The Best Japanese Festivals & Events On the Web

New Years Oshogatsu Festivals in the United States
1
                                
×
2025 Sharing Conversations: The Magic of Haiku, UCLA Royce Hall, Room 306
2025 Guadalupe Obon Festival (Live Taiko, Bon Odori, Teriyaki, Udon, Sushi, Bonsai Exhibit, Martial Arts) Sun Guadalupe Buddhist Church #obon
2025: 14th Annual Walk the Farm Event (1 1/2 Mile Walk Around & Sample Fruits, Vegetables, Shave-Ice, Live Taiko..) [See Video]
2025 GVJCI Gardena Matsuri Fundraiser Annual Matsuri Festival Event (Japanese Food, Kid Games, Bingo, Beer Garden..) Gardena Valley Cultural Institute
2025 Shogun and Buddhism: Exploring the Influence of Jodo Shinshu on Japanese Society - San Fernando Valley Hongwanji Buddhist Temple
2025: 36th Annual Las Vegas Obon Festival Event (Bon Odori-Folk Dancing, Live Taiko, Crafts, Bento Boxes, Plate Lunches, Sushi, Raffle..) Saturday
2025 Japanese Festival Event: Miami Friends of the Ichimura at Miami Japanese Garden (Japanese Bon Dance • Bon-Odori..) (See Video)
2025 Japantown Kodomo no Hi Children's Day Festival Event, San Francisco (Games, Art, Crafts, Performances..)
2025 Asian American Pacific Islander Heritage Festival (Japanese Culture: Taiko Drums, Origami, Floral Arrangements..)
2025: 4th Annual Kibō Nobori - Children's Day Festival Event (Family-Friendly Activities, Art, Performances & Food) Terasaki Budokan, Little Tokyo
2025 Tokyo Night Festival (Japanese Food, Japanese Culture, Performances, Anime, Car Show..) 2 Days (Video)
2025 Kodomo no Hi (Children’s Day) Celebration Event (Kid Crafts, Food Vendors, Taiko..) JACCC
2025: 20th Annual JapanFest Festival-Experience Japan (Japanese Food & Beer Garden, Taiko, Music Performance, Dance, Games..) #JapanFest (2 Days

2024 Manzanar National Historic Site to Host Gardens for Peace Events (Sep 28, 2024)NEW

SELECT DISTINCT e.PkID, e.Title, e.StartDate, e.StartTime, e.EndTime, e.TBD, e.Description, e.LocID, l.Name, l.Lat, l.Lon, e.SeriesID FROM hc_events e LEFT JOIN hc_locations l ON (e.LocID = l.PkID) WHERE (e.SeriesID = '1052' OR e.LocID = '1052') AND e.IsActive = 1 AND e.IsApproved = 1 AND e.StartDate >= '2025-04-30' ORDER BY e.Title, e.StartDate, e.TBD, e.StartTime
Date: Saturday, 28 September, 2024       Time: 9:00 am - 3:30 pm
Manzanar National Historic Site
Highway 395
Uninc Inyo County, CA 93526
Visit Location Website
Map of Manzanar National Historic Site, Highway 395

Manzanar National Historic Site to Host Gardens for Peace Events, September 28, 2024. Manzanar National Historic Site invites the public to a day of special events to celebrate the United Nations’ 2024 International Day of Peace. With its large collection of Japanese gardens, Manzanar NHS is one of only 20 places across the continent selected to take part in the North American Japanese Garden Association’s signature event, “Gardens for Peace,” to promote world peace and understanding. Manzanar’s gardens were created by Japanese Americans who were incarcerated at the World War II prison camp as symbols of hope and resilience in the face of racism and wartime hysteria. Abandoned after the war, the gardens were obscured by sediments and vegetation, but since 2007 over 20 have been uncovered through Manzanar’s award-winning Community Archeology Program. Manzanar’s 2024 Gardens for Peace events will begin at 9 am with presentations by noted scholars Kendall Brown and Keiji Uesugi at the Visitor Center. At 10:30 am there will be tours of two restored gardens, Arai Pond and Merritt Park, followed by a BYO brown-bag lunch and discussion at Merritt Park. During lunch, the public can participate in a Toro Nagashi paper lantern commemoration. After lunch there will be a tour of the Block 34 mess hall garden, the hospital garden, and the Children’s Village. The afternoon tour will end at the historic Lydston Orchard where participants can pick Comice pears.

Date
Saturday, September 28, 2024

Event Schedule
09:00 am - 10:00 am: Introductions, presentations, and discussion at Manzanar’s Visitor Center (West Theater), Kendall Brown and Keiji Uesugi

10:30 am - 12:00 pm: Arai Pond and Merritt Park tour (meet at Arai Pond parking area)
12:00 pm - 1:00 pm: BYO lunch at Merritt Park, discussion, decorate and float a lantern
01:00 pm - 2:30 pm: Block 34 mess hall garden, hospital garden, and Children's Village tour
02:30 pm - 3:30 pm: Pear Harvest at end of tour (bring a cloth bag) 

Toro Nagashi, which literally means "flowing lanterns," is an opportunity to commemorate loved ones. During the lunch break, visitors who wish to participate will have time to get a lantern, write their dedications or decorate their lantern with pictures and wishes, and then set their lantern afloat. 

Presenters
Kendall Brown is emeritus Professor of Asian Art History at California State University Long Beach. A former museum curator, he publishes actively in several areas of Japanese art and has organized exhibitions for several American museums, exploring topics from modern woodblock prints to Art Deco and, most recently, “Songs for Modern Japan, Popular Music and Graphic Design, 1905-1950.” In the study of Japanese gardens in North America, he published the books, Japanese-style Gardens of the Pacific West Coast (Rizzoli, 1999), Quiet Beauty: The Japanese Gardens of North America (Tuttle, 2012), Visionary Landscapes (Tuttle, 2016), and various essays on the social history of these gardens. In 2011, he co-founded the North American Japanese Garden Association.

Keiji Uesugi is a licensed landscape architect and principal of TUA, Inc., with over 20 years of Japanese garden design experience, which includes the Japanese Friendship Garden San Diego, Roosevelt High School Garden of Peace, Coachella Valley History Museum Japanese garden, and the Huntington Japanese Garden centennial renovation. He is an assistant professor of landscape architecture at Cal Poly Pomona University where he teaches design, construction, and Asian gardens history. He focuses his research on Japanese American cultural landscapes such as the Japanese gardens of World War II confinement sites. In 2021, he created the first ethnic studies and landscape architecture course titled “The Japanese American Experience and the California Landscape.”

Logistics
Meet at the Visitor Center at 9 am Participants will be able to drive along the tour road to parking areas near the gardens; the tours will entail up to half a mile of walking. Chairs, water, a washing station, and a porta-potty will be provided at Merritt Park. Bring your own brown bag or picnic lunch and beverage. Bring a cloth bag if you wish to take some of Manzanar’s historic pears home. The Manzanar National Historic Site was established by Congress to preserve the story of the incarceration of over 120,000 Americans of Japanese ancestry solely because of their ethnicity; this history touches on many topics, including how a government can perpetuate racism, the harsh treatment of immigrants, and the abrogation of civil rights. In their gardens, the Japanese American incarcerees asserted pride in their heritage in the face of prejudice, hope and action in the face of forced confinement, and community and family ties in the face of imposed institutionalism. Thus, Manzanar’s gardens are not solely places of serenity and beauty, they also represent how individuals and small groups can work against the tyranny of divisiveness and war.

Manzanar National Historic Site is located at 5001 Highway 395, six miles south of Independence and nine miles north of Lone Pine, California. Learn more on our website at https://www.nps.gov/manz or explore “ManzanarNationalHistoricSite” on Facebook and “ManzanarNPS” on Instagram and YouTube.

Disclaimer: Please double check all information provided on our platform with the official website for complete accuracy and up-to-date details.

   

Saturday, 28 September, 2024



Event Contact

Manzanar to Host Gardens for Peace Events

Event Organizer Website


Visit Organizer Website

Get More Details From the Event Organizer

Event Location Website


Visit Location Website

For More Location Details

Add Event To Your Calendar


iCalendar Google Calendar

Windows Live Calendar

Event Information Can Change

Always verify event information for possible changes or mistakes.

Contact Us for Issues

Japanese Event & Festival Categories




Social Media & Email Share