Oakland activist keeps spirit of revolution
strong
By Momo Chang, Correspondent
05/19/2008
OAKLAND - Yuri Kochiyama embodies the spirit of activism that one might
find in an ebullient college student, but this long-time activist for
social justice turns 87 today.
Kochiyama is most well known as the woman who cradled Malcolm X in her
lap after he was shot Feb. 21, 1965, during a speech at the Audubon
Ballroom in New York City.
"I wanted to get up to where Malcolm was," explained Kochiyama, who
was
in the audience that day. "I sort of put his head in my lap, praying and
hoping that he was still alive."
That moment of Kochiyama cradling the revolutionary leader was captured
in a Life magazine photo.
Kochiyama, who shares the same birthday as Malcolm X and another
revolutionary, Ho Chi Minh, is still an activist today.
The walls of her studio apartment in a senior housing complex near
downtown Oakland are covered with political posters and signs that say
"Free Mumia," "Free Palestine," and "Impeach
Bush" alongside family
photos, many showing interracial relationships.
Her desk and bed are covered with folders and leaflets and letters - lots
of letters. She corresponds with more than 200 political prisoners in the
United States, many black activists. "I can never catch up," she
says.
But she was not always this radical.
Kochiyama grew up in a solidly middle class Japanese American family in
San Pedro, according to Diane Fujino, associate professor of Asian
American studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara, who
wrote
During World War II, Kochiyama's family was forced to move to an
internment camp in Jerome, Arkansas, but not before her father, who had
just undergone surgery, was imprisoned and tortured. He died soon after.
Kochiyama moved to Harlem - where she lived for about 40 years - after
the war to live with her now-deceased husband, Bill. They, along with
their six children, lived in a housing project.
She became involved in local civil rights organizations, such as a Harlem
parents' group, and rallied for better schools, safer streets and union
jobs for people of color.
It wasn't until she met Malcolm X, though, that her ideology became more
radical, one of self-determination for African Americans and all people.
"He was so dynamic, and of course, his message so powerful,"
Kochiyama
said, describing Malcolm X as her biggest political influence.
The petite Asian American woman first met Malcolm X at a courthouse in
1963, when she went up to him to shake his hand. She was in her 40s at
the time.
Kochiyama, then known as Mary, was new to the Civil Rights Movement. She
did end up shaking Malcolm X's hand and questioned his views on
integration. Malcolm X invited her to his office for more discussion.
Though she never went, she wrote many letters to him.
Kochiyama later invited Malcolm X to her apartment, which was dubbed
"Grand Central Station," because of the many community members they
housed.
Daughter Audee Kochiyama-Holman, 58, said that growing up, there was
always someone living in their home besides their family, and that her
mother would take the kids to demonstrations.
"For us kids, it was a very different kind of upbringing," she said.
"It
felt like 24/7 it was an activist home."
On June 6, 1964, the Kochiyama family hosted some hibakusha (atomic bomb
survivors) from Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The person they wanted to meet
most was Malcolm X.
As their apartment filled with guests, they anxiously awaited, wondering
if he would show. He did.
Malcolm X also wrote the Kochiyamas many postcards - 11 from nine
countries, to be exact. Kochiyama also became a member of his
organization, the Organization of Afro-American Unity, and became Muslim
for several years.
Poet and activist Amiri Baraka remembers first hearing about Yuri.
"There was a lot of discussion about her, because of the photo of
her,"
said Baraka, of Newark, New Jersey.
He said it was unusual at the time to find an Asian American involved in
black liberation struggles, but that he viewed it positively. The two met
in 1965 and still keep in touch. Kochiyama recently attended Baraka's
jazz opera, The Sisyphus Syndrome, in Oakland.
Richard Aoki, a field marshal of the Black Panther Party, said that he
and Kochiyama were two of a handful of Asian Americans active in African
American struggles prior to the Asian American movement in the late '60s.
"When the Asian American struggle burst loose, we found ourselves sort of
in the forefront because of our exposure and experience in the African
American struggle," Aoki said. "It was refreshing to find someone
that
would agree politically," he added.
Though Kochiyama largely aligned herself with the black liberation
movement, she also had a third world outlook, Aoki said. She was one of
the people arrested after taking over the Statue of Liberty with Puerto
Rico independence activists in 1977, for example.
She moved to Oakland in 1999 to be closer to family after suffering a
stroke.
In recent years, she's continued to support various political causes,
participating in anti-war demonstrations, immigrant rights' rallies and
numerous community events. And she continues to write to political
prisoners, many of whom she's known for decades.
She uses a walker to get around, and occasionally a wheelchair, but that
doesn't stop her. She's got scores of cross-generational friends to
shuttle her around.
"She's been in it for the long haul, since the '60s," said Mary
Uyematsu
Kao, a friend of the family. "She's represented Asian Americans in a lot
of social justice and freedom struggles."
Kochiyama recently started a grassroots group, Asian Americans for the
San Francisco Eight. The "SF8" case includes former Black Panthers
and
affiliates facing trial for the 1971 shooting death of a San Francisco
police officer. Kochiyama has known some of them for decades, visiting
them in prison when she lived in Harlem.
About half the jury in cases tried in San Francisco is Asian American,
but Asian Americans know very little about the case, according to the
group.
Sophy Wong, 32, first met the elder Kochiyama when Wong was a college
student. Today, they work together side-by-side in the political group,
though Yuri is her grandmother's age.
"You realize she's the most humble person, and gives huge props to
everyone else but herself," said Wong, an HIV doctor in San Francisco.
"At the same time, when injustice happens in the world, she's there and
speaks out about it."
Kochiyama will be honored later this month by a local youth group, Asian
Pacific Islander Youth Promoting Advocacy and Leadership, for their
10-year anniversary event.
Wong, who says Yuri Kochiyama is a role model for the younger
generations, added that in progressive and liberal circles, people are
often angry, loud, and not-so-humble - a contrast to the way Kochiyama
operates.
"Yuri represents to me the ability to be humble, yet fierce, at the same
time," Wong said.
---------------------------------------
s. e. anderson is author of "The Black Holocaust for Beginners"
Social Activism is not a hobby: it's a Lifestyle lasting a Lifetime
http://blackeducator.blogspot.com
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