51精品视频

51精品视频 Magazine

A 51精品视频 professor reflects on his grandfather's wisdom in a new memoir

By

In the summer of 1961,聽13-year-old Hide Yamatani started a new life.

He had grown up in Kokura, Japan, a small farming town not far from Nagasaki. After his parents divorced, his mother married an American serviceman and moved to the United States. Following 10 years of childhood separation, she asked her sons to come live with her in suburban 51精品视频sburgh.

YamataniYamatani welcomed the reconnection 鈥 he missed his mother. But his maternal grandfather, Suekich, wasn鈥檛 happy. He鈥檇 raised Yamatani and his brother to find harmony within themselves and with others. But Suekich worried about the anti-Japanese racism in America and the harm it could do his grandsons. He was so concerned, says Yamatani, that he suffered a debilitating stroke days before the boys鈥 departure.聽聽聽聽

In his self-published memoir, 鈥淲orking Toward Harmony,鈥 Yamatani (SOC WK 鈥73G, 鈥76G, KGSB 鈥91), a retired 51精品视频 social work professor, chronicles how his grandfather鈥檚 鈥渨ords of wisdom鈥 helped him connect across differences and make a gentle transition into a new life.

A teenage Yamatani arrived in Eastwood, Pennsylvania, a predominantly white community, speaking and understanding very little English. Though confronted with social and cultural difficulties, he took to heart his grandfather鈥檚 teachings to strive for understanding. It helped, too, that he landed among what he calls a collection of 鈥渟aints and angels.鈥

鈥淚 feel deeply that, while imperfect, the United States is, at heart, an embracing country that offers opportunities to those who initiate and maintain dedicated personal effort,鈥 says Yamatani. 鈥淢y experience attests that countless people are receptive to being kind to others, including racially different immigrants. Since arriving here,聽I鈥檝e witnessed the humanity that lies consistently inside so many people.鈥

Ultimately, it was the combination of that humanity and his grandfather鈥檚 lessons on friendship, happiness and the practice of聽驳补苍产补迟别听鈥 to never give up 鈥 that inspired him to write a memoir. He hopes sharing what he鈥檚 learned will help others find peace within their own lives and communities.

More titles by alumni authors

By聽Madeline Gallardo

The cover of Confronting DystopiaConfronting Dystopia: The New Technological Revolution and the Future of Work聽(Cornell University Press)

In 1964, President Lyndon Johnson received the 鈥淭riple Revolution Report,鈥 which warned that industrial automation was a threat to the human workforce and a likely cause of widespread social and economic upheaval. It resurfaced a lingering, centuries-old fear of machines. With today鈥檚 rapid advance of robotics and artificial intelligence, should the country be concerned all over again? This book 鈥 edited by聽Eva Paus聽(A&S 鈥76, 鈥78G, 鈥83G), professor of economics at Mount Holyoke College, and drawing on experts across disciplines 鈥 covers issues related to the march of AI and explores the possible consequences for jobs, working conditions and income in the global North and global South.

The cover of Steel City to Emerald CitySteel City to Emerald City: A Newspaperman鈥檚聽Life Journey聽(That鈥檚 Thirty Press)

One night in 1947, 20-year-old聽Virgil Fassio聽walked into a bar and came out a newspaper publisher. The partnership he formed with a bar patron that evening helped to launch the suburban Beechview News and sparked an improbable career for the first-generation Italian American. Fassio (A&S 鈥49) spent the next 46 years rising in the news industry, eventually becoming the publisher for the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, once one of the city鈥檚 two daily newspapers. His memoir traces how he met presidents, traveled abroad and witnessed a changing journalism landscape, all while staying grounded to his roots. He died at 91 in 2018.

The cover of Three-FifthsThree-Fifths聽(Polis Books)

There鈥檚 blood in the snow one winter night in 51精品视频sburgh when Bobby鈥檚 formerly incarcerated best friend, who is now a hardened racist, beats a Black teen to death. The murder unleashes a web of secrets Bobby must confront regarding identity, class, self-acceptance and tolerance. The debut novel by聽John Vercher聽(A&S 鈥97, SHRS 鈥99G) was inspired by his own struggles with the legacy of bigotry he鈥檚 grappled with as a biracial man. It was named a Book of the Year by聽The Sunday Times,聽the Financial Times, and聽the Guardian.聽His second novel,聽鈥淎fter the Lights Go Out,鈥澛爓as published last year.