Article, Social Justice, Community, Urban Issues
Meet Julia Aoki: administrator, writer, researcher, and advocate
We are delighted to welcome Julia Aoki as Program Manager at 間眅埶AVs Vancity Office of Community Engagement!
With her experience at non-profit organizations including , , and , Julia brings a wealth of knowledge to 間眅埶AVs Vancity Office of Community Engagement (間眅埶AV VOCE). We sat down with Julia to discuss how her search for Japanese Canadian community led to a longstanding practice of advocating for marginalized people in Vancouvers Downtown Eastside neighbourhood.
This interview has been edited for length and clarity.
Julia, can I start by asking you to introduce yourself and your interests, inside and outside of work?
I grew up in North Delta with a small circle of Japanese Canadian family, but in a broader community that was predominantly white and, over time, it became important for me to explore what it means to be Japanese Canadian. The Powell Street Festival was my entry point largely because it is an intergenerational, diasporic space, and you dont have to speak Japanese in order to participate. I began to volunteer there and over time, I took on short contracts which led me to become the Interim General Manager.
I was fortunate to happen upon a space that was so accepting and diverse, where there wasnt a singular sense of what it means to be Japanese Canadian. It was the first time I met a queer community, and there were many strong women involved in the festival. They program all-women taiko groups for example, when, in Japan, this artform is historically for men only. The Powell Street Festival is open to generational layers of immigrationto prewar and postwar folksand for me, it was a massive awakening to the history of internment. Im a second-generation Japanese Canadian and, though internment isnt part of my family history, I feel impacted by the dispersal and the fact that there isnt a circumscribed Japanese Canadian community. Were an assemblage that is coming together in the wake of a massive trauma.
The Powell Street Festival is located in the Downtown Eastside, a very politically fraught space within Japanese Canadian history, but also with the current community of socioeconomically marginalized people, who are disproportionately Indigenous relative to the larger Canadian population. Working there taught me to go beyond my own community. I got to ask, where do we overlap in our histories, our communities? And how can we work in a collaborative way toward one anothers interests?
What a wonderful way to introduce yourself! As someone who cares about space and the ways it is used or occupied, what continues to draw you to work in the Downtown Eastside?
To me, it's the most palpable expression of intersecting injustices in our region. It is an expression of rampant capitalism within the history of colonialism, deep-seated xenophobia and racism. Many of those social dysfunctions have been made bare and it's impacting people's lives right now, and it's a life or death situation. I have so much respect for the people who are doing the work there. And by that, I dont mean all the folks who, like myself, are coming from outside the community and working for nonprofits, but the folks who are living under extreme duress and who do the work day in and day out to support the wider community.
Im drawn to spaces that can bring local communities together and amplify their experiences in ways that align with larger social and political interests. At Megaphone magazine, where I worked from 2019-2023, I got to bring together my interests in cultural production and community building with a more immediate, material element. Our work wouldnt ultimately solve the material injustices of people living in poverty, but we helped to alleviate the conditions temporarily by redistributing the organizations income through workshops, programs, mentorships, and the vendor program. [The vendor program offers flexible work to people facing poverty and homelessness through sales of Megaphone Magazine and the Hope in the Shadows calendar.]
But even this model has its limitations. For many people the vendor program has a high barrier of entry, in that you have to be capable of standing outside for long periods, and you have to be able to withstand rejection. Its really hard, but its one way that we could appeal to the wider public and support people with an income.
And in 2022, through Megaphone, you partnered with 間眅埶AV VOCE to make a podcast series named Voices of the Street, after Megaphones of the same title. This project connects community-oriented work with academia and art. Can you tell us how you navigate working across these different spaces? And with VOCE being an office that spans these fields, are there any projects youre looking forward to?
If I look for a thread of continuity across my interests in the different spaces where Ive worked, Ive strived to work in spaces that allow for access to resources in ways that are not overly determined or prescribed, and that retain a sense of experimentation and self-determination. At the Powell Street Festival that was through accessible and intersectional programming. At VIVO Media Arts Centre, where I was General Manager from 2017-2019, that was in the form of access to technology, resources, educational programs, and an archive of experimental media.
VOCE is so well positioned to both provide community access to some of the vast resources of the university, like access to space and presentation support. Im also very interested in what Ive seen called knowledge mobilization at 間眅埶AV VOCE how otherwise opaque, academic outputs are made relevant and immediate to the community. Im excited to find these points of intersection here.
Find Julias writing about the Downtown Eastside in , published in Space and Culture, and , published in TOPIA.
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