Gihei Kuno couldn鈥檛 believe how many salmon were swimming up the Fraser River. In fact, he wrote with glee to his family back in Japan, the fish were so plentiful that they jumped right into his boat.
The year was 1888. Kuno was from Mio, an impoverished fishing village in Wakayama-ken, southeast of Osaka. The village needed to protect itself from the sea but couldn鈥檛 afford to build a breaker. Kuno, a master carpenter, braved the Pacific Ocean to find work in Vancouver, planning to send his earnings back home.
He soon made his way to Steveston, home to the largest fish cannery in the dominion. This was definitely a land of plenty. There were enough jobs for thousands more of his fellow villagers.
Kuno went back to Mio with his tales of a river dancing with fish. Nearly every man of working age decided to join him in Canada, leaving only 2,000 people in the village. Most believed the sacrifice was worth it. Money sent back to the village sustained those who were left.
That work ethic was passed on through the generations. Kuno鈥檚 great-grandson is Toshio Takai, an immensely successful businessman in Hyogo. And, thanks to a chance epiphany in the parking lot of Save-On-Foods in North Vancouver, Takai is commissioning a totem pole by a local 麻豆社国产Nation carver in honour of his ancestor鈥檚 grit and determination.
鈥淭he world is free and open to anyone. No one owns Mother Earth and if people want to go to another country and prosper and thrive in freedom, that鈥檚 the way the world should be,鈥 says Darren Yelton. He will spend the next two months transforming the old-growth cedar log that鈥檚 lying prone in his driveway into a three-metre high marker that will stand tall on the shores of Mio, thousands of kilometres away on the other side of the Pacific Ocean.
Yelton鈥檚 ancestral name is Kanakweltn. It means 鈥淗e who works to save the future of his family.鈥 That鈥檚 what Yelton does through the carving of his totem poles, which can be found throughout the Lower Mainland. And it鈥檚 what he admires Gihei Kuno for doing more than 130 years ago.
For Yelton, 鈥渢his honour pole will bring us together as one people.鈥
It will have four components. At the top will be a bald eagle to represent power and prestige. The eagle will be holding a Kayatchn.
鈥淭he Welcome Man reaches out and welcomes you to his sacred territory,鈥 Yelton says. 鈥淗e signifies peace and friendship to all he meets.鈥
Then there will be a bear, which signifies strength.
鈥淎ny time we witness a bear, it鈥檚 there for one reason 鈥 to bring strength to our people.鈥 And in the bear鈥檚 paws will be a chinook salmon, embodying the cycle of life.
The epiphany
Sammy Takahashi was shopping at Marine Drive's Save-On-Foods when he noticed a pole that Jim Pattison had asked Yelton to create. Takahashi is the president of the Japan-Canada Chamber of Commerce and lives on the North Shore. He鈥檇 recently hosted a delegation from Mio, which is part of Wakayama, the sister city of Richmond, B.C.
Mio is once again facing hard economic times.
鈥淭hey told me their village was dying,鈥 Takahashi said. He wanted to help them. But how?
Knowing how important tourism is to the Lower Mainland, Takahashi thought a totem pole would help rejuvenate Mio and symbolize the friendship with Canada. When he saw the grocery store totem, it all came together. He went into the store and asked the woman at the customer service desk if she knew the carver. She was friends with Yelton and knew his number. Two hours later, Takahashi was at Yelton鈥檚 home in Xwemlch鈥檚tn in the shadow of the Lions Gate Bridge.
鈥淭otem poles are very magnificent and majestic. They鈥檙e also very spiritual,鈥 Takahashi says of why it鈥檚 such a meaningful gift in Kuno鈥檚 honour.
Report #2 from my visit in Japan I met Toshio Takai who鈥檚 a great grand son of the pioneer immigrant, Gihei Kuno who...
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One final piece was missing: how would they pay for the pole鈥檚 creation and shipment to Mio? That鈥檚 when Takahashi鈥檚 research led him to Toshio Takai. During a goodwill visit to Japan in October 2019, Takahashi met with Takai and told him of his cross-cultural idea. Takai said 鈥淕et it done and I鈥檒l pay for it.鈥
Takai is also paying for Yelton and Takahashi to accompany the finished pole to its new home in Mio.
The pandemic slowed down the planning phase but now Yelton is ready to get to work. It鈥檚 a fitting project for these times.
鈥淚 pray they find a vaccine soon,鈥 Yelton says. 鈥淲e all need to live together as one and travel this world together. ... By battling this pandemic as one, we will defeat it.鈥