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Marriage bias? It isn't the first time

ORANGE COUNTY

June 17, 2008|DANA PARSONS

Toshiko Wilkinson isn't claiming any special wisdom. She's not looking for a soapbox. She's merely agreed to my request to talk about her marriage, since it began amid a swirl of societal and family doubts that sound vaguely familiar to those in the wind today as same-sex marriage goes on the books in California.

Yes, Tosh remembers voices like that, with her inner circle of friends wondering if she knew what she was doing and her father refusing to attend her wedding and her parents once discouraging her husband from attending the family's traditional Thanksgiving dinner. When she and her husband moved into their Rossmoor neighborhood 45 years ago, the real estate agent went door-to-door asking neighbors if they minded having a mixed-race couple in their midst.


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I think it's fair to say that history judged that Tosh did know what she was doing: She remained married to the man for 53 years. Since the marriage produced a daughter and three grandchildren, I'm being rhetorical when I ask if she can picture her life without being married to Leland Wilkinson, who died in 2005.

"No, I can't," she says. "It was for me a wonderful journey, much better than I had a right to expect."

Perhaps because those expectations were shaped by American life in the years after World War II, when not everyone thought it was fine if an American man married a Japanese woman. No matter that the woman was born in Los Angeles and grew up Americanized or that the man was a bank teller who grew up in Iowa.

She sees the same-sex marriage controversy in a similar way. But her defense of it isn't so much intellectual as instinctual. She knows that had she listened to the people closest to her way back when, she and Lee never would have married.

"Not one of my friends married outside the race," she says. "Nobody was very pleased about our marriage. It was not one of those happy times."

But the two seemed to know they had a shared destiny, she says. They first laid eyes on each other in the late 1940s, when Lee came to pick up a friend of Tosh's and saw her in pajamas and curlers. She laughingly says that isn't why they didn't start dating for a couple years or so, but by 1952 she decided they needed to fish or cut bait.

Friends said the marriage wouldn't work, that the cultural differences would doom it. That their children would face societal disapproval.

"We just thought we'd made up our minds, we were going to make a go of it, and if everybody wasn't happy, so be it."

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