

Mar 6, 2023
Generally speaking, “conservatives” (in the broad sense of the word) know how to build and maintain institutions in ways that “progressives” don’t. Conservatives also generally know how to stick together in ways that progressives don’t.

Here are a few reasons why…
Conservatives know what they are trying to conserve because they don’t have to imagine something new, while progressives have a sense of what needs to be done and pursued, but often find out that people aren’t on the same page - and thus, they splinter.
Conservatives generally don’t need to exercise much imagination outside of ways of adapting to the broader changes. Their hurdle is irrelevancy. Progressives generally need to exercise more imaginative than most people have the capacity to handle. Their hurdle is exhaustion.
Read 7 tweets
Mar 5, 2023
There are plenty of people who hold bad ideas. In fact, everyone will be wrong, many times in their life - this is inevitable.

The problem isn’t necessarily with people who have bad ideas, but what we do when those bad ideas are coupled with power and influence.
What do you do when people with bad ideas garner power and resources to promote and perpetuate those bad ideas?

When some people hold bad ideas, it isn’t consequential. When others hold them, it can be deadly. When bad ideas gain muscle, it can lead to devastation.
I’ve never had a problem in walking with people who disagree with me (I actually welcome disagreement because it informs me both of what others are seeing and what I may not be seeing) and am open to being wrong and changing my mind.
Read 5 tweets
Jan 28, 2023
You will always have an audience with white evangelicalism if you don’t actually address racism and white supremacy with any real force. Always.

White evangelicalism is always on the lookout for the palatable person of color to say just enough not to appear backwards.
This isn’t to say there aren’t any “good” white evangelicals. What you often find is that white evangelicals don’t want to fall out of grace with the tribe they’ve curated and cultivated and called home - a home that has been brutal for Christians committed to racial justice.
Then you have racialized minority Christians who thought they would find a home with fellow Christians but instead got entangled with the economics of a system that has never had any regard for their dignity & worth, apart from the ways that they could be used as mouthpieces.
Read 6 tweets
Jan 28, 2023
If you don’t understand the weight of the brutal murder of #TyreNichols on the Black community, this would be a good moment to press in & pay attention, to sit in & sit with the grief, & to try to comprehend that many know they could’ve been in the same situation.
They’ve seen and experienced this since they can remember. Police brutality existed since the days of chattel slavery.

I can’t tell you the number and type of Black people who have experienced some form of harassment, profiling, mistreatment, and violence at the hands of police.
Those who are supposed to protect and serve, end up being the ones who cause the most terror because their weapons are given to them by the state and their violence is often justified.

Sadly, in corrupt systems, even the good cops get penalized for standing up for what is right.
Read 4 tweets
Jan 22, 2023
Woke up to news of another mass shooting.

10 killed. 10 more injured.

It was after a Lunar New Year festival in Monterrey Park, CA, a city that is 65% Asian and 27% Hispanic, but almost all Asian where the shooting took place.

It is also the first suburban Chinatown in the US.
News of a second shooting also surfaced in Alhambra, CA, which is one town over - just three miles away.

Alhambra is 52% Asian and 26% Hispanic.
These mass shootings are preventable. It’s not too late to act.

We need:

Mental health services. Stronger communities. More equitable education & social service opportunities. Reduction in economic disparities. Increased gun safety measures.

And a church that calls for change.
Read 6 tweets
Aug 27, 2022
Christian nationalism is a religion many Christians in the US need to repent of.

Turn away from the false religion of Christian nationalism. Believe in the gospel, which can teach you how to love your country without worshipping it.
Christianity is not American. The United States is not a Christian nation. America has been informed and influenced by Christian values, but has never been Christian - ever. All one needs to do is look at Black history to understand that the US was never a Christian nation.
I am grateful we can freely practice Christianity and freely follow Jesus in the US. The freedom to follow any religion is what can make the US special. Sadly, throughout history, people who weren't Christian in the US faced significant discrimination.
Read 6 tweets

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