What does it mean to have the freedom to stay, to move, and to return?
In 1942, the United States incarcerated over 125,000 Japanese Americans in concentration camps during WW2—including 1150 from San Diego. AjA’s Civil Liberties Project aims to remember this history through art while drawing parallels to the injustices happening today.
With the help of the Japanese American Archival Society of San Diego (JAHSSD), our youth fellows engaged with primary and archival sources that were incorporated into a large scale photo project.
Come view this art exhibit at Ocean View Growing Grounds, commemorating the erased history of San Diego’s Japanese American communities and its ties to the current humanitarian crises happening locally and internationally.
Because from San Diego to Mexico to Palestine, our struggles are interconnected.
Come join us for an afternoon of art, conversation, food, poetry, and mutual aid. Engage in direct collective action by making care packages for migrants and raising money for San Diego mutual aid group We All We Got SD, Palestine, and Sudan.
Agenda:
Community Conversation
Poetry Workshop
Care Packages
Mutual Aid Fundraisers