Driving along Avenue 12 in Madera and then passing the future intersections at Avenue 11, there are structures but the connections are nowhere in sight. They are abandoned and not properly secured as links in the future construction.

The sounds of Taiko drums greeted visitors to the 45th annual
Haru Matsuri spring festival Sunday.
The sounds of Taiko drums greeted visitors to the 45th annual Haru Matsuri spring festival Sunday.

Visitors also stopped by exhibits of Japanese crafts, flower arraignments and jewelry. The bento boxes featuring barbecue chicken were a big hit again this year.

A crowd of all ages, and a few dogs, came out to the Buddhist Community Center on Murphy Avenue to enjoy the music, food and crafts from the Japanese culture at the event.

While a steady stream of people attended the festival, it was not in the numbers organizers were hoping for.

“Usually the weather is a lot better,” said co-chair Howard Watanabe. “Though attendance is what it has been the past few years.”

Organizer theorized that the Sunday morning clouds delayed people from attending the festival earlier in the day.

Judy Little, a Morgan Hill resident who has been on the organizing committee for a number of years, said once the weather cleared, the visitors arrived.

“I think it went very well,” Little said. “(Attendance) looked pretty good. It was low at first, but once the sun came up, boy, the people started coming.”

But those who did attend Haru Matsuri said they enjoyed the atmosphere, and they all had their favorite part.

Carolyn Inouye, who came with her husband from Salinas to watch their niece play in one of the Taiko groups, said she enjoyed having the event in Morgan Hill instead of having to drive to San Jose or beyond.

“I think it’s a wonderful event,” said Inouye, who made her fourth trip to the festival.

Gilroy’s Lawson Sakai, a veteran from the honored World War II 442 Regimental Combat Team, said he enjoyed coming out and catching up with friends from the community.

“This is a nice little get-together for everybody,” Sakai said. “I’m very happy to see the sun come out.”

Morgan Hill resident Vince Pak said he came out to interact with different people from the community, as well as for the entertainment and the food.

“There are so many people here with different stories,” Pak said. “I can catch up with them.”

Rep. Mike Honda, D-San Jose, has been attending the Haru Matsuri festival for 20 years. He said it has grown by leaps and bounds. Honda added that he was pleased to see members of the Japanese community, as well as others, come together to share in the culture.

“People are coming to a cultural event and enjoying a communal get-together,” Honda said.

Thirteen different Taiko drum groups were featured, the most for the event, according to co-chair Ron Mayeda.

The day-long festival was billed as the ninth annual Taiko Expo.

Drummers played on two stages, one outdoor and one indoor.

Featured groups were both local and from slightly farther away, including Sacramento and Union City.

But the most popular band of the day was the San Jose Taiko, the third oldest group in the United States.

The hall was filled to overflowing when San Jose Taiko performed.

Also in the hall was an exhibit featuring the 100 and 442 Army Combat Divisions whose ranks were entirely filled with Japanese-American soldiers during World War II.

Many of them came from the internment camps following President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s order – the infamous Executive Order 9066 that forced Japanese on the West Coast to report to camps claiming national security concerns.

The exhibit included pictures of both the camps and the Japanese-Americans in combat. Also on display were artifacts collected from the war including a Japanese army rifle, medals, dog tags and a helmet.

Sakai, who helped put together the display, said its main purpose was to teach younger generations who don’t always know about what Japanese-Americans did during the war.

And, of course, there was the food.

Festival goers were offered an assortment of Japanese dishes, including sushi.

Organizers of the Haru Matsuri took the time to honor Shaka Narimatsu of Morgan Hill, who has been contributing flower arraignments called Ikebana since the festival’s beginning in 1960.

Cheeto Barrera is an intern at the Morgan Hill Times. He can be reached at [email protected]

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A staff member wrote, edited or posted this article, which may include information provided by one or more third parties.

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