Sorry there are no tabs and that the paragraphs aren't spaced out. It's just a mass of TEXT; blame blogger, haha.
Naomi, the main character in Joy Kogawa’s “Obasan” is torn between her racial ties to Japan and her physical state in Canada and struggles to come to terms with the two cultures she is born into the world with. By example, her parents and grandparents instill the Japanese way of keeping one’s emotions guarded; silence is best. But growing up in a country unlike Japan, Naomi is witness to many people who are outright with their words, opposite to that of her family.
What adds to the struggle is World War II, a racially spiteful time period for the Japanese living in Canada. Though she is born and raised in Canada, Naomi’s grandparents and parents have originated from Japan, forcing her to uphold her Japanese background, all the while growing up and living as a normal child in Canada. Naomi and her older brother Stephen endure the racial jokes and comments from kids at school; while Naomi remains silent through it all, Stephen has not taken on her approach and instead outwardly grows more and more angry and resentful at their cultural difference.
Naomi and Stephen’s Aunt Emily is also outspoken about her beliefs that how the Canadian government is treating the Japanese-Canadians is cruel and wrong. During the war she was part of an underground organization trying to maintain that they are citizens of Canada, not traitors in anyway because of their homeland. And in the present time, Aunt Emily tries to push Naomi to speak about her anger toward the government, that it is better to let it out then to keep it in, but Naomi reserves her silence, wondering why her aunt cannot simply accept what is impossible to change: the past.
Even up to her present life in the novel, Naomi has remained a quiet character. The reader does not know, and never does know, much about her, but is able to piece together bits and pieces from what Naomi narrates. This puzzle parallels Naomi’s childhood which was filled with many unanswered questions about the absense of her mother and grandparents, and other changes throughout her life. One aspect though, that the reader is able to pick up is that Naomi never shows any anger and hostility toward any of the questions that her aunt and uncle know the answers to. She has not shown spite toward Japan for taking away her mother, neither has she shown hate toward Canada for separating her family.
The silence though, does not help to bring back together the family, and may even have caused a further separation. Uncle and Obasan are never straight-forward with Naomi, leaving her to fill in the rest of the story, for example with her mother’s long leave to Japan. Naomi’s mother left when Naomi was very young, never to return, forcing Naomi to wonder why for years. Naomi learns later though, that her mother specifically asked that Naomi and Stephen never know of what happened in Japan because she believed it would spare them from the hurt.
At the end of the novel, the truth and the missing pieces comes to light. With this newfound knowledge, Naomi is liberated, believing that her family’s silence was a mistake; it only caused more hurt. The racism in Canada, and the Japanese’ silent reaction to it has caused rifts through Naomi’s life, but in the end, she is still apart of both cultures and is able to accept this.