The first Japanese person known to settle in Canada, Manzo Nagano, lands in New Westminster, British Columbia. (Source: Nikkei National Museum and Cultural Centre)

The government of British Columbia enacts a law banning Japanese Canadians from voting in provincial elections. (Source: Elections Canada)

Tomekichi Homma challenges the government of British Columbia’s ban on voting. In Cunningham v. Homma, the Privy Council ultimately rules against Mr. Homma. (Sources: Elections Canada; Wikipedia; The National Association of Japanese Canadians)

The Asiatic Exclusion League organizes the Pacific Coast Anti-Asian riots to attack businesses and people of Asian ethnicities in Vancouver Chinatown and Japantown. Surrounding these events, the government of British Columbia enacts a series of laws discriminating against all persons of colour. (Sources: The National Association of Japanese Canadians; The Canadian Encyclopedia)

The Canadian government enforces laws that restrict all Asian Canadians from the right to vote or to enter various professions including law, mining, and civil service. (Sources: The National Association of Japanese Canadians; The Canadian Encyclopedia)

Beginnings of the Asia-Pacific War and the Canadian government’s invocation of the War Measures Act that introduces the suspension of civil rights, seizure of personal property, and forced internment of Canadian “enemy aliens [of] Japanese racial origin” in work and prisoner of war (“POW”) camps. Unlike POWs or Canadians of German and Italian descent, Japanese Canadian human rights were not protected by the Geneva Convention. (Sources: Government of Canada; Nikkei National Museum and Cultural Centre)

The National Japanese Canadian Citizen’s Association (renamed the National Association of Japanese Canadians [the “NAJC”] in 1980) is formed to represent and protect the civil liberties of the Japanese Canadian community. The 1947 Citizenship Act expands franchise to Canadians of South Asian and Chinese origin, but excludes Indigenous Peoples and Japanese Canadians. (Source: The National Association of Japanese Canadians)

Japanese Canadians gain the right to vote federally and provincially. The Government of Canada re-instates Japanese Canadian rights to move freely within Canada and reveals that almost all of the latter’s property (valued at over $400,000,000 collectively) has been sold off to finance the internment. (Sources: The National Association of Japanese Canadians; The Canadian Museum for Human Rights; Wikipedia)

The 1967 Immigration Act opens up immigration for skilled labourers. Paired with the Japanese Economic Miracle (1945-1991) representing Japan’s rapid postwar economic growth, the Act promotes the Second Wave – the immigration of skilled Japanese workers to Canada in the coming decades. (Sources: Council on Foreign Relations; Berkeley Economic Review)

The National Association of Japanese Canadians (NAJC) establishes the National Redress Committee, giving that committee a mandate to research and study the subject of Redress (Source: Toronto NAJC)

Three Japanese Canadian lawyers from Toronto – Shin Imai, Maryka Omatsu and Marcia Matsui – begin organizing the Sodan Kai, a non-partisan group aimed at bringing more community involvement to the Redress movement in Canada. The term “Sodan Kai” means “arriving at a mutual decision through quiet group discussion”. (Sources: Toronto NAJC; Discover Archives)

The Redress Movement culminates in Prime Minister Mulroney’s signing of the Redress Agreement, which includes a formal apology to Japanese Canadians for wartime incarceration, property seizure, and disenfranchisement. The Agreement includes the creation of the Canadian Race Relations Foundation, which serves to eliminate all forms of racial discrimination in Canada. (Source: Canadian Encyclopedia)

Judge Maryka Omatsu becomes the first judge of Japanese Canadian descent (and the first woman of East Asian descent) to be appointed to a Canadian court. (Source: Discover Nikkei)

Groundbreaking ceremonies for the Japanese Canadian National Museum, the National Nikkei Heritage Centre, and various other monuments celebrating Japanese Canadian heritage. (Source: Nikkei Place)

Naomi Yamamoto, the first Japanese Canadian elected to the BC legislature, introduces the government of British Columbia’s formal apology to Japanese Canadians for its role in their internment and dispossession. The following year, Vancouver’s City Council apologizes for its 1942 motion to remove the “enemy alien population”. (Source: Canadian Encyclopedia)

Heritage BC announces the Japanese Canadian Historic Places Recognition Project to recognize places in British Columbia that held significance to the Japanese Canadian community. (Source: Canadian Encyclopedia)

Please note that this historical timeline remains a work in progress. If there are any dates of significance that you would like to see added to this timeline, please reach out to a member of JCLA’s Executive Steering Committee. We welcome the whole community’s contributions to this timeline.