Through Hell to Mercy: one woman's journey

Published: Fri, 05/29/15


Author Mary Cronk Farrell 
Hello ,

Last week I told you about Joy Kogawa, a Japanese Canadian women whose family was torn apart and interned during WWII. The family's home in Vancouver, British Columbia was confiscated and sold without their permission, as were their possessions.

What I didn't tell you is about Joy's courage to heal after the hurt and outrage of such an irreparable injustice.
Through Hell to Mercy
Joy Kogawa & brother by house in Vancouver
Joy and her brother stand near the home the Canadian government ripped away from them. When the war ended, Japanese Canadians were not allowed to go back to Vancouver. They were given the choice of being deported to war ravaged Japan, or shipped east of the Rocky Mountains to Canada's inland provinces. 
Weeding in Southern Alberta beet fields
Joy and her brother were hauled over the Rockies to Southern Alberta, where they were put to work on a sugar beet farm.

They had to weed fields like these shown in the photo three times a year, and then harvest the beets. 

For five years, through blistering summers and freezing winters, the children, and an aunt and uncle lived in a one-room hut on a remote farm on the Alberta prairie. 

When Japan bombed Pearl Harbor, Joy's mother and maternal grandmother were visiting relatives in Japan. Jo never heard from her mother again. Not until she was an adult did she learn her mother died after suffering terrible burns when Nagasaki was hit by the atomic bomb. Joy's father had died an early death in the internment hospital during the war.
Japanese Canadians loaded into trucks
How does one recover after loosing nearly everyone and everything? 

How does one build a life from the shambles of a family staggering under the anguish of such bitter injustice?
The Canadian government and many citizens refused to acknowledge the wrong done to Japanese Canadians, but Joy realized the silence had gone on long enough.

As she reflected on her experiences Joy began to write her novel Obasan, named for the aunt who cared for her during the internment and her teenage years. She mentioned two ideas in the book, which I believe helped her move beyond the evils that had happened to her.

One she describes through the metaphor of remembering her grandfather’s woodworking. ““I can feel the outline of the plane with a wooden handle which he worked by pulling it towards him. There is a fundamental difference in Japanese workmanship--to pull with control rather than push with force.”

Another insight comes from the Japanese ideograph for “love” which contains the root words heart, hand and action.

The power of story also gave Joy courage. Writing her novel of one woman’s brokenness and journey toward healing brings not only helped mend her own heart, but harnessed the power of narrative to shine a light on history and move people to try and make up for the wrong done.
At last report, Joy Kogawa was working on a memoir entitled Gently, to Nagasaki. She says this project is the hardest thing she has ever done because she has had to "go to her personal hell" in search of mercy.

Mercy is necessary, Joy says. The world needs mercy because so many people live with a constricted fearful heart. They live with a scarcity mindset. Mercy moves us to an abundance mindset.

I've been struck by so many pieces of this story. I love the idea that action is integral to love. I'm pondering how Joy uses the word "mercy" where others might use "forgiveness."  I'm wondering if I can have a mindset of abundance when I start to feel I don't have enough time in my day.


For a longer interview with Joy Kogawa, click here...


In a round-a-bout way, Joy's family home in Vancouver did come back to her. Read about it here...
News and Links 
Played a new game last weekend that was a total blast, forest croquet. It's just like regular croquet, except no nice flat lawn. You encounter tree roots, rocks, pine cones, and bushes.

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Mary


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