Unearthing Ogawa:  Lessons of Reconciliation
Dec
7
7:00 PM19:00

Unearthing Ogawa: Lessons of Reconciliation

On Pearl Harbor Remembrance Day, EngageAsia reflects on post-war reconciliation between Japan and the U.S. in a panel discussion on the film "Unearthing Ogawa".

An American finds a dead Japanese soldier in a battlefield cave and tries to return the man’s diary to his Tokyo family after the war. Decades later, the American’s son retraces the footsteps, finds out what happened, and meets the Ogawa clan today. Powerful new details are revealed in Tokyo, Hiroshima, and across the United States. Part history, part travelogue, part memoir, Unearthing Ogawa brings the past alive with surprise twists, unexpected discoveries, and far-reaching compassion.

The event will feature a panel discussion with the film's director, writer, and producer Steve Meixell and editor Anthony DeLuca.

Register here: https://tinyurl.com/ogawa

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JapanCraft21: Introduction to Japanese Aesthetics and Japanese Crafts
Jun
17
7:00 PM19:00

JapanCraft21: Introduction to Japanese Aesthetics and Japanese Crafts

Join EngageAsia for a special webinar led by Kathy Krauth, a Founding Member of JapanCraft21 (and an EngageAsia Elgin Heinz Oustanding Teacher Award Recipient), for an introduction of key ideas of Japanese aesthetics and how those aesthetics are reflected in a variety of Japanese crafts. The talk will also highlight the current critical moment Japanese crafts are in and provide an overview of JapanCraft21's mission and approach in assisting Japanese crafts for survival and success in the 21st century.

REGISTER HERE

SUGGESTED DONATION - $10 - PLEASE CONSIDER CONTRIBUTING HERE

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Lessons of Resilience from Maine:  Japanese Aquaculture in the U.S.
Mar
23
7:00 PM19:00

Lessons of Resilience from Maine: Japanese Aquaculture in the U.S.

Join EngageAsia’s next webinar, Lessons of Resilience from Maine: Japanese Aquaculture in the U.S., for an in-depth exploration of the Japanese roots of the thriving scallop-raising industry in Maine. The relationship between Maine and Japan are long, having begun in 1889 when people in Aomori rescued survivors of a Maine-built ship caught in a typhoon. Many years later this led to a sister-state relationship that ultimately created the context for cross-cultural learning about aquaculture. After several trips to Aomori and visits by Japanese experts to Maine, Japanese aquaculture techniques are today helping develop new livelihoods and bringing economic development to Maine.

As an education incubator building community in the Asia-Pacific Region and deepening U.S.-Asia Relations, this virtual event will look at a rare U.S.-Japan professional education exchange between aquaculture experts and its impacts.


Speaker
Mr. Hugh Cowperthwaite, Senior Program Director, Fisheries and Aquaculture, Coastal Enterprises, Inc. (CEI)

Hugh is a Maine native and has a background in commercial fisheries (lobstering) that began in high school. At CEI Hugh is responsible for CEI’s Sustainable Fisheries and Aquaculture Program which involves coordinating lending, business counseling and technical assistance with commercial fishermen, aquaculturists and waterfront businesses that maintain commercial fishing access. CEI is a partner in the “Aquaculture in Shared Waters” training program, a 12-week training course for existing and new aquaculturists. Since 2010 Hugh has been leading an ongoing effort to introduce commercial scallop farming to Maine growers based on Japanese culture methods. Hugh is a member of the Maine Technology Institute’s Aquaculture and Marine Technology Board, the Maine Fishermen’s Forum Board, the Maine Sea Grant Policy Advisory Committee and is currently Chair of the Alliance for Maine’s Marine Economy.

 
Registration Details
Suggested donation: $10 - Register via Link Below

REGISTER HERE

DONATE HERE

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BANZAI BABE RUTH! - BASEBALL, ESPIONAGE, & ASSASSINATION DURING THE 1934 TOUR OF JAPAN
Feb
24
7:00 PM19:00

BANZAI BABE RUTH! - BASEBALL, ESPIONAGE, & ASSASSINATION DURING THE 1934 TOUR OF JAPAN

JOIN ENGAGEASIA FOR A SPECIAL WEBINAR WITH AUTHOR ROBERT K. FITTS AND FILMMAKER YURIKO ROMER FOR A DISCUSSION OF THE BOOK BANZAI BABE RUTH AND THE 1934 BASEBALL TOUR OF JAPAN THAT INCLUDED BABE RUTH, LOU GEHRIG, JIMMIE FOXX, MOE BERG, AND CONNIE MACK. THE HOPE OF THIS TOUR WAS THAT A SHARED LOVE OF BASEBALL WOULD BRING AMERICAN AND JAPAN CLOSER TOGETHER DURING A TIME OF INCREASING TENSION.

BUY THE BOOK NOW AND READ IT PRIOR TO THE WEBINAR (A PORTION OF SALES IS DONATED TO ENGAGEASIA)

REGISTER HERE

Purchase the book here: https://www.robfitts.com/copy-of-banzai-babe-ruth

Donate here: https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=EXCW6QW352NA2

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Teshima - Memories of Resilience, Working Towards Sustainable Communities
Jan
13
7:00 PM19:00

Teshima - Memories of Resilience, Working Towards Sustainable Communities

Teshima is an island located in the Seto Inland Sea. In the latter part of the 20th century islanders fought a grueling battle to rid their ecosystem of illegally dumped industrial waste. United and autonomous, the islanders won a seemingly impossible fight by making many sacrifices. Today, the island is part of the Setouchi Art Triennale circuit. The mesmerizing artwork brings with it a consumerist culture and some of the important issues that linger from the waste dumping incident have been reinforced. However, only a few are left who remember. The story of Teshima reflects resilience, and an extraordinary sense of community. What can we all learn from Teshima? Why is it important? How could communities be structured today? These are some questions we haven’t stopped asking since we encountered this island.

Presenters 

Mako Mihira

Mako is a human ecologist, recently graduated from College of the Atlantic (COA), with a focus on food studies, botany, language, social entrepreneurship, and performing arts. Before her undergraduate work, she studied at  UWC-USA and has been involved in the UWC movement since then. She has been trying to find a way to study and communicate global and local issues through interdisciplinarity with a hope to make this world a better place. 

Priyamvada Chaudhary

Priyamvada is also a human ecologist (COA‘20). While studying human ecology she focused on visual/performing arts, art history, ethnography, and social entrepreneurship through the lens of art and collectives. She was also part of the UWC movement, in Pune, India. Having grown up partly in the UK and partly in New Delhi India, she hopes to use art, and design as an interdisciplinary lens to redesign how we relate to our environments and the differences that cause tension within them. (view some of Priyamvada’s artwork at www.priyamvadachaudhary.com)

Registration Details

Register here:  https://tinyurl.com/EngageAsiaTeshima

Suggested donation:  $10

 

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FINDING RESILIENCE IN THE FOREST – TEAM BENEFITS OF A SLOW WALK IN THE WOODS
Dec
15
7:00 PM19:00

FINDING RESILIENCE IN THE FOREST – TEAM BENEFITS OF A SLOW WALK IN THE WOODS

The slow-drip of constant stress inherent in global work culture is harming our bodily systems - Type 2 Diabetes tops the charts, along with obesity and heart disease. What causes stress? Long commutes; poor housing; poor neighborhood conditions, and poor workplace design; high demand/low control jobs; lack of access to retail, jobs, services, and now – COVID 19, major unemployment, and global recession.

Our environments and how we interact with them affect our quality of life. A solution currently on the vanguard is Shinrin Yoku, or Forest Bathing - the immersion into nature of teams and leadership for stress relief and creative inspiration.

During this webinar we will discuss our disconnection from nature, common stressors, and how an intentional, guided, and slow immersion practice within the woods has evidence-based, positive benefits for the mental, physical, and emotional health.

Featured Guest:
David Motzenbecker
Founder and Principal @Motz Studios

Motz Studios is a Minneapolis-based wellness provider of therapeutic forest immersion walks based on the Japanese tradition of Shinrin Yoku. The firm is also a design and landscape architecture consultancy with a focus on biophilic and salutogenic design, emphasizing the healing power of nature. David Motzenbecker, Founder and Principal, is an ANFT-Certified Forest Therapy Guide, Forest Therapy Trail Certification Consultant, speaker, and award-winning Landscape Architect with 20 years of design experience. He was a US-Japan Leadership Program (USJLP) Fellow in 2010/11.

REGISTER HERE

FREE - SUGGESTED DONATION OF $10 - DONATE HERE

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 Beyond the Wall: Expanding International Education for Underserved Youth
Nov
19
7:00 PM19:00

Beyond the Wall: Expanding International Education for Underserved Youth

Join EngageAsia in a Film+Makers Series Screening and Discussion of the Film Beyond the Wall featuring Sally Schwartz, Founder of Globalize DC and others.

Beyond The Wall is an independent documentary film, produced by CIB Productions, a Beijing-based production company. It tells the story of four DCPS high school students (from Ballou, Anacostia/McKinley, Roosevelt, and Wilson) who were selected for a six-week Chinese language and culture program in Beijing in summer 2009. This opportunity was offered at no cost to the students through Globalize DC's partnership with Americans Promoting Study Abroad (APSA), with partial funding from the US State Department. The film follows the students in their homes, schools, and communities before their summer travel; during the six-week trip; and in the years since their return.

Beyond The Wall makes a powerful statement about the value and impact of global exposure and study abroad, particularly for students in underserved schools and communities. One of the four is now a Foreign Service Officer, headed to his first China assignment next year as a direct result of his participation in this high school program.

Co-sponsored by the National Association for Black Engagement with Asia.

Please watch the film prior to the webinar.

Panelists Include:

Dr. LaNitra M. Berger
Senior Director, Office of Fellowships & Affiliate Faculty, African and American Studies Program @George Mason University

Dr. LaNirta M. Berger is Director, Office of Fellowships, Office of Undergraduate Education, George Mason University. She’s also on the Affiliate Faculty, African and African American Studies Program. Of relevance, she is Editor of the recently published book from NAFSA, Social Justice and International Education: Research, Practice, and Perspectives. LaNitra was instrumental in recruiting and supporting two students from the film (Jeffrey and Peter), who both went to George Mason University where they continued their Chinese education and study abroad to China.

Ms. Paula Koda
Co-Founder @Americans Promoting Study Abroad (APSA)

Paula Koda is co-founder of Americans Promoting Study Abroad (APSA), the China study abroad program featured in the film Beyond the Wall. She is now retired as Principal for AWA Management; held positions in Sales and Marketing in AT&T (including Director of Asia Pacific Sales Operations out of Beijing); and did a stint in government during the Clinton Administration as Chief of Staff in the Office of Management, Department of Education. She currently resides in Lancaster, PA. Paula was deeply involved in the creation and design of APSA, while she was based in Beijing, and has interacted a lot with the urban public high school students who were the focus of the program.

Ms. Sally Schwartz
Executive Director @Globalize DC
Sally Schwartz is Executive Director of Globalize DC, a nonprofit organization dedicated to expanding access to global education, language learning, and study abroad opportunities for students in DC public schools. Prior to this role, she was Director of International Programs for DC Public Schools. Beginning in 2008, Globalize DC partnered with APSA to select, prepare, and follow up with students who went on the APSA summer program to Beijing. Sally worked closely with the Beyond The Wall independent filmmaker during filming and post-production.

Mr. Jeffrey Wood
Foreign Service Office @US Department of State
Jeffrey Wood is a Foreign Service Officer in the US Department of State. He will soon depart the United States for his first diplomatic posting in Dhaka, Bangladesh.

In 2009 Jeffrey Wood was a 10th grader at Theodore Roosevelt High School in the District of Columbia when he was selected for a free six-week summer Chinese language and culture program in Beijing, sponsored by Americans Promoting Study Abroad (APSA), with funding from the US State Department’s National Security Language Initiative for Youth (NSLI-Y) Program. He had never studied Chinese, or been on an airplane before. He was invited back to China two years later to participate in APSA’s Booey Lehoo Concert to promote study abroad, sharing the stage with prominent musical artists, such as John Legend and will.i.am.

Jeffrey’s participation in the APSA summer program was documented in the independent film, “Beyond The Wall.” He has spoken at public screenings of the film in local schools, libraries, and on a panel at the US Department of Education’s International Education Week program in 2014.  

After graduating from Roosevelt in 2011, Jeffrey attended the Honors College, George Mason University, where he earned his Bachelor of Arts in Foreign Languages, with a concentration in Chinese in 2015. He wrote his Honors Thesis on migrant education in China.

While at George Mason, Jeffrey won a Gilman Scholarship from the US State Department and a Boren Scholarship from the National Security Education Program. These funds supported an academic year in Harbin, China (through CET Academic Programs), where Jeffrey earned a Certificate in Chinese language and literature from Harbin Institute of Technology.

During his year in Harbin, he was selected to interview then First Lady Michelle Obama for Discovery Education, as part of a White House cross-cultural exchange initiative in Beijing, China.

While an undergraduate, he also participated in the Public Policy and International Affairs (PPIA) Junior Summer Institute program at University of California, Berkeley, where he spent seven weeks taking graduate courses in economics, statistics, and public policy.

In 2015, Jeffrey was selected for the highly prestigious Thomas R. Pickering Graduate Foreign Affairs Fellowship, which set the stage for his future career. He returned to China for his first year of graduate work at the Johns Hopkins SAIS – Nanjing Center, where he studied International Affairs and China Studies. He continued his graduate studies in Washington, DC at the Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) at Johns Hopkins University, where he received a Masters of Arts in International Economics and China Studies in 2017.

As a Pickering Fellow, Jeffrey interned at the US Embassy in Oslo, Norway, working on US-Norwegian political and economic issues, as well as in the China and Mongolian Affairs Office at the US Department of State.

Throughout his academic career, Jeffrey continued to serve his community as an advocate for study abroad. He served as Ambassador for the US China Strong Foundation (formerly 100,000 Strong Foundation) and for Globalize DC to promote diversity in study abroad and encourage youth to consider international exchange.

Jeffrey was invited to testify as part of a panel before the US Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Government Affairs on “A National Security Crisis: Foreign Language Capabilities in the Federal Government.” He has also testified numerous times with Globalize DC before the DC State Board of Education in support of global education and critical language learning for DC public school students.

Register Here.

See the Film Here.

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Family Ties:  US-Japan Relations and the Legacy of Manjiro Nakahama & William Whitfield
Nov
5
7:00 PM19:00

Family Ties: US-Japan Relations and the Legacy of Manjiro Nakahama & William Whitfield

Join CIE-US and CIE in an unprecedented webinar focused on generations of friendships between the Whitfield and Nakahama families. Co-sponsored by EngageAsia and the American Friends of the International House of Japan (AFIHJ), this webinar will feature descendants of John Manjiro (Manjiro Nakahama) and Captain William Whitfield, as well as a descendant of Commodore Perry to explore the legacy and lasting impact of family ties and friendship.

Register at: www.tinyurl.com/ManjiroWebinar

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The Gift of Resilience:  A Discussion with Ms. Amya Miller
Oct
20
7:00 PM19:00

The Gift of Resilience: A Discussion with Ms. Amya Miller

  • https://tinyurl.com/giftofresilience (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

Join EngageAsia for a special resilience webinar featuring Ms. Amya Miller.

Born and raised in Japan, Amya Miller is the only foreigner hired by a municipality post-disaster 2011 to work as a voice for those affected by the tsunami. A 28-year resident of Japan with a career spanning over 30 years in US-Japan relations, her intrinsic and instinctive knowledge of Japan helped catapult in particular the City of Rikuzentakata into the mainstream media both in Japan and globally.

Miller brings a fresh perspective to the concepts of empathy and resiliency from the perspective of disaster victims. She is currently writing a book with Mayor Futoshi Toba of Rikuzentakata on their experiences over the past ten years in post-disaster recovery and reconstruction.

“The story of a boat” which Miller spearheaded has gained international coverage and recognition. In this webinar, Miller discusses how she connected two high schools and two cities with formal partnerships.

Register here: https://tinyurl.com/giftofresilience

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The AmerAsian School in Okinawa:  The Past and Future of Bilingual & Bicultural Education in Okinawa
Oct
7
7:00 PM19:00

The AmerAsian School in Okinawa: The Past and Future of Bilingual & Bicultural Education in Okinawa

  • https://tinyurl.com/AmerAsianSchool (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

Join EngageAsia for a special webinar on the AmerAsian School in Okinawa featuring Chair of the School’s Board of Trustees, Dr. Naomi Noiri. Dr. Noiri is Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology and Human Sciences at the University of the Ryukyus.

Register here: https://tinyurl.com/AmerAsianSchool

Consider supporting the school here: https://sites.google.com/amerasianschoolokinawa.org/home-en/supporting-aaso?authuser=0

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Virtual Japanese Tea Ceremony
Oct
3
11:00 AM11:00

Virtual Japanese Tea Ceremony

  • https://tinyurl.com/EngageAsiaTeaCeremony (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

Saturday, October 3, 11:00 to 12:00 AM EDT 
 
Join EngageAsia for a rare chance to engage in live Japanese tea ceremony via Zoom meetings with host Ed Papantonio. This event is open to a maximum of 25 participants. 

Ed Papantonio has been practicing Japanese tea ceremony for almost 30 years.  While in Japan, he studied with the Urasenke School and, after returning to the US, moved to the Omotesenke School in 2003 for logistical reasons.  Both schools trace their origins back to Sen no Rikyu, a 16th century tea master who created a uniquely Japanese esthetic that he will convey during this event.  

 Registration / Tickets:  https://tinyurl.com/EngageAsiaTeaCeremony

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Film+Makers Series:  An Apprentice Boatbuilder in Japan - A Discussion with Douglas Brooks
Sep
22
7:00 PM19:00

Film+Makers Series: An Apprentice Boatbuilder in Japan - A Discussion with Douglas Brooks

  • https://tinyurl.com/EngageAsiaDouglasBrooks (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

Join Douglas Brooks, master-builder of traditional Japanese wooden boats, for a discussion of this craft, its uniqueness and disappearance as traditional teachers pass away leaving no disciples. 

Douglas Brooks is a boatbuilder, writer, and researcher specializing in traditional wooden boats. Since 1996 he has been documenting traditional Japanese boatbuilding. He has apprenticed with nine boatbuilders from throughout Japan. He is the sole apprentice for six of his nine teachers. His work has been honored by the Japanese Ministry of Culture and he was awarded the 2014 Rare Craft Fellowship from the American Craft Council. He has authored four books on Japanese boatbuilding and numerous articles published in the US, UK, and Japan. He has taught and lectured across the United States and Japan. His latest book, Japanese Wooden Boatbuilding, is the first comprehensive survey of the craft. He lives in Vergennes, Vermont.

Register here:  https://tinyurl.com/EngageAsiaDouglasBrooks

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Film+Makers Series Featuring Shizumi Shigeto Manale, Bryan Reichhart, and Colleagues from the Film Pictures from a Hiroshima Schoolyard
Aug
5
7:00 PM19:00

Film+Makers Series Featuring Shizumi Shigeto Manale, Bryan Reichhart, and Colleagues from the Film Pictures from a Hiroshima Schoolyard

On the 75th Anniversary of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, join EngageAsia, MIT Japan Program, and the Aligned Center for a live interactive discussion with Pictures from a Hiroshima Schoolyard Producer Shizumi Shigeto Manale, Director Bryan Reichhardt, and Colleagues.

We encourage you to watch the film prior to the webinar. Link here:
https://www.amazon.com/Pictures-Hiroshima-Schoolyard-Bryan-Reichhardt/dp/B01GT47PSA/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1465654461&sr=8-1&keywords=hiroshima+schoolyard

About the film:
A collection of surprisingly joyful drawings created by school children living among the ruins of Hiroshima in 1947 becomes the heart and soul of this true, inspiring story about an exchange of gifts between Americans and Japanese after a devastating war. This powerful documentary about reconciliation and the power of gift, introduces the children artists (now in their late 70s) who reflect on their early lives amidst the rubble of their destroyed city and the hope they shared through their art. In 2010, the newly restored drawings, buried for decades deep inside All Souls Church in Washington DC, are taken back to Japan where they are reunited with the artists and exhibited in the very building where they were created.

Running With Cosmos Flowers
Filmmaker Shizumi Shigeto Manale is also the author of Running with Cosmos Flowers: The Children of Hiroshima, which comes out in paperback on August 2, 2020.

REGISTER HERE

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Resilience Webinar Series:  A Discussion with Emmy Award-Winning Journalist Allison Gilbert
Jul
30
6:30 PM18:30

Resilience Webinar Series: A Discussion with Emmy Award-Winning Journalist Allison Gilbert

Join EngageAsia for a conversation with Allison Gilbert, an Emmy award-winning journalist and one of the most thought-provoking and influential writers on grief and resilience. The author of numerous books including the groundbreaking, Passed and Present: Keeping Memories of Loved Ones Alive, her stirring work exposes the secret and essential factor for harnessing loss to drive happiness and rebound from adversity. She serves on the Board of Directors for the National Alliance for Grieving Children and the Advisory Board for the Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors, the preeminent national organization providing grief support to families of America’s fallen heroes. Learn More at: https://allisongilbert.com/
REGISTER HERE

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Film+Makers Series Featuring Filmmaker Regge Life + Cast of Cocktail Party
Jul
17
6:30 PM18:30

Film+Makers Series Featuring Filmmaker Regge Life + Cast of Cocktail Party

Join EngageAsia for a live interactive roundtable with acclaimed filmmaker Reggie Life and the Cast of Cocktail Party that will focus on the film, U.S.-Japan relations, racial tensions, and the continued legacy of World War II and Battle of Okinawa. Cocktail Party is based on the Akutagawa Prize-winning novel of the same name by Tatsuhiro Oshiro and you can learn more about the film here: https://www.cocktailpartythemovie.com/
REGISTER HERE

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