San Francisco's Japantown one of three that still exist in the U.S.; Grace Horikiri keeping it alive

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  • Опубликовано: 1 май 2024
  • A San Francisco native and this week's Jefferson award winner is helping keep alive the city's historic Japantown, one of only three left in the U.S. Sharon Chin reports.
    Read More: www.cbsnews.com/sanfrancisco/...
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Комментарии • 62

  • @4U6U57
    @4U6U57 12 дней назад +53

    No way there's only three Japantowns in the US, I've been to three: SF, SJ, and Little Tokyo in LA.
    *Looks up Japantowns on Wikipedia*
    Oh damn, those really are the only ones, huh. Crazy.

    • @bruh5136
      @bruh5136 12 дней назад +3

      Yes, you missing another jtown called Sawtelle Japantown aka little Osaka. All jtown should be name by Japan prefectures.

    • @brendanboon6548
      @brendanboon6548 12 дней назад +5

      Just left a similar comment up above - but 'Historic Japantown' as a title refers to ethnic enclaves that came about in the early 1900's where Japanese folks would gather & live. Sawtelle was added to this list in 2015.
      There are other enclaves that have sort of 'returned' in recent years, such as Sacramento & Seattle, as well as many unofficial Japanese enclaves like San Mateo, Costa Mesa, St Marks or Greenpoint in NY, Porter in Boston.

    • @JORDMAN1001
      @JORDMAN1001 9 дней назад +2

      Don't forget Seattle Japantown.

  • @fuji4202
    @fuji4202 15 дней назад +23

    Thank You 🙏🏻 Grace

  • @yoshinumberone
    @yoshinumberone 12 дней назад +9

    I love visiting Japantown

  • @exalkalibor924
    @exalkalibor924 15 дней назад +14

    Love love love jtown. Place to chill plus..the sunrise there is lovely. Trees breeze and playgrounds nearby. Jtown and fishermans wharf lovely places.

  • @nihonbabe
    @nihonbabe 10 дней назад +3

    Arigato Grace-san!!!!!❤️

  • @kaorusanchez4166
    @kaorusanchez4166 15 дней назад +3

    Congratulations! ❤

  • @trekkeruss
    @trekkeruss 10 дней назад +1

    I grew up in the Bay Area in the 60's and early 70's. Even though out family is Chinese, my father had a lot of Japanese friends, and when the Japan Center was opened in 1968, we used to go there all the time. As a boy, I always liked looking at the ship or crane models (my memory is a bit fuzzy) at I guess what was the Mitsubishi showroom.

  • @OneManOnFire
    @OneManOnFire 10 дней назад +2

    I only wish the SF japantown mall was better and bigger.

  • @pondcypressstudio
    @pondcypressstudio 12 дней назад +1

    How cool! I’d love to visit one day!

  • @GabrielSouza-rh4ee
    @GabrielSouza-rh4ee 11 дней назад +2

    Nice! I hope they can keep culture and traditions. AS someone from São Paulo- Brazil, this Jtown is much more simple when compared with our Japanese Town, the neighborhood called Liberdade- Brazil is the country with the largest japanese community (immigrants+descendants) I recommend searching for it.
    Watching the video I didn't see too much influence of Japan in this little town area... Liberdade neighborhood is full of japanese elements and it is always croweded of people 'cause there's always street fairs, many japanese markets, asian beauty products stores, feltivals, museum of immigration, events of pop japanese culture, karaoke and japanese schools. The neighborhood is very livable even tough the government don't take too much care of it.

  • @riorocky3360
    @riorocky3360 16 дней назад +45

    But , I finding not much food, snack, lot more business not Japanese , rather Chinese owners, workers now. hardly to find people speak Japanese. So, I feel it is hard to keep the culture if Japanese American not coming back to Japan town themselves.

    • @kbjis
      @kbjis 15 дней назад +8

      Nah, Jtown is pretty Japanese. Look at the ramen stores, the book store, etc. all originated from Japan.

    • @iplayfoofee3547
      @iplayfoofee3547 15 дней назад +16

      @@kbjis most of the business in J town at SF are chinese own, but yes they try to sell Japanese and Japanese-like products to keep the image of Japan going.

    • @plantsplantz2116
      @plantsplantz2116 15 дней назад +10

      Not all chinese theres also Korean owned

    • @jessicasmith5728
      @jessicasmith5728 15 дней назад +11

      I think part of the reason this is the case has to do with Japanese immigrants and Japanese Americans going back to Japan. I personally don't blame them for leaving considering how expensive it is to live in the US nowadays. Everything has a price tag to it.

    • @DxModel219
      @DxModel219 12 дней назад

      @@jessicasmith5728I would say yes and no… New Japanese Immigrants who are wealthier will not invest or immigrate to the US just because the Yen is historically weak vs the Dollar now. But I would say it’s a great time for the younger Japanese just starting off to immigrate and work here… The dollar exchange rate is +40% to the yen

  • @shokubutsugaku_hi
    @shokubutsugaku_hi 15 дней назад +11

    お疲れ様でした

  • @Midori_Hoshi
    @Midori_Hoshi 14 дней назад +2

    Arigatou, Grace Horikiri.

  • @DoneWithEvrything
    @DoneWithEvrything 8 дней назад

    I’ve never visited a Japan Town. Not even Litttle Tokyo. I really wanna visit one day.

  • @matthew_natividad
    @matthew_natividad 12 дней назад

    I wish I went there when I lived near by

  • @harlanjackson6112
    @harlanjackson6112 15 дней назад +8

    So the 3 remaining Japantowns in the US are LA, San Jose and San Francisco. Guess the Japantown in Seattle didn't make the cut.

    • @MrKenneffdupriest
      @MrKenneffdupriest 15 дней назад +6

      It's more than 51% homeless so it's no longer Japantown. It's Zombie Apocalypse Town.

    • @harlanjackson6112
      @harlanjackson6112 15 дней назад +1

      @@MrKenneffdupriest If you're talking about Seattle, the google maps street view of the area doesn't look that bad. Just very few Japanese businesses. They're calling it the International District and Chinatown. Maybe the Zombie Apocalypse is in a different area of Seattle.

    • @SUpersaiyajinjerkbag
      @SUpersaiyajinjerkbag 12 дней назад

      what about honolulu?

    • @Drownedinblood
      @Drownedinblood 12 дней назад +1

      It's seen as part of the international district. Its not very big.

  • @ENScottish
    @ENScottish 12 дней назад +5

    日本人の観光客は円安であまり来てないはずだから地元の観光客で賄っとるんやろな

  • @jessicasmith5728
    @jessicasmith5728 15 дней назад +5

    It seems like Japantown in San Francisco is facing the same issue as DC's Chinatown. I remember getting food from there back in '05, but now it's mostly dead or has businesses from owners of other Asian nationalities such as Korean or Vietnamese. Baltimore never really had a Chinatown despite a high number of Asians who live in the area especially Chinese people. I think part of the reason Japantown is dying is because some Japanese Americans left the US to immigrate to Japan. The same can be said for Japanese immigrants as well.

  • @4MJedLWY2c
    @4MJedLWY2c 13 дней назад +3

    Japantown remains one of the better neighborhoods in San Francisco; I'm thankful to those who have kept the area alive. However, the Japanese influence is increasingly diminished. Not that it's wrong for the area to flourish in its own way, but if the neighborhood wishes to value its cultural root and identity, it needs to constantly remind itself as to why it's called Japantown. It's sad that when Chinatown continues to thrive as its own, Japan with so much cultural soft power than China does such a poor job presenting itself. It's quite interesting why all the Chinatowns continue to flourish but the Japantowns choose to vanish and die.

    • @hnguyen5656
      @hnguyen5656 11 дней назад +3

      It's because there is a continuing large stream of new immigrants from China, but nothing comparable to that from Japan. Without new immigrants, these types of neighborhoods die out since second- and third generation immigrants assimilate. It's also why Little Italy in Manhattan is just a tourist trap and facade. Italian Americans had since assimilated and moved to the suburbs ..

    • @thelastdefenderofcamelot5623
      @thelastdefenderofcamelot5623 11 дней назад +1

      @@hnguyen5656 You're right, you can't control what immigrants you want. Even if Chinatown dies it won't bring back Chinese businesses no matter how much you try to advocate it. You'll end up having non-Chinese businesses. Like Vancouver for example, Chinatown shrunk by 50%. Japantown died. Indian and other fusion style restaurants started popping up. I'm not against it but there are some things that are out of our control.

    • @4MJedLWY2c
      @4MJedLWY2c 11 дней назад +1

      @@hnguyen5656 This is true. It's a dilemma for immigrants. I think assimilation, when done successfully, is great for them and the host nation, but that's obviously done at the expense of their cultural heritage. Chinese do assimilate well in general, but some do also keep their culture alive due to the influx of new immigrants as you mention.

    • @user-uj5kn6co5q
      @user-uj5kn6co5q 8 дней назад +2

      Prior to the war Japan town was very large and encompassed a large area. A lot of the loss of has to do with interment camps during WWII. The second generation wanted to distance themselves from a Japanese culture and be as American as possible due to the humiliation of being singled out, up rooted and forced to live in concentration camps even though they were American citizens. People moved away to the suburbs as they had lost their homes, businesses and possessions. In the 50's and 60's the whole area where the mall is and hotel was an empty lot. There were a few Japanese businesses. The whole area was rundown.

  • @hussienalsafi1149
    @hussienalsafi1149 12 дней назад

    🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰☺️

  • @runnerfromjupiter
    @runnerfromjupiter 12 дней назад +2

    🇯🇵 🤙

  • @knkweb
    @knkweb 10 дней назад +1

    XG revitalizes Japanese culture once more! As a popular Japanese pop group, XG truly captures the essence of Japanese culture. And we can't overlook One Ok Rock, hailed as the premier Japanese rock band. As someone of half Japanese descent, I take pride in witnessing the growing recognition of Japanese artists and culture.

  • @Jianju69
    @Jianju69 15 дней назад +1

    Grace FuriKuri??

  • @SecretMountainTroll
    @SecretMountainTroll 15 дней назад +3

    Its a mall...

    • @sethland
      @sethland 10 дней назад

      Understand the history. It was full of Victorian storefronts. But Japanese internment displaced the community. After WWII, they lost the property so much of the community settled wherever they could, scattered. Area was considered a blight in the 50’s so they cleared a wide area and put up a mall to serve the community that remained and the rest is public housing. It’s fortunate to exist at all with the advocacy of the community.

  • @user-rh8fl8qz2z
    @user-rh8fl8qz2z 2 дня назад

    "Japan Town " is just a MALL. Theres no actual residential neighborhood. FYI - Japanese are the MOST INTEGRATED of people of COLOR - hence their HIGHEST RATE OF SUCCESS! We learn ENGLISH. WE join the MILITARY. WE dont hide behind our culture or huddle together in suspicion of FELLOW AMERICANS. WE STAY OUT OF TROUBLE AND PRISON! We observe principles of SUCCESS and embrace them. If we FAIL...its our OWN fault...NOT culture, racism or politics.

  • @kenadrian27
    @kenadrian27 14 дней назад +1

    Maybe make it an Asian town instead? Seems like a lot of space for just one ethnicity, and half the restaurants are already Korean anyway. Could use more Thai and Vientnamese cuisines. Chinatown makes sense because of the large population.

    • @desu5070
      @desu5070 13 дней назад +2

      The report was mainly about how there are only 3 remaining and theyre trying to keep keep this one. It sounds like a bad idea to get rid of one of the three

    • @kenadrian27
      @kenadrian27 13 дней назад

      @@desu5070 I'm not saying get rid of it. I'm saying to rebrand it to better make use of the space and reflect actual demographics.

    • @stephenbachmann1171
      @stephenbachmann1171 13 дней назад +3

      Then you are getting rid of it because it’s not a Japantown any more. Do you think there’s no difference between Chinese and Japanese people?

    • @kenadrian27
      @kenadrian27 13 дней назад

      @@stephenbachmann1171 I said Chinatown makes sense because there's a bug chinese population in sf. Of course I'm aware there's a difference. I'm suggesting the other ethnicities, because they are lower in population, can share an Asian Town. The Japanese American population is a small minority in Asian Americans in the US, and is decreasing. Japantown has a bunch of Korean restaurants and bars anyway, and Taiwanese and Chinese shops are also opening there so the name doesn't make sense much now anyway. Opening the doors to other Asian countries like Vietnam and Thailand will bring much needed revitalization to that area.

  • @lilaznkid4ever
    @lilaznkid4ever 13 дней назад +3

    Don't forget Pearl Harbor 😢

    • @thelastdefenderofcamelot5623
      @thelastdefenderofcamelot5623 11 дней назад

      This sort of Japanese hate goes far back beyond Pearl Harbor. Your justification of hate goes far back when Xavier tried to overthrow the Japanese government.

  • @beanbon666
    @beanbon666 15 дней назад +4

    That's where i get all my japan girls

  • @latinwaterpoloperez
    @latinwaterpoloperez 16 дней назад +3

    Love these orientals