LOOKING BACK
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Young Chang
There wasn’t a kid in town who didn’t know sweet and smile-y Soto
Nishikawa, Judge Robert Gardner remembers.
He was a nice, quiet “little Japanese gentleman who came to Balboa God
knows how many years ago -- must’ve gone back 1,000 years.”
In the 1930’s and 40’s, Nishikawa owned a Japanese curio shop called
“Soto’s” on the corner of Bay Avenue and Main Street. He was known and
loved, according to a few locals, but was sent to a Japanese internment
camp during World War II only to die soon after the war ended.
Current business owners in that area of Balboa Island don’t seem to
know anything about him. Any trace of where the shop once was seems to
have faded. But Gardner, a long-time Newport Beach resident, was one of
those kids who spent probably too much time in Nishikawa’s little haven
of priceless, delicate Japanese goodies.
“Every kid spent his time crawling through Soto’s shop,” he said.
“Picking up precious little things and dropping them and he smiled,
smiled, smiled.”
Gay Wassal-Kelly, also a long-time Newport Beach resident, remembers
seashells. Nishikawa sold them along with little figurines that she and
her friends would buy after pooling pennies, because that’s what young
children in those days spent.
“He just loved kids to come into the store,” she said.
And at the end of the day, Nishikawa would close up shop and walk his
fuzzy, little white dog down to the tip of the peninsula and back.
Unfortunately, World War II hysteria had spread by that time to the point
where locals thought he and other Japanese immigrants were spies, Gardner
said.
“When he and the dog walked down there, the lights in the police
department would come on,” he added. “We were a bigoted population . . .
it was a time of great and embarrassing hysteria.”
Nishikawa was eventually sent to an internment camp in Arizona. While
he was away, the shop’s landlord closed Soto’s permanently.
After the war ended in the late 1940s, once Gardner had also returned
from the service, the judge got a call from the Orange County Hospital.
Soto was there. He was dying and wanted to see Gardner, so they visited.
Nishikawa told Gardner he wanted to go back to the shop. Gardner
didn’t have the heart to tell him it didn’t exist anymore.
“So I made up some kind of ridiculous story and said I’ll be back
tomorrow and I’ll take him down there, but thank God Soto died during the
night, because I didn’t have the guts to tell him the landlord had closed
his shop. He woulda had a heart attack,” Gardner said.
What Nishikawa’s friend and patron remembers most vividly is just how
much everyone loved him before the war hysteria struck.
“He was a fixture in a time when, to be as brutally frank as possible,
all people that were not considered Caucasian” were treated unfairly,
Gardner said.
* Do you know of a person, place or event that deserves a historical
Look Back? Let us know. Contact Young Chang by fax at (949) 646-4170;
e-mail at [email protected]; or mail her at c/o Daily Pilot, 330 W.
Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627.
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