By PETER YOON, Rafu Digital Editor
Another legacy business in Little Tokyo is closing its doors.
Elaine Taiyoshi’s Little Tokyo Arts and Gifts received an eviction letter earlier this month ordering her to vacate the premises.
The gift shop, which was founded by Taiyoshi’s father after World War II, sells Japanese imports ranging from clothing to antiques. Just months after the inauguration of Metro’s Little Tokyo/Arts District Station, the shop, alongside Anzen Hardware and Suehiro Cafe, stands as another testament to the displacement of Japanese- and Japanese American-owned family businesses from Little Tokyo’s historic First Street North.
“The landlord just said goodbye,” said Taiyoshi. “I think their goal is to double the rent like they did for Anzen.”
When asked how she learned of the eviction, Taiyoshi reported that she received a letter in the mail notifying her that she had 30 days upon receipt of the notice to vacate.
Community organizations have fought hard to keep legacy businesses in Little Tokyo, which have been put at risk due to the exorbitant rents caused by the gentrification of the neighborhood. Suehiro’s monthly rent was reportedly increased from $6,000 to $10,000.
“How can you keep making that kind of rent?” asked Taiyoshi. “It’s just scary for everybody. It’s one thing to charge a huge corporation, but what about the little people? We have families.”
Kevin Charles Keizuchi, founder of the Shinsei movement, organized a clean-up effort to help Taiyoshi with her inventory. Several community members and organizations came by to show their support, including members of Maryknoll Church, Kristen Fukushima of Little Tokyo Community Council, Mariko Lochridge of Little Tokyo Service Center, Darin Maki of Crft by Maki, and Kaitlyn Emiko Chu, the reigning Nisei Week Queen.
“To prevent gentrification, we have to become owners of our community,” said Keizuchi, “Thank you to everyone who helped to clean up, shop, or just support Elaine during this difficult time.”
Members of Maryknoll will continue to assist Little Tokyo Arts and Gifts on Wednesday.
“I’m not good at talking about my feelings,” said Taiyoshi about the eviction, “My father started this store after the war. I’m the last person left. The rest of my family passed away. I still have all of these things that my father brought here. I just want to find a home for them.”
Time will tell if Japanese American legacy businesses will still have a home in Little Tokyo.
“Merry Christmas,” said Taiyoshi. “I guess that’s just the way people are nowadays.”
Onward, Christian CowboysHow an Australian VR gaming studio scored a gig with Boeing to train astronautsTop Amazon deals Aug. 21: Echo Buds, Sonos Roam, Kindle KidsBrute ForcesRabbi in Puerto Rico pleads for help on eve of Yom KippurSan Juan mayor to Trump: 'We are dying'SpaceX launched and landed a rocket that has already been to spaceLos Angeles Sparks vs. Washington Mystics 2024 livestream: Watch live WNBATrump wants to send humans back to the moonStephen King is still posting about The Dark Tower. He just dropped his biggest hint yet. Watch a loose bat fly around a Spirit Airlines plane mid Inside the deeply weird fake Tom Brady simply can't pull off this hat This video of 2 cow friends reuniting is extremely moo 2020 candidates directly call out Trump after two mass shootings This soothing latte art video is peak relationship goals Data breach leaks personal information of tens of thousands of college students The 7 best Tumblr scams of all time Miley Cyrus opens up about Liam Hemsworth in lengthy Twitter thread Oakland A's sign fan who threw 96 mph fastball in a speed challenge
0.1316s , 14228.984375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【siblings sex video】Gentrification of Little Tokyo: Another Legacy Business Evicted,Global Hot Topic Analysis