5. Class segregation in my father’s home village in Okayama Prefecture

But he was telling me, growing up, he said, there were segregations of people of class, and he said that bothered him a lot. And so, he said, it didn’t matter to me, he said I just felt that people were all equal. And he said, I did not see that. And as a young man, as a teen-ager, he was already observing this. And I thought it was quite amazing that for a young man to be that observant. And he said, I noticed that there was such a classification of people. And we were on the hierarchy there. We were gentry farmers, but I would bring home kids from school that were not necessary befitting to the rest of the family. But I’d bring them home, we’d eat lunch and I’d walk home with them. And sometimes, I would visit their homes, and the neighborhoods would be very upset because I was in the wrong neighborhood. But he said, “I didn’t care.” He said they were my friends. And this is how he saw life, already, as a young man. And so, by the time he came to the U.S. and saw the equality, and the freedom and the choice you had, I think it made a tremendous impact on him. And he decided, well, I’ll send dad back, but I’m gonna stay!

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