Los Angeles Times Article
01/23/02
Nurturing UCLA Women's
Asian Roots and U.S. Lives
Education: Founded by
students of Japanese descent in 1928, the sorority Chi Alpha Delta
is now a cherished pan-ethnic institution.
By K. CONNIE KANG
TIMES STAFF WRITER
January 23 2002
Sixty years later, Aki
Yamazaki still wonders about a box of sorority papers and mementos
she hid in her parents' attic on 29th Place near Western Avenue
and Adams Boulevard. She wonders if the people who live there now
might have come across the box. She wonders how they would receive
her if she knocked on the door of the old house and explained why
she had come.
She'd have to tell them
the story of Chi Alpha Delta, which was organized in 1928 by 14
Japanese American UCLA students who were barred from Greek sororities.
She'd have to tell them
how Chi remained independent, rather than affiliating with a national
sorority. How it became the oldest continuing Asian American student
organization in the country. How an influx of young women of Chinese,
Filipino, Korean, Thai and Vietnamese heritage in the last three
decades has made Chi a cherished pan-ethnic Asian American organization.
Today, fewer than 10% of the sisterhood's 65 members are Japanese
American, said UCLA political scientist Don T. Nakanishi, who has
supervised students doing research on the sorority.
"The survival of
the Chis for nearly eight decades is remarkable, because [the sorority]
has gone through so many difficult historical periods and demographic
transformations," said Nakanishi, director of Asian American
Studies Center at UCLA.
"No other
Japanese American or Asian American student group has had such
longevity."
Every spring on Charter
Day, the sorority honors its alumnae, who sometimes come from across
the country.
Since 1995, Chis have
tracked down 1,000 alumnae through research projects, most of which
Nakanishi has supervised.
"It brings us a
lot of pride in having so much history and being part of the group," said
this year's Chi president, senior Christina Wu.
With her roommate, Pamela
Cheng, Wu has pored over many papers and photographs in the Chi
Alpha Delta archives.
Some photos show serious-looking
young Asian women in flower-pattern dresses and Bermuda shorts at
a beach party.
One of them, with a sailor
hat perched on her head, is Doris Aiso Hoshide, now 91 and living
in Rockville, Md.
The year was 1932. Hoshide
had changed her major from education to geography after completing
practice teaching, because a placement official at UCLA told her
Japanese couldn't get teaching jobs.
She still remembers her
sorority years as among her most fun-filled: beach picnics in San
Pedro, dinners and teas in homes of her sorority sisters, socials
with young men from the Japanese American Bruins Club, the only
other Japanese American student group on campus, dancing the fox
trot and the Charleston at the Biltmore and Beverly Wilshire hotels.
Juggling School and Family
As daughters
of struggling immigrants living in a narrowly defined subculture,
women like Hoshide
had to juggle school and family responsibilities. Their social
life was limited to Japanese churches and temples, but they yearned
to
feel "American." The sorority functions were gifts of
fancy that satisfied that longing.
An annual black-tie dinner-dance
with the Japanese American Bruins Club was the social event of the
year in the Japanese American community, said Kiyoshi Patrick Okura,
a retired clinical psychologist in Maryland. He was a founding member
of the men's group and the first Japanese American to play varsity
baseball at UCLA.
"We did things in
grand scale," he said. "We wanted to have the best place.
We hired an orchestra. There was so much discrimination, we wanted
to show that we could match anything that [mainstream groups] could
put on."
One year, 1933, Okura
and a friend spent the exorbitant sum of $10 on a bouquet of red
roses in an unsuccessful effort to persuade actress Jean Harlow
to attend.
Discrimination meant
that Chis could not live on campus or have a sorority house. But
the exclusion didn't deter them. After they were officially recognized
by the university in 1929, they got busy filling their social calendar,
raising money for scholarships for Japanese American students and
performing community service.
Minutes of
a meeting from that first year noted that a sack of rice and
a basket would
be given to needy families for Christmas. "Names to be gotten
from YWCA," the minutes said.
Another entry,
dated Dec. 8, 1941, ended: "The monthly dinner meeting was
canceled due to the national crisis. President Roosevelt declared
war on
Japan this morning. All activities are temporarily suspended."
Aki Yamazaki, who lives
in Van Nuys with her retired pediatrician husband, was the president
of the sorority that year. Her last act after Roosevelt issued Executive
Order 9066, authorizing internment for residents of Japanese descent,
was to put all the sorority papers in a box and hide it in her parents'
attic.
She hoped to retrieve
it when she returned home, but she did not have the luxury of tracing
the past. By the time the war was over, she was married; her husband--who
had gone to war in Europe with the Army--was a prisoner of war;
and their first child had died at birth.
Yamazaki had to leave
school just a few credits short of graduation. Half a century later,
in 1992, she was awarded her bachelor's degree in dietetics at a
special ceremony at Royce Hall. Overwhelmed by emotion, she could
not utter a word when she went to the podium to receive her degree.
Except for the World
War II years, when Chis couldn't attend school because they were
interned, the sorority has thrived.
Now as then, Chis don't
have a house. Today it is by choice: Members don't see a need to
live in the same house to maintain friendship and solidarity. They
have rejected offers by other Asian American Greek groups to join
them, choosing to remain an independent sorority identified solely
with UCLA.
Even on campus,
where people of Asian ancestry make up 35% of the student body
and there
are 75 Asian American organizations, the women feel what Yamazaki
describes as the desire of "birds of the same feather to
flock together."
They share an enduring
conflict between traditional Asian values expounded in the home--such
as not tooting one's own horn and holding back emotions--and the
more expressive values of the dominant American culture.
Said sorority
President Wu, a communications and accounting major who was born
in Westwood: "Even though [she and her roommate] were born
in America, [and] a lot of the girls might be third and fourth
generation, we still
have the same values and personality traits that we gain from Asian
families."
Wu quietly
defied her immigrant parents, who considered pledging a sorority
a waste of
time and money. "Sometimes it's hard," she said. "We're
trying to assimilate into the American culture and be Americans,
but at the same time we are trying to make our presence known."
To her delight, Wu learned
after becoming a Chi that some of her sisters had heard the same
superstitions she grew up with, including the one warning children
to eat every grain of rice in their bowl, lest they end up with
an ugly spouse.
"We find that our
parents are very similar--very academically driven," said
Nikki Kodama, last year's president.
That sense of comfort
can be felt in something as seemingly trivial as knowing the Japanese
word for egg when preparing a Japanese dish, Kodama said.
She thought the term
was tamago, but wasn't sure. A call to a sorority sister resolved
the issue.
Pride in History, Togetherness
Last month,
Chis sent Christmas cards to all the alumnae whose addresses
they could find. "It brings us a lot of pride in having so much history and
being part of the group," Wu said.
Chis no longer give a
sack of rice and a food basket to the needy. Instead, they teach
reading to students at the predominantly Latino Magnolia Avenue
Elementary School in the Pico-Union district on Saturdays, do arts
and crafts and play with them. They raise money for breast cancer
research. They walk dogs from animal shelters.
They sing Christmas carols
at the UCLA Medical Center with an Asian American fraternity, and
help community groups in Little Tokyo and Chinatown raise funds.
For a faculty tea in
1940, many Chis dressed up in kimonos. Last month, when the sorority
held its 55th annual Christmas party at the posh Reef-On-The-Water
Restaurant in Long Beach, there were a lot of exposed shoulders
and backs.
An outsider
would have been amused by the difference. Chis would have been pleased
by the similarities.
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