Wendy Yoshimura

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Wendy Yoshimura
Date of birth: January 17, 1943 (1943-01-17) (age 65)
Place of birth: California
Movement: Symbionese Liberation Army

Wendy Masako Yoshimura (born January 17, 1943) is an American still life watercolor painter better known for her involvement with the Symbionese Liberation Army. She was born in a WWII-era California internment camp, and raised in postwar Japan and the Central Valley. She encountered and became involved in radical politics during her last year of art college as a result of meeting Willie Brandt, founder of the so-called Revolutionary Army in Berkeley, California.

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[edit] Early life

Yoshimura was born at the Manzanar Internment Camp for Japanese Americans where her American-born parents were incarcerated. After the war the Yoshimura family moved to Etajima, a small island off the coast of Hiroshima, where her father worked for the Allied Occupation forces. The family returned to the US when Yoshimura was 13 years old. Because she did not speak English, Yoshimura was initially placed in the second grade in the Fresno school system. She graduated from the California College of Arts and Crafts (now California College of the Arts) in 1969.[1]

[edit] Revolutionary Army

Yoshimura became associated with the Revolutionary Army, a group founded by her boyfriend, Willie Brandt, which has never been shown to have had more than five members.[citation needed] Brandt appended the title to public statements claiming responsibility for violent actions intended to express opposition to the Vietnam War. In 1972, police discovered a weapons and explosives cache in a Berkeley garage she had rented and described it as a "massive bomb factory."[2]. They also found letters taking credit for planned future bombings targeting the University of California, Berkeley campus including the Naval Architecture building, and notes describing a specific plan to kidnap or assassinate World Bank President and former defense secretary Robert McNamara at his winter residence in Aspen, Colorado.[2] Brandt and two others were arrested in Berkeley on March 31, 1972 and subsequently convicted, but Yoshimura evaded a police dragnet and fled California.[2][3] She lived under an alias in New Jersey until 1974.

[edit] Symbionese Liberation Army

Also in 1974, the three surviving members of the Berkeley terrorist group Symbionese Liberation Army (Bill Harris, Emily Harris, and Patty Hearst) relocated to rural Pennsylvania after six of their comrades died in a shootout with Los Angeles police. Sports writer and political activist Jack Scott, who had helped the high-profile fugitives make their way east, arranged for Yoshimura to join them and handle shopping and other public transactions.

After two months with the group, Yoshimura left and returned alone to California, taking up residence in San Francisco. Hearst and the Harrises found their own way back into the state and regrouped in Sacramento, California. When the FBI found Yoshimura's thumbprint in the SLA's rural hideout, newspaper headlines tied her to the group and she fled San Francisco and reunited with them in Sacramento.

In Sacramento, with associates from the San Francisco Bay Area, some of the fugitives planned and carried out a bank robbery in which a customer was shot and killed. Hearst's account in "Every Secret Thing" states that she and Yoshimura opposed the action and were therefore assigned to "switch cars" far from the scene. After the robbery the group abandoned Sacramento and fled separately to San Francisco.

[edit] Arrest and conviction

On September 18, 1975, Yoshimura was arrested with Hearst in a second-floor apartment at 625 Morse Street by FBI Special Agent Tom Padden and San Francisco Police Department Inspector Tim Casey.[4][5][3] Padden and Casey, failing to read Hearst and Yoshimura their Miranda rights, did not obtain a warrant until twenty-six hours later; thus weapons evidence including a handgun in Yoshimura's purse and a shotgun in the bedroom were suppressed.[3] During her trial, Japanese Americans who sympathized with her family's experience during World War II gave $150,000 dollars to aid her legal defense through the Wendy Yoshimura Fair Trial Committee.[6]

[edit] Grand jury investigation

In 1991 Yoshimura was granted limited immunity to testify during a grand jury investigation into the fatal 1975 bank robbery, which killed Myrna Opsahl, 42-year-old mother of four.[7] One SLA member, Michael Bortin, had plead guilty for the robbery itself. No indictments resulted at the time. In 2002 five former SLA members and associates were arrested and four of them pled guilty to charges related to that crime.

[edit] Present day and watercolors

Today, Yoshimura lives in north Oakland, California and teaches art at a local community center.[8] Her still-life watercolors depicting fruits, vegetables, flowers and seashells are often displayed in the Bay Area.[9][10][11] Her open studio in December 2007 was noted by Hokubei News, a Bay Area publication for Japanese-Americans.[12] According to Yoshimura, she paints to capture single moments of intense beauty that inspire her. Of watercolors, she says, "I love its transparency, fluidity, and quiet wildness, always flowing just at the edge of the artist’s control."[13][14] Asian Week calls her still-life watercolors "colorful and brilliant."[15] East Bay Express calls her prints "shimmeringly rendered."[10]

[edit] Notable media

  • American Woman is a fictionalization of Yoshimura's story by Susan Choi that was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize.
  • Wendy... Uh... What's Her Name is a documentary by Curtis Choy

[edit] References

[edit] External links