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Noriko Sawada Bridges Flynn

Noriko Bridges Flynn, known as "Nikki Bridges Flynn", was a Japanese American writer and civil rights activist. She also helped overturn the law in Nevada barring mixed-race marriages.

Biography
Noriko Sawada was born in Gardena, California to Japanese parents who leased land to grow their own crops. Her parents leased the land because it was illegal for them to own farmland at the time in California. She began classes at Santa Monica College, but she was forced to stop after her first year. In 1942, she and her family were incarcerated in a Japanese internment camp near Poston, Arizona due to Executive Order 9066. The experience affected Sawada, showing her the deep injustices in society. When she was released, Sawada and her parents, moved to Berkeley and she became active in the AFL-CIO, the Berkeley Interracial Committee and the War Relocation Authority. She met her first husband, Harry Bridges, at a fund-raiser for the Mine, Mill and Smelter workers and after falling in love, they decided to get married on Pearl Harbor Day in 1958. The case was noticed by the national press and lawyers for Bridges and Sawada struck down the Nevada law in four days, allowing the couple to marry in Reno. In 1973, Bridges studied creative writing at San Francisco State University. Her writing was featured in ''Harper's and Ms. Magazine''. In 1988, she was honored by the Pacific Asian American Women Bay Area Coalition with the Asian Woman Warrior award for her community advocacy. In 1990, she read her poem, "To Be or Not to Be: There is No Such Option", at the government ceremony which apologized to Japanese Americans for the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II. The same year, Harry Bridges died. He had been friends with Ed Flynn for many years. Nikki wed Flynn in 1994. Nikki Bridges Flynn died in Pescadero, California in her home on February 7, 2003. == References ==
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