Nikkei Studies

SFSU Day of Remembrance connects history and community

Co-organized by Cassie Miura, inaugural Takahashi Distinguished Chair in Nikkei Studies, the moving commemoration brought together scholarship, art and community memory, reflecting the growing strength of Nikkei Studies at SFSU

On a February evening in SFSU’s Ruth Asawa Garden of Remembrance, students, alumni, descendants, survivors and community members held small illuminated lanterns as they honored 19 Japanese American SFSU students whose education was interrupted by World War II incarceration.

The University’s 2026 Day of Remembrance brought together scholarship, art, ritual and community memory in a moving commemoration hosted by the Edison Uno Initiative for Nikkei and Uchinaanchu Studies and the Department of Asian American Studies. The event reflected the growing strength of Nikkei Studies at SFSU — work advanced in part through the generosity of the Henri and Tomoye Takahashi Charitable Foundation, whose support enabled the hiring of Assistant Professor Cassie Miura as the inaugural Henri and Tomoye Takahashi Distinguished Chair in Nikkei Studies. Although the event itself was not directly funded by the Foundation, its impact was visible in the faculty leadership, community partnerships and public programming made possible through this growing area of study.

Co-organized by Miura, Professor of Asian American Studies Wesley Ueunten and community partner Nancy Ukai, the evening included a screening of DUST, a short film by Glenn Mitsui and Brandon Shimoda; an exhibition of the Wakasa Spirit Stone; and an outdoor ceremony in the Garden of Remembrance. Masako Takahashi, president of the Henri and Tomoye Takahashi Charitable Foundation, collaborated with Miura on the event and helped connect organizers with the Wakasa Memorial Committee to bring the Wakasa Spirit Stone exhibition to campus.

During the ceremony, an original short film by Mitsui and Ukai was projected onto the Wakasa Spirit Stone, featuring the names and photos of the 19 SFSU students incarcerated during the war. As Miura told Golden Gate Xpress, the images helped current students understand that “these were peers, these were individuals who are just like them.”

The evening also connected generations of SFSU history. Reverend Michael Endo of the Buddhist Church of Oakland offered a blessing and read each student’s name aloud as 19 small lanterns were illuminated by survivors, descendants, community members and SFSU students. Attendees were invited to offer incense and place flowers before the Wakasa Spirit Stone in quiet gestures of remembrance that connected past and present.

Music was provided by Robert Kikuchi-Yngojo, whose father, John Kikuchi, was one of the 19 students, along with Ueunten on sanshin and Francis Wong on saxophone. Kikuchi-Yngojo wore the SFSU letterman jacket belatedly presented to his father by the University in 1990, a powerful symbol of recognition across time.

The Day of Remembrance offered a meaningful example of how philanthropy can strengthen academic life while deepening the University’s ties to alumni, families and community partners. Nancy Ukai, a community partner and member of the Wakasa Memorial Committee, underscored the importance of remembrance when she told Golden Gate Xpress, “If we don’t have these remembrance days, we will forget things.”

Through support for faculty leadership and community-engaged scholarship, donor generosity helps preserve history, uplift underrepresented stories and create spaces where students and the broader SFSU community can continue learning from the past in pursuit of a more just future.

For more information about donating to the College of Ethnic Studies, contact:

Alex Sánchez

Executive Director of Development

College of Ethnic Studies

alexsan@sfsu.edu

(415) 338-1032

Read more about Alex

New Takahashi Distinguished Chair in Nikkei Studies Reflects on a Busy First Semester

Cassie Miura focuses on advancing awareness, understanding and appreciation of Japanese American experiences

Since beginning her role in August, 2025, inaugural Henri and Tomoye Takahashi Distinguished Chair in Nikkei Studies Cassie Miura, PhD, has been busy not only connecting with SFSU students but also extending learning beyond the traditional classroom setting.

“I have loved working with SFSU students in my first semester, especially majors in Asian American Studies and members of the Nikkei Student Union,” Miura says. In addition to those student connections, activities have included a field trip to view the exhibit Living Tattoo Traditions: American Irezumi and Beyond at the San Francisco Public Library and a Zoom visit with author and activist Frank Abe, co-author of the graphic novel We Hereby Refuse: Japanese American Resistance to Wartime Incarceration.

Other happenings include a new website for the Edison Uno Initiative for Nikkei and Uchinaanchu Studies (EUINUS) and an upcoming Day of Remembrance event on campus during the evening of February 19. The Day of Remembrance commemorates the unlawful incarceration of Japanese Americans during WWII and invites reflection on contemporary experiences of racialized violence and xenophobia.

In May 2024, SFSU announced a $4.2 million gift from the Henri and Tomoye Takahashi Charitable Foundation to establish the Takahashi Distinguished Chair in Nikkei Studies. This faculty position is the first endowed chair in the University’s College of Ethnic Studies. It is also the first in the Asian American Studies department, which is the oldest and largest in the country and is at the forefront of curriculum development used by schools and universities nationwide.

“We are deeply honored to have Dr. Miura join our faculty and play a critical role in advancing Nikkei Studies,” SFSU College of Ethnic Studies Dean Grace Yoo said at the time of Miura’s appointment. “With her extensive background in Asian American Studies, particularly in Japanese American and Nikkei literature as well as Okinawan diasporic identity, Cassie will be instrumental to our college and University.”

Nikkei Studies centers the history, culture and experiences of the global Japanese diaspora and its intersectional communities. In Miura’s role, she focuses on increasing awareness, understanding and appreciation of the historical and contemporary experiences of Japanese Americans and the worldwide Nikkei diaspora. 

“This position is an opportunity of a lifetime, and I’m eager to build relationships and get to work,” Miura said when her appointment was announced. “On one hand, the history of World War II Japanese American incarceration remains vital to understanding contemporary issues, especially the rise of anti-Asian and xenophobic racism in the United States today. On the other hand, I regard Nikkei Studies as an evolving transnational field with room to engage more deeply with feminist, queer and Indigenous perspectives. Given the longstanding commitment to self-determination on the part of SFSU’s College of Ethnic Studies, I can think of no better place to situate my work.”

"Given the longstanding commitment to self-determination on the part of SFSU’s College of Ethnic Studies, I can think of no better place to situate my work.” 
—Cassie Miura, Ph.D.

Prior to coming to SFSU, Miura was an associate teaching professor of culture, arts and communication in the School of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences at the University of Washington Tacoma. There she also served as director of grants and special projects for the Office of Equity and Inclusion and co-principal investigator of the AAPI THRIVE Project, which was funded by a $2 million grant by the U.S. Department of Education’s AANAPISI (Asian American and Native American Pacific Islander Serving Institutions) Program.

Miura holds a Ph.D. in Comparative Literature from the University of Michigan, and her research and teaching interests include Okinawan diasporic identity, Japanese American and Nikkei literature and more. Miura is a yonsei (fourth generation) Okinawan and Japanese American born on the island of Kauaʻi and raised mostly in the Pacific Northwest.

Visit the SFSU website to learn more about the Asian American Studies Department.

Cassie Miura with Don Endo and Tomoye Takahashi

From left to right: Donor Masako Takahashi, Takahashi Distinguished Chair Cassie Miura, and SFSU Foundation board director Don Endo

For more information about donating to the College of Ethnic Studies, contact:

Alex Sánchez

Executive Director of Development

College of Ethnic Studies

alexsan@sfsu.edu

(415) 338-1032

Read more about Alex