Abstract

This article interrogates both the legal and social identities of Japanese-Melanesians (or ‘Nippo-Kanaks’) residing in the Free French territory of New Caledonia at the beginning of the twentieth century to the years following the Second World War. The first part of the article details how, fearing an imminent Japanese attack on New Caledonia after the bombing of Pearl Harbor, the French Empire began the process of deporting nearly all Japanese emigrants residing throughout New Caledonia to Australian internment camps on 8 December 1941. French officials in New Caledonia sequestered all property belonging to the Japanese émigré community, and later sold it to the French public. Nippo-Kanaks, who were children at the time of the incarceration and deportation of their Japanese fathers, maintained a problematized legal identity as Japanese nationals residing in Pacific French territory. Although the French Empire granted French citizenship to mixed race Kanaks in 1946, French authorities in New Caledonia specifically denied French citizenship to Nippo-Kanaks, who then had to petition for French naturalization. The second part of this article interrogates the social identity of Nippo-Kanaks viewed from the perspective of Jeannette Yokoyama, a second-generation Nippo-Kanak whose Japanese father was deported to Australia. Yokoyama’s father was forcibly repatriated to Japan after the Second World War, but by writing letters he maintained communication with his family in New Caledonia. The letters that Jeannette received from her father allowed her to forge personal memories of her absent father that shaped her social, mixed race identity as a Nippo-Kanak. For Yokoyama’s father, the letters served as a means to enculturate Jeannette as a Japanese daughter from afar. Jeannette’s memories of her beloved father, coupled with the embrace of her Japanese heritage, represent a symbolic resistance to French administrators’ efforts to erase the presence of the Japanese community in New Caledonia.

Highlights

  • None of the children were granted Dutch citizenship from the mother, which indicates that citizenship prior to 1941 in New Caledonia was either patrilineal—passed jus sanguinis from the Japanese father—or selected by the child at the age of eighteen11 Interviews with second-generation Nippo-Kanaks reveal many were under the impression that they were Japanese, while others affirmed that they were French subjects (Masukata and Toyoda 2018)

  • This article has contributed to recent research on Asian minority citizenship in Francophone New Caledonia by offering an analysis on the legal identity, namely the naturalization process and citizenship, of Nippo-Kanaks before and after the Second World War

  • For Nippo-Kanak men bearing a Japanese surname, French officials often did not record official citizenship statuses on identity cards, even if these men enlisted as French to complete their mandatory military service

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Summary

Introduction

Nippo-Kanaks, who were children at the time of the incarceration and deportation of their Japanese fathers, maintained a problematized legal identity as Japanese nationals residing in Pacific French territory. Framed by these considerations of citizenship, this article interrogates Nippo-Kanak social identity by examining the role played by letters written by a Japanese father to his kin left behind in New Caledonia.

Results
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