Silenced サイレンス - Documentary (Seed and Spark Crowdfunding)
U.S. internment camp survivor Joni Kimoto journeys across continents to document untold stories of Japanese-American and Japanese WWII survivors, unraveling the impact of silence on their identities and bridging generational scars. These are not interviews--they are acts of testimony.
Mission Statement:
We repeat history because we forget it, because we forget the pain of past generations. SILENCED aims to give voice to survivors in the U.S. and in Japan, each confronting the aftermath of internment in different cultural and emotional landscapes. So the next generation doesn't forget.
The Story:
During WWII, over 120,000 Japanese Americans—most U.S. citizens—were forcibly removed from their homes and imprisoned in concentration camps. Some were later repatriated to Japan, a country many had never known. Few of these stories have been told, and in Japan, they remain largely silenced. Now in their 80s, 90s, and early 100s, survivors are beginning to speak.
SILENCED is a feature-length documentary that follows internment camp survivor, Joni Kimoto, who found activism later in life and now shares her story to build awareness in Portland, Oregon, where she was originally detained in 1941. She was sent to the Minidoka War Relocation Center in Idaho with her family as a child. We follow Joni as she returns to the sites of her internment and interacts with the younger generation of Japanese Americans in the Pacific Northwest who were never told these stories of survival by their own parents and grandparents. Eventually, she will embark across the Pacific to meet Japanese war survivor Kodera Yashima, who was exiled to China during the war, where she and her family were faced with unimaginable hardships from starvation, sickness, suicide, and Russian soldiers. The two women will share their stories across continental, cultural, and language barriers.
Artistic Statement:
Co-Director, Kenji Shimizu, spent his entire life in Japan, never knowing that, decades earlier, people who looked like him had been locked behind barbed wire in America. It was never in textbooks, never discussed in classrooms, never mentioned around the dinner table. It wasn’t until he moved to the U.S. that he stumbled upon a truth erased on both sides of the Pacific.
As a photographer, Kenji was drawn to capturing personal histories. During the COVID-19 pandemic, he began remotely interviewing people of Japanese descent about their families’ wartime experiences. The more he listened, the more he realized that this history had not only been silenced in Japan—it had been buried in the U.S. as well. The survivors who still carried these memories were in their nineties. If these stories weren’t captured now, they never would be.
Co-Director, Blake Robertshaw, grew up in Ontario, Oregon, a small town where many formerly interned Japanese Americans had resettled. His own community carried this history, but no one talked about it. As a military veteran, Blake has spent his life trying to understand war’s lasting impact—not just on soldiers, but on the civilians caught in its aftermath. When he met Kenji through their shared work as photographers in Eugene, Oregon, they connected over their fascination with the stories history tries to forget. But it wasn’t until Blake returned home that the film became inevitable.
One afternoon, Blake was photographing Marge Yasuda, an outspoken woman in her eighties. At the end of their session, she pulled him aside. “You need to actually make this film before everyone dies.” Her husband had been interned and has since suffered a stroke. She had spent decades watching the last survivors of the camps slip away, their stories untold.
Blake felt the weight of her words settle in his gut. This history wasn’t just fading—it was being erased in real time. If no one told these stories now, they never would be.
The Team:
Kenji Shimizu – Co-director / Cinematographer
Kenji Shimizu is a Japanese-born filmmaker and photographer based in Oregon whose work centers on intimacy, memory, and the visual poetics of silence. With nearly two decades of experience in portraiture, documentary, and commercial photography, Kenji brings a nuanced eye to stories of human connection. He previously directed a WWII oral history project on Japanese and Japanese American experiences, honing his sensitivity to intergenerational trauma and the politics of erasure. As co-director and cinematographer, Kenji’s deeply personal investment in the subject infuses the film with lyrical imagery and a cross-cultural reckoning with buried histories. www.shimizuphotography.com
Blake Robertshaw – Co-director / Cinematographer
Blake Robertshaw is a documentary photographer and U.S. Coast Guard veteran whose camera has traveled from natural disasters to forgotten corners of American history. Born and raised in Ontario, Oregon—a resettlement site for many formerly incarcerated Japanese Americans—he grew up in a place where memory and silence collided. His own experience as a Veteran deepens his understanding of the emotional landscapes the film traverses. As co-director, Blake leads production and outreach with care and precision. His visual work and logistical stewardship ensure a process grounded in trust, and a final film that honors the complexities of resilience, displacement, and remembrance. www.blakerobertshaw.com
Anaïs Webster Mennuti - Producer
Dr. Anaïs Webster Mennuti, PharmD, is a filmmaker, producer, and Docs in Progress Legacy Fellow & BendFilm Basecamp Fellow whose work spans narrative film, advocacy, and impact-driven nonfiction. She combines rigorous production strategy with a deep investment in ethical, artist-centered storytelling. Her background in science and storytelling supports a cross-disciplinary approach to research, distribution, and engagement. Her documentary, HARMACY, exposes the understaffed and overwhelmed reality–or “fast food-ification”--of retail pharmacy, and is currently in post-production. Anaïs joined SILENCED to elevate underrepresented histories with care and clarity. As producer, she anchors the film’s vision while ensuring it is resourced, positioned for longevity, and accessible to communities most impacted by the histories it unearths. www.harmacyfilm.com
Julia Morizawa - Producer
Julia Morizawa is a fourth-generation Japanese American producer/writer based in Portland, Oregon, with over 20 years of experience in narrative film, television, new media, theater, and fiction podcasting. Produced projects include JESUSCAT (OR HOW I ACCIDENTALLY JOINED A CULT) (feature film), SIN & LYLE (short film), FIVE YEARS (short film), and TWENTY-TWO (play). Her most recent project, DRAGONFLY (animated short film), about the Tokyo Firebombing of March 9-10, 1945, premiered at the Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival in May 2023. It was awarded Best Animation at the Maryland Int’l Film Festival, Best AAPI-Directed Film at the Phoenix Film Festival, and the Audience Award for Best Animation at DisOrient in 2024. Julia's paternal grandparents met and married in Heart Mountain incarceration camp, while her maternal grandparents survived firebombings in Japan. She never met any of them and aims to connect with her own family history through SILENCED. www.juliamorizawa.com
Our most pressing goal at this time is to travel to Japan so that our two war survivors, Joni Kimoto and Kodera Yashima, can meet. Joni is ready and eager to make the trip, but as she’s previously stated, “Just do it before I get too old.” With both of our subjects in their 80s, we must heed her advice and travel to Japan to capture this footage as soon as possible.