By Judy Tseng
In honoring Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., we also honor all the nameless
people who devoted their lives to the movement for justice and equality in America.
I would like to introduce you to Yuri Kochiyama, a central figure in Asian Pacific
American history and the civil rights movement. When I went up to visit New York
City one weekend in August, I told my friends, "I'm going to see the famous Asian
American activist Yuri Kochiyama," but no one had an inkling as to who she was.
She has been featured in the documentaries "My America ... Or Honk If You Love
Buddha" and "Yuri Kochiyama: A Passion for Justice." Every so often,
she's called to speak at Asian American student conferences, or maybe an Asian Pacific
American publication will have a blurb about her, relating to her friendship with Malcolm
X.

Yuri Kochiyama with her late husband Bill. Mr. Kochiyama
dedicated his life to supporting his family and his wife's activist efforts. |
Who is Yuri Kochiyama? Yuri Kochiyama is a brave Japanese American woman with a
social conscience who has dedicated her life to political activism, participating in
issues such as nuclear disarmament, Japanese American redress and reparations, and
international prisoners' rights. Though many people do not know about her, she
reminds us that movements, such as that led by Dr. King, are created by an amalgamation of
individuals whose desire for social change often surpasses any quest for personal fame and
fortune.
Yuri still lives in the same small apartment in Harlem where she and her husband Bill
raised their children and entertained notable guests for over thirty years. As I got
off the subway to meet Yuri and her assistant for lunch, the edge of Harlem looked crowded
and old, but not dangerous. Two years earlier when I visited New York City, I wanted
to go to Harlem and see the Apollo theater, but my friend dissuaded me, saying that it
would be too dangerous. "You're Asian; you'd stick out like a sore
thumb!" he warned. But the intersection of Broadway and 125th Street showed no
signs of the protests and activism that is a part of its history. Instead, there was
a Kentucky Fried Chicken, little stores, and about three Chinese takeout restaurants in
the area.
The apartment building was dreary and weathered looking. As I wandered through
the institutional-looking dark hallway, a woman asked cheerfully, "You lookin for
Miss Yuri?" and pointed to the right door. Though her husband has been gone for
over four years, Yuri's apartment door still has an address label on it with both their
names. The door opened to my knock, and there was my hero Yuri Kochiyama, about five
feet tall and welcoming me with her deep voice, full of conviction even when she was just
saying a greeting. Even though I had only known her daughter from volunteering at
the Asian Law Caucus, Yuri was extremely hospitable and open.
The black linoleum-floored apartment was filled with mementos, pictures, and political
rally flyers. Family pictures, pictures of Angela Davis, Malcolm X, and the slain
rapper Tupac Shakur. Her grandson went to nursery school with Tupac, she tells me,
and she is friends with his mother.
There was so much I wanted to talk to her about that I didn't know where to begin.
Just as Martin Luther King, Jr. was concerned about broader issues of human rights
and spoke out against the Vietnam War, Yuri Kochiyama has also been involved in
international human rights issues and prisoners' rights. We talked a little about
Mumia Abu-Jamal, the author of _Live from Death Row_, and Fred Korematsu. Yuri was
happy that I had heard of Abu-Jamal, and that finally someone agreed with her that it was
odd that Korematsu has become some sort of a hero with Asian Pacific Americans, when he
had never wanted to associate with Asians, had cosmetic surgery to avoid being interned
during World War II, and happened to be imprisoned for refusing to go to an internment
camp. While chowing down on sushi, noodles, and Mexican cookies, she told me more
about the case of David Huang, a prisoner scapegoated for killing a guard, and of course,
her association with Malcolm X.
Many people don't know this, but Yuri Kochiyama is the petite Asian woman wearing
cat's-eye glasses, holding Malcolm X, in photographs of his assassination at the Audubon
Ballroom. When the shooting occurred, most people in the audience hit the floor and
hid under their chairs, but Yuri's first concern was the safety of Brother Malcolm.
She ran to the stage where he had fallen and was by his side as he died.
Yuri Kochiyama, then known as Mary, became involved in the civil rights movement after
being imprisoned in Arkansas with other Americans of Japanese ancestry during World War
II. She met her husband Bill in Mississippi when she welcomed Japanese American
soldiers back to the U.S. When they moved to New York City, Yuri became a member of
Malcolm X's Organization of Afro-American Unity (OAAU) and took her children with her to
political and other civil rights rallies, sometimes getting arrested with everyone else.
She pulled out a worn-out, yellowed scrapbook full of Malcolm X memorabilia to show me.
It included her OAAU membership card, photos of Malcolm X with her children,
letters, and postcards from his trip to Africa. I didn't have enough time to ask her
about all the programs and political efforts she has been involved in, because I had a
train to catch. The visit ended with us trying to kill a crop of fruit flies in her
bowl of bananas, and getting pictures taken with her "family" of stuffed animals
wearing political buttons. Yuri's health is not as good as it used to be, so she no
longer accepts invitations to speak at events.
Her story will be told in the memoirs she is currently writing with a grant from UCLA.
It is important that people of all backgrounds appreciate the benefits our country
has gained as a result of the civil rights movement. Sometimes I hear Asian Pacific
Americans criticizing "liberal activist crap," as if they have no historical
memory of the struggles APAs have also had in demanding equal rights in our country.
As "My America ... Or Honk If You Love Buddha" filmmaker Renee
Tajima-Pena stated, "Activists like Bill and Yuri introduced a generation of Asians
to Malcolm X -- they've lived history. As a child, I had no idea the Black struggle
for equality I saw on TV had anything to do with Asian Americans. It changed our
lives. Asian Americans got fair housing, the right to intermarry. Even the right to
be here. In 1965 Congress struck down the Asiatic Barred Zone--laws that virtually
excluded Asians from the country. The doors were opened ... and I wonder what we've
given back."
I will always remember Yuri Kochiyama's ending words at a speech she gave at the
Japanese American Citizens League headquarters in San Francisco, summer 1993: "My
sincere hope is that Asian Americans will continue to side with the oppressed."
During my visit to New York, the friends and relatives I visited were successful Ivy
League law students, a doctor, a corporate attorney sporting custom-made shirts, and the
editor of a nationally-known magazine. Without the unified struggles to gain fair
opportunities in housing, education, and other social realms, we would not be able to bask
in our current status. For her dedication in helping to change society, Yuri
Kochiyama is to be remembered and honored for her contributions to helping to make Dr.
King's vision come true.