Manchester Magazine Spring 2017 | Page 29

MU| F e a t u r e s F or Toru Kataoka, the journey to Manchester started in Hiroshima nearly 25 years ago. The then-sophomore at Hokusei Gakuen University (HGU) in Sapporo, Japan, visited the memorial where an atomic bomb in the last days of World War II killed nearly 150,000 people. At the historic site, Kataoka purchased a book about peace studies and, in it, discovered that the world’s first undergraduate Peace Studies Program started at a place called Manchester. For the young Kataoka, Manchester seemed the perfect place for exploring how to cool conflicts before they escalated into white- hot horrors like Hiroshima. Inspired to learn more, he sent a letter to Professor Ken Brown, then director of Manchester’s program. “I’d like to study with you,” Kataoka wrote. The letter launched an enduring friendship that brought Kataoka to Manchester in 1995 as an exchange student through BCA Study Abroad. In fact, it was Professor Allen Deeter ’53 who expanded BCA to include Kataoka’s school. Now an associate professor at HGU, Kataoka returned to Manchester this past year as a visiting scholar. His research is shining new light on the 15-year presidency of Vernon F. Schwalm ’13 and what Kataoka calls “the deep history” of how MU’s Peace Studies Program began. He plans to write a book about it. As an exchange student, Kataoka absorbed the thought-provoking courses of professors that included Brown, Benson Onyeji and Marcia Benjamin ’78, among others. He connected with Ed Miller ’56, who had directed BCA in Sapporo, and Martha Showalter ’56 Miller. He made new friends, American and international. He enjoyed the camaraderie of Garver Hall and late-night conversations in the “fishbowl.” For spending money, he washed dishes in the Union cafeteria. Sapporo, a city of 2 million, and North Manchester, a town of 6,000, seemed worlds apart. But the friendly community that welcomed and supported him made the adjustment easier. This past year, Kataoka brought his wife, Emi, daughter Nanami, 10, and son Haruki, 8, to experience Manchester for themselves. The Kataokas sent Nanami and Haruki to Manchester Intermediate and Elementary School and lived across the street from Katy Gray Brown ’91, an associate professor and director of the Peace Studies Institute and Program in Conflict Resolution her father once led. In his research, Kataoka painstakingly examined Schwalm’s documents housed in the MU Archives. Though Gladdys Muir gets praise for founding the Peace Studies Program, Schwalm doesn’t get nearly enough credit, says Kataoka. Schwalm envisioned an undergraduate program that would reflect Church of the Brethren values and train leaders for peace work. He embraced an interdisciplinary approach to the program that endures to this day. Schwalm also convinced Muir to leave the University of LaVerne in Southern California for Indiana. “Manchester was lucky to have him,” adds Kataoka. “He had a mission.” As revenue dropped and the faculty was cut, Schwalm steadied the ship as best he could. After the war, when the GI Bill flooded U.S. campuses with students, Schwalm rebuilt the faculty, personally hiring many of the gifted teachers who would enrich Manchester academics for decades. In many ways, Kataoka benefitted from Schwalm’s contributions. As a prestigious Rotary Ambassadorial Scholar, he attended the University of Bradford in England, where he earned his master’s degree in peace studies. Today, in addition to teaching, he coordinates peace studies at HGU, where he has arranged for visits from Ken Brown, Katy Gray Brown and Thelma Rohrer ’84, now dean of the College of Arts and Humanities. Now he wants other university students to have the same opportunities he had. He’s guided several HGU students to MU for peace studies, including Satomi Imai ’12, who now attends Bradford. For Kataoka it’s personal. Hiroshima and Nagasaki must never happen again. He knows that peace begins with friendship, especially the kind that stretches from Sapporo to Manchester and back again. By Melinda Lantz ’81 A Century of Faith, Learning and Service by Timothy K. Jones was a source for this story. Indeed, Schwalm led Manchester through extraordinary times. The United States entered World War II a few months after he became president. Over the next several years enrollment plummeted as male students were drafted or enlisted in the military or the Civilian Public Service. In the fall of 1941, Manchester’s enrollment was 645 but by fall 1944 it had plummeted to 410 – 315 women and only 95 men. Manchester | 29