Friday, March 13, 2026

Women's History Month

 

When the Uchida family was ordered to report to be imprisoned in the desert simply for being Japanese American, 20-year-old Yoshiko faced an impossible task. She and her family had been given just ten days to abandon their Berkeley, California home and surrender to the federal government, and Yoshiko had just ten days to find someone, anyone, to take care of their beloved dog.
Laddie, a Scotch Collie, had been part of the family since Yoshiko's childhood, and now, elderly and devoted, he needed a stranger's mercy. Yoshiko placed an ad in the "Daily Cal," UC Berkeley's student newspaper. A boy responded and took Laddie. Within two weeks, the dog was dead. It was the kind of loss that didn't make headlines -- no barbed wire in the photograph, no armed guards -- but it captured the intimate cruelty of what the government had done: not just imprisonment, but the quiet destruction of everything a person loved.
The Uchidas were among 120,000 people of Japanese descent -- about two-thirds of them U.S. citizens -- forcibly relocated to concentration camps following Executive Order 9066, signed by President Roosevelt on February 19, 1942. The government claimed military necessity; newspapers fanned the flames with editorials like the one in the "Los Angeles Times" that declared, "A viper is nonetheless a viper wherever the egg is hatched -- so a Japanese American, born of Japanese parents, grows up to be a Japanese, not an American."
Decades later, a Congressional commission found no evidence of Japanese American disloyalty and concluded that the incarceration had been the product not of security concerns but of "race prejudice, war hysteria, and a failure of political leadership." In 2018, Chief Justice John Roberts called it what it was: "The forcible relocation of U.S. citizens to concentration camps, solely and explicitly on the basis of race, is objectively unlawful," he wrote. The original Supreme Court decision upholding the camps, he added, "was gravely wrong the day it was decided."
Uchida would spend her life making sure America never forgot. When she wrote her pioneering 1971 children's book "Journey to Topaz," she included the story of a family dog left behind who dies shortly after drawn directly from her own experience, as she confirmed in her memoirs "Desert Exile" and "The Invisible Thread." Uchida became an award-winning writer of children's books, all based on aspects of Japanese and Japanese American history and culture.
She is best known for her books on the concentration camp experience, the first such books for children written by a Japanese American author, including "Journey to Topaz," its sequel "Journey Home," and the picture book "The Bracelet." She also wrote two memoirs: the adult "Desert Exile: The Uprooting of a Japanese American Family" (1982) and the young adult "The Invisible Thread." As she later explained, she wanted to write stories about human beings, not stereotypic Asians, noting that there were no books like that in the early 1950s when she started writing for children.
Though sickly as a child, Yoshiko graduated from high school in two and a half years and enrolled at UC Berkeley at age 16. But as she later wrote, "Pearl Harbor put an abrupt end to our 'days of innocence' and instead of attending the Cal Commencement, I received my diploma from the mailman in my horse stall at Tanforan -- a prisoner of my own country." She would recall feeling "degraded, humiliated, and overwhelmed with a longing for home."
Yet rather than succumb to despair, she and her sister started a nursery school at the camp, and Yoshiko later became a second-grade teacher. Seeming to recognize the historic nature of her confinement, she documented her experience through drawings, paintings, journals, and letters. That determination to transform injustice into testimony made Uchida one of American literature's most important chroniclers of the Japanese American experience.
In May 1943, Uchida received word of acceptance at Smith College with a full scholarship, and she and her sister left the concentration camp on the same day -- Keiko to a job at nearby Mt. Holyoke. After finishing her M.Ed. at Smith, Yoshiko took a teaching job in Philadelphia, then moved to New York and worked as a secretary, which gave her more time to write. She submitted short stories to mainstream magazines and journals, resulting in a pile of rejection slips. Her breakthrough came with the 1949 publication of "The Dancing Kettle and Other Japanese Folk Tales," which was met with great acclaim.
Over her career, Uchida wrote 34 books, received a Ford Foundation fellowship in 1952 and a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1959, and won numerous awards, including Commonwealth Club of California Medals and a Child Study Association of America Children's Book of the Year citation. She died in Berkeley in 1992.
In the epilogue of "Desert Exile," she explained why she had devoted her life to this work: "I wrote it for the young Japanese Americans who seek a sense of continuity with their past. But I wrote it as well for all Americans, with the hope that through knowledge of the past, they will never allow another group of people in America to be sent into a desert exile ever again."
To discover Yoshiko Uchida's powerful books for young readers, we recommend "The Bracelet" for ages 5 to 8 (https://www.amightygirl.com/the-bracelet), "Journey To Topaz" (https://www.amightygirl.com/journey-to-topaz) and its sequel "Journey Home" (https://www.amightygirl.com/journey-home), both for ages 9 and up
She is also the author of the acclaimed memoir for adult readers "Desert Exile: The Uprooting of a Japanese American Family" at https://bookshop.org/a/8011/9780295994758 (Bookshop) and https://amzn.to/48hU4KX (Amazon)
For more books for children and teens about the internment of Japanese American, visit our blog post, “‘Dangerous Americans’: Mighty Girl Books About The Internment of Japanese Americans” at https://www.amightygirl.com/blog?p=14199

Morning Reflections

 


Thursday, March 12, 2026

In Today's News

 Trump lies the excursion is going swimmingly And mixes in a hate rally just for shits and giggles



The Art Of A Wanker


WELL BLESS HIS TANGARIN HEART, Y'ALL.

Women's History Month

 


When Yanar Mohammed returned to Iraq in 2003, there were zero shelters for women fleeing honor killings, trafficking, and abuse. She built the first one with her life savings. Over the next 22 years, that single shelter grew into a network of 11 safe houses across five cities -- saving 1,400 lives.
Last Monday, on March 2, six days before International Women's Day, Yanar was assassinated outside her home in Baghdad. The forces she had spent decades fighting finally silenced her -- but the international women's rights community has answered the call she always made: for solidarity, for visibility, and for her life-saving work for women to continue.
Born in Baghdad in 1960, Yanar Mohammed trained as an architect -- but it was the injustice she witnessed from childhood that would define her life. When war and economic collapse devastated Iraq in the early 1990s, she fled to Canada with her husband and young son, building a quiet life in Toronto. But exile never sat easily with her.
When the U.S. invasion came in 2003, she wrote to her mother explaining why she had to go back -- she could not watch Iraq go back to "the times of my grandmother," where the politics of the post-invasion era were handing power to men who would leave millions of women vulnerable. She crossed the Tigris River by rowboat to go home. She was done being an architect -- Yanar was going to build something else entirely.
What she built was unprecedented. Yanar used her life savings to found OWFI -- the Organization of Women's Freedom in Iraq -- the first organization to open women's shelters in central and southern Iraq, protecting women from honor killings, trafficking, and domestic abuse in a country where no such refuge had ever existed.
"My work is focused on protecting women in Iraq from the crimes of patriarchy," she said -- and the crimes were staggering. She wrote at the time: "Millions of women are being displaced in Iraq at this moment. They are vulnerable to trafficking because of poverty and having to feed their children. We also have extreme violence against women under ISIS. We try to deal with all of it."
And she did -- for years. She interviewed 200 women in Iraqi prisons, helping save at least one from a death sentence. She launched a feminist newspaper, a radio station, and courses training women to become human rights defenders themselves.
"Our shelters are not only a place for women to rest and feel safe," Yanar declared. "They are schools for social transformation -- for women to turn from victims into defenders of rights."
By 2024, her shelters had protected and empowered 1,400 women. Human Rights Watch called her "one of Iraq's most courageous advocates for women's rights." Agnes Callamard, Secretary-General of Amnesty International, called her simply "one of our icons."
She paid for that work by living in constant danger. Death threats arrived almost immediately -- from militias, from ISIS, from Islamist armed groups. The Iraqi government filed lawsuits trying to dissolve her organization, accused her of human trafficking, and forced her to flee the country more than once.
"The government starts with smear campaigns," she warned in 2023, "then court cases -- and if that doesn't work, they kidnap and kill you." But she always came back. "She faced constant threats," said Callamard after her death, "but she never stopped." Her colleague Arwa Damon, former CNN correspondent, remembered her as someone who "exuded a strength that gave strength to those around her."
Yanar Mohammed's assassination has sent shockwaves through the global women's rights community. This International Women's Day, advocates, governments, and human rights organizations around the world are demanding justice in her name. The European Union, Australia, Canada, the United Kingdom, and Switzerland issued a joint statement honoring her memory, reaffirming their commitment to "the values of equality, justice, and inclusion for which she stood."
Amnesty International called her killing "a calculated assault to stifle human rights defenders," and its Secretary-General Agnes Callamard declared: "She spent her life standing up for women's rights in the most dangerous environment. She faced constant threats, but she never stopped. And today we cry and mourn her energy, her commitment, her profound humanity, her amazing courage."
The Rafto Foundation, which awarded her Norway's prestigious human rights prize, called it "an attack on the fundamental values she dedicated her life to defending: women's freedom, democracy, and universal human rights." The Iraqi government has opened an investigation. The world is watching.
Even in the face of constant threats, Yanar Mohammed's defining belief never wavered: "We women are capable of knowing what is best for us, our families, and our communities." She proved it every day for 22 years -- in the shelters she built, the women she saved, and the movement she refused to let die.
That movement is still standing. OWFI has pledged to keep the safe houses open. And MADRE, Yanar's decades-long partner in this work, has launched the Yanar Mohammed Feminist Defense Fund -- "Yanar's Fund" -- to make sure they can.
The Fund covers emergency relocation for activists now facing threats, security upgrades, legal defense, and the leadership development needed to carry her work forward. The immediate goal is $500,000. The long-term vision is a permanent endowment that will honor Yanar's legacy for generations.
The most powerful thing we can do this International Women's Day is make sure the institutions Yanar built to protect and empower women survive.
To support Yanar Mohammed Feminist Defense Fund, visit https://support.madre.org/campaign/776576/donate
To learn more about the work of her group, the Organization of Women's Freedom in Iraq, visit https://www.owfiraq.org/
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For children's books about extraordinary global women, visit our blog post "50 Children's Books About Mighty Girls & Women Around The World" at https://www.amightygirl.com/blog?p=33102
To inspire children and teens with the true stories of girls and women who dared to fight for change throughout history, check out our blog post, "Dissent Is Patriotic: 50 Books About Women Who Fought for Change," at https://www.amightygirl.com/blog?p=14364
For an excellent guide for girls on how to make real change on the issues they can care, we highly recommend "A Smart Girl's Guide: Making A Difference" for ages 8 to 12 at https://www.amightygirl.com/smart-girl-s-guide-making-a...
For kids in general, we also recommend "How to Make a Better World: For Every Kid Who Wants to Make a Difference" for ages 7 and up at https://www.amightygirl.com/how-to-make-a-better-world
For both fictional and biographical books for children and teens that star courageous girls and women, visit our "Courage & Bravery" section at https://amgrl.co/2IUVSzW
To stay connected with A Mighty Girl, you can sign-up for our free email newsletter at https://www.amightygirl.com/forms/newsletter

Australia to New Zealand RECAP with links (Throwback Thursday)

 2015

AUSTRALIA TO NEW ZEALAND








Day 26 Queenstown - a free day to do chores and stroll around.

Day 27 - Queenstown to Franz Josef


Day 28 Franz Josef  the highlight of the day was the helicopter ride even though the unsettled weather didn't allow a snow landing.


Day 29 Franz Josef to Christchurch we take a (delayed) train to Christchurch in the rain, so not great views and we arrived so late that we didn't see anything of Christchurch.


Day 30 Christchurch to Rotorua We take an early morning flight to Rotorua, definitely a highlight.

The rest of the day we explored the town, went to the Hot Springs Spa and out for dinner.


Day 31 Touring Rotorua this was a morning of tours.


Then to a sheep museum.



Rainbow Springs



In the evening we went to the highlight Tamaki Maori Village.




Day 32 Rotorua to Auckland a lovely bus ride with lunch and a tour on the way. We couldn't take photos in the glow worm caves.


Day 33 Auckland we spent the day around town and then had a late overnight flight to LA.


Air New Zealand to LA




Funnies

 










Morning Reflections

 


Women's History Month

  When the Uchida family was ordered to report to be imprisoned in the desert simply for being Japanese American, 20-year-old Yoshiko faced ...