APA Spotlight: Chris Aihara, Japanese American Cultural & Community Center

8Questions is a bi-monthly interview of Asian Pacific Islander (API) community leaders. It is a spotlight on individuals who have dedicated their careers to issues surrounding the API community with the goal of bringing much deserved recognition to their work and cause(s).

Chris Aihara is the Executive Director of the Japanese American Cultural & Community Center (JACCC), one of the largest ethnic cultural centers of its kind in the U.S. She was the former Chair of the Little Tokyo Community Council, a member of the Mayor’s Little Tokyo Community Advisory Committee, and member of the California Japanese American Community Leadership Council. She has written several publications on Japanese American culture and has served as a member of the City of Torrance Cultural Arts Commission for six years.

The JACCC is dedicated to the promotion and presentation of Japanese and Japanese American arts and culture to diverse audiences.

What is the mission statement of your life?
To not be afraid to live because I’m afraid to die.

How did you end up doing what you’re doing?
I totally “ended up” doing what I’m doing. It has been a journey of self-discovery: who am I as a post-war Sansei woman growing up in the ‘50s, experiencing the ‘60s & ‘70s, and emerging through the rest of it. I landed in places that fed my interests and provided opportunities to learn and be challenged. For me, it’s always been very personal. I am of the ilk that was not career savvy. I never anticipated nor set a goal to  run an organization. Timing is everything, and at this time in the JACCC’s history, I was the person to step forward.

If Hollywood made a movie about your life, whom would you like to see play the lead role as you?
Emma Thompson, Holly Hunter, Ruth Gordon (although she’s deceased) or Roseanne Barr (only selected scenes).

How can people find out more about your organization or get involved?
Call me or members of my staff. Jessica Kikuchi & Janet Hiroshima are good advocates for the organization.

Address: 244 S. San Pedro Street, Suite 505, Los Angeles, CA 90012
Phone: (213) 628-2725
Fax: (213) 617-8576
Email: [email protected]

If you had a crystal ball, what do you see for the future of the Asian Pacific Islander American community?
What I see, or what I want to see? I see a community that is diverse and multi-cultural. I’d like to see continuation of values and culture that is distinct from Western culture and values, like emphasis on the group, sense of interconnectedness, respect for elders. I’d hope that the connection to Asia and ethnic communities will reinforce and help to maintain the identity of individual cultures: Japanese, Chinese, Korean, etc. I’d like to see the API community have impact and influence, through individuals and as communities, on the broader American culture

Bonus Question: What advice do you have for young professionals?  Would you give different advice for young Asian Pacific Islander American professionals?
Know your values, what you live by. In your work, understand your objective, what you wish to accomplish. Your values and goals are the basis for your decisions. Take calculated risks. Study and observe, and then factor your gut reaction into the decision. Utilize and maximize the available resources. Maintain good relationships.

For API professionals: group consensus and opinion are important, but sometimes the stronger stance will lead to a better and clearer outcome. Sometimes you go against the popular opinion.

Bonus Question: What are your comfort foods and what memories do you have associated with them?
Ochazuke is my comfort food. Tea, rice and tsukemono. I ate this sitting on my baa-chan’s (grandmother) lap. I even have an old photo. I’m in those pajamas that snap together with the feet attached.

Bonus Question: What’s your guilty pleasure?
I like to chill out watching old sit-com re-runs, like The Cosby Show in my nightgown… in bed.

Know someone we should highlight on 8Questions? Send an email with their name and contact info or website.

About Koji Steven Sakai

Writer/Producer Koji Steven Sakai is the founder of Little Nalu Pictures LLC and the CEO of CHOPSO (www.CHOPSO.com), the first Asian English streaming video service. He has written five feature films that have been produced, including the indie hit, The People I’ve Slept With. He also produced three feature films, a one hour comedy special currently on Netflix, and Comedy InvAsian, a live and filmed series featuring the nation’s top Asian American comedians. Koji’s debut novel, Romeo & Juliet Vs. Zombies, was released in paperback in 2015 and in audiobook in 2016 and his graphic novel, 442, was released in 2017. In addition, he is currently an adjunct professor in screenwriting at International Technological University in San Jose.
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