"If one needs hope in a period of collective anxiety about our present and near term future, I advise reading a remarkable memoir by rural sociologist and Community organizer, Isao Fujimoto." -- Christopher Breiseth Bouncing BACK describes the life of Isao Fujimoto and his family.
Helene Dillard, Dean of UCD\'s College of Agriculture and Environmental Sciences describes the author as "one of our campus treasures who has inspired and challenged students and faculty alike for decades." Bouncing BACK is a story of his life and family, beginning with his father\'s coming to America from.
He received his Ph D from Cornell University, at the age of 76, after spending fifty years working with marginalized, multi-ethnic communities in California\'s Central Valley.
Helene Dillard, UC Davis\' Dean of Agriculture and Environmental Sciences, describes him as "one of our campus treasures who has inspired and challenged students and faculty alike for decades."About the Author: Isao Fujimoto is a rural sociologist, Community activist, and Lecturer Emeritus of Community Development at the University of California, Davis. and abroad.
S.
He traces how those early experiences shaped his path as an educator for more than fifty years at the University of California, Davis and as an activist working with struggling, multi-ethnic communities in the U.
They embodied the saying that accompanies the beloved red papier-mache figure: "Nanakorobi Yaoki" or "Fall down seven times, get up on the eighth." Now 83, Isao shares the lessons he learned from his parents, a dozen siblings, and community.
Like a Japanese daruma doll, Isao and his family kept "Bouncing back" from a series of injustices and other hardships.
At the age of 8, Isao and his family are forcibly removed from their home to the Heart Mountain and Tule Lake internment camps.
The story begins with his father leaving a small fishing village in Japan, coming to America, and starting a family farm on a Yakima reservation in Wapato, Washington. "If one needs hope in a period of collective anxiety about our present and near term future, I advise reading a remarkable memoir by rural sociologist and Community organizer, Isao Fujimoto." -- Christopher Breiseth Bouncing BACK describes the life of Isao Fujimoto and his family