Among her many accomplishments over 50 years, her activism led directly to the US Senate's agreement to pay reparations and apologise to Japanese-Americans and others who were interned during the Second World War. She was born Mary Nakahara in San Pedro, California, to a middle-class family. After Pearl Harbour she and her family …show more content…
While interned, she met her future husband, Bill Kochiyama, a Nisei (second-generation Japanese) soldier fighting for the US.
Once married, they moved to Harlem and Kochiyama dedicated her life to social activism that spanned races, nationalities and causes, including opposition to the Vietnam War and apartheid in South Africa. She got to know Malcolm X and was a member of his Organisation of Afro-American Unity, following his departure from the Nation of Islam. She played herself in the 1981 television film Death of a Prophet - The Last Days of Malcolm X and is the subject of two plays, Yuri and Malcolm X, by the Japanese-American playwright Tim Toyama, and Bits of Paradise by Marlan Warren.
She also supported the Puerto Rican cause, and in 1977 joined a group of Puerto Ricans who took over the Statue of Liberty to draw attention to the struggle for independence. The author of a memoir, Passing It On, in 2005 she was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize through the 1,000 Women for the Nobel Peace Prize 2005 project. Some of her speeches were published in Discover Your Mission: Selected Speeches & Writings of Yuri Kochiyama