We are very pleased that Dr. Greg Kimura, who now serves as the Rector of an Episcopalian priest, will join us for an important roundtable conversation The Mixed-Race Conversation: Is it a Wrap? on June 10, 2017 at 3:00pm at the Mixed Remixed Festival. Pre-registration is strongly encouraged.
What are you?
Hapa. Half Anglo, half Japanese
What is your mixed experience?
Biracial, raising two multiracial children
What is the most important thing you want people to know about the mixed experience?
The search for the meaning of mixed/hapa identity is the next frontier of identity politics.
Do you remember when you first started thinking about the mixed experience? Was it because of a certain moment or event? Please tell us about that.
I was five or six and called a racial epithet by a man of my grandparent’s age. This happened in a store in the Midwest.
What was your experience when you attended the Mixed Remixed Festival before? Why did you want to come back?
I was the president/CEO of the Japanese American National Museum, which hosted and supported the Festival for several years.
What are you looking forward to most at the Festival this year?
Hearing the stories of others.
What are you?
Do you remember when you first started thinking about the mixed experience? Was it because of a certain moment or event? Please tell us about that.
What are you?
Why did you want to be a part of the Mixed Remixed Festival? How did you get involved?
What are you?
Do you remember when you first started thinking about the mixed experience? Was it because of a certain moment or event? Please tell us about that.
What are you?
What was your experience when you attended the Mixed Remixed Festival last year? Why did you want to come back?
What are you?
Is this your first time attending the Mixed Remixed Festival?
What are you?
Well, I guess I want to say here that in my memory it is twofold, there’s the moment where you see what you are and the moment that other people confirm they see it too. So it’s about gaze in that respect. Mine actually centers around the year 2001 when both Taina and That’s So Raven were on TV around the same time. It might seem silly to some but at age 7 I was so grateful to know I wasn’t alone, they may have been on separate channels but here was the time I most easily was able to see families that looked like mine though they could never touch. It was really nice, and they were images I had found on my own.
Did you know that you can hear the oral argument before the Supreme Court of the Loving v. Virginia decision? You can find it 
Loving Day
Richard Loving was a white man who was in some ways “passing” as black. As writer and scholar