窪蹋勛圖厙

Pitt Magazine

A Pitt professor reflects on his grandfather's wisdom in a new memoir

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In the summer of 1961,13-year-old Hide Yamatani started a new life.

He had grown up in Kokura, Japan, a small farming town not far from Nagasaki. After his parents divorced, his mother married an American serviceman and moved to the United States. Following 10 years of childhood separation, she asked her sons to come live with her in suburban 窪蹋勛圖厙.

YamataniYamatani welcomed the reconnection he missed his mother. But his maternal grandfather, Suekich, wasnt happy. Hed raised Yamatani and his brother to find harmony within themselves and with others. But Suekich worried about the anti-Japanese racism in America and the harm it could do his grandsons. He was so concerned, says Yamatani, that he suffered a debilitating stroke days before the boys departure.

In his self-published memoir, Working Toward Harmony, Yamatani (SOC WK 73G, 76G, KGSB 91), a retired Pitt social work professor, chronicles how his grandfathers words of wisdom helped him connect across differences and make a gentle transition into a new life.

A teenage Yamatani arrived in Eastwood, Pennsylvania, a predominantly white community, speaking and understanding very little English. Though confronted with social and cultural difficulties, he took to heart his grandfathers teachings to strive for understanding. It helped, too, that he landed among what he calls a collection of saints and angels.

I feel deeply that, while imperfect, the United States is, at heart, an embracing country that offers opportunities to those who initiate and maintain dedicated personal effort, says Yamatani. My experience attests that countless people are receptive to being kind to others, including racially different immigrants. Since arriving here,Ive witnessed the humanity that lies consistently inside so many people.

Ultimately, it was the combination of that humanity and his grandfathers lessons on friendship, happiness and the practice of眶硃紳莉硃喧梗泭 to never give up that inspired him to write a memoir. He hopes sharing what hes learned will help others find peace within their own lives and communities.

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