A Bust Honoring the Legacy of Daniel K. Inouye Established in his Ancestral Homeland of Yame City, Fukuoka Prefecture

(L-R) Kazue Inoue (Daniel K. Inouye’s relative), Keiichi Kakuda (Yame City Council Chairman), Tsuneyuki Mitamura (Yame City Mayor), Masaru Eguchi (Fukuoka Prefecture Vice Governor) and John C. Taylor (Principal Officer, U.S. Consulate in Fukuoka)

On March 18, an unveiling ceremony for a bust commemorating the legacy of the late Senator Daniel K. Inouye (1924-2012) was held by the city government of Yame, Fukuoka Prefecture. Senator Inouye, the decorated World War II veteran and the second-longest-serving U.S. senator in history, was born in Honolulu, Hawaii in 1924, after his father and his grandparents emigrated from the village of Yokoyama in Yame county, current Joyo district in Yame city. The monument was erected in a park in Joyo with 30 flowering dogwoods, a gift from the United States to Japan in 2015, as a symbol of the lasting U.S.-Japan bilateral friendship and as the pride of his hometown honoring the political and cultural achievements that he had made in both countries.

Holding keen awareness of his heritage and paying respect to his roots, Senator Inouye, together with Irene Hirano Inouye and other Japanese American leaders, founded the U.S.-Japan Council in 2008. On behalf of the Council and Irene, who looked forward to the completion of the monument, a congratulatory message by USJC President and CEO Suzanne Basalla was delivered during the ceremony.

To watch the entire ceremony, click here.