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Hawaii Hochi : ウィキペディア英語版
Hawaii Hochi

The ''Hawaii Hochi'' is a six-day-a-week Japanese-language newspaper published and sold in Hawaii. The newspaper was founded in 1912 to serve the Japanese immigrant community in Hawaii. Founder Frederick Kinzaburo Makino had recently been released from a ten-month prison sentence for his role in organizing a 1909 labor strike among sugar plantation workers. Disappointed by existing newspapers' coverage of continuing labor disputes, Makino established the ''Hochi'' to present a "non-party and independent" perspective on the issues then facing Japanese Americans in Hawaii. After some initial financial struggles, the ''Hochi'' became one of the primary sources for news related to political issues important to the island's Japanese community, publicly supporting legislation to extend Asian American citizenship rights and ease restrictions on Japanese language schools, as well as another strike in 1920. The paper was one of only a few to discuss racial inequality in the islands during the highly publicized Massie Trial of 1932.
An English section, called "the Bee" for its sting, was introduced in 1925 in order to appeal to Nisei who were not fluent in Japanese. During World War II, the paper was renamed the ''Hawaii Herald'' in response to anti-Japanese sentiment. Unlike other prominent Japanese-language newspaper editors, like the ''Nippu Jijis Yasutaro Soga, Makino managed to avoid incarceration, and in 1952 the ''Hochi'' returned to its original title. Makino died in 1953, and in 1962 the paper was purchased by Japanese newspaperman Konosuke Oishi. In 1969, Oishi created an English-only sister paper under the name ''Hawaii Herald''. The ''Herald'' was discontinued after four years, but was brought back in 1980 and continues to run alongside the ''Hochi'' today.〔
At its peak in the early 1990s, the ''Hawaii Hochi'' had a circulation of 9,000. The number has since dwindled to around 3,000, but the paper is still delivered by mail today, the only remaining Japanese-language semi-daily in the islands. The newspaper's publishing company also operates a commercial printing business.
==See also==

* Japanese in Hawaii
* Nippu Jiji
* Oahu Sugar Strike of 1920
* Japanese language education in the United States

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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