Ugly History Japanese American incarceration camps Densho

On December 7, 1941,

16 year-old Aki Kurose shared in the
horror of millions of Americans

when Japanese planes
attacked Pearl Harbor.

What she did not know,

was how that shared experience

would soon leave her family and
over 120,000 Japanese Americans

alienated from their country,

both socially and physically.

As of 1941,

Japanese American communities had been
growing in the US for over 50 years.

About one-third of them were immigrants,

many of whom settled on the West Coast
and had lived there for decades.

The rest were born as American citizens,
like Aki.

Born Akiko Kato in Seattle,

Aki grew up in a diverse neighborhood

where she never thought of herself
as anything but American–

until the day after the attack, when a
teacher told her:

“You people bombed Pearl Harbor."

Amid racism, paranoia,
and fears of sabotage,

people labelled Japanese Americans
as potential traitors.

FBI agents began to search homes,
confiscate belongings

and detain community leaders
without trial.

Aki’s family was not immediately subjected
to these extreme measures,

but on February 19, 1942, President
Roosevelt issued Executive Order 9066.

The order authorized the removal of any
suspected enemies–

including anyone of even
partial Japanese heritage–

from designated ‘military areas.’

At first,

Japanese Americans were pushed to leave
restricted areas and migrate inland.

But as the government froze
their bank accounts

and imposed local restrictions
such as curfews,

many were unable to leave–
Aki’s family among them.

In March, a proclamation forbid Japanese
Americans from changing their residency,

trapping them in military zones.

In May, the army moved Aki and her family,

along with over 7,000 Japanese Americans
living in Seattle

to “Camp Harmony”
in Puyallup, Washington.

This was one of several makeshift
detention centers

at former fairgrounds and racetracks,

where entire families were packed into
poorly converted stables and barracks.

Over the ensuing months,

the army moved Japanese Americans
into long-term camps

in desolate areas of the West and South,

moving Aki and her family to
Minidoka in southern Idaho.

Guarded by armed soldiers,

many of these camps were still being
constructed when incarcerees moved in.

These hastily built prisons were
overcrowded and unsanitary.

People frequently fell ill and were unable
to receive proper medical care.

The War Relocation Authority relied on
incarcerees to keep the camps running.

Many worked in camp facilities or taught
in poorly equipped classrooms,

while others raised crops and animals.

Some Japanese Americans rebelled,
organizing labor strikes and even rioting.

But many more,
like Aki’s parents, endured.

They constantly sought to recreate some
semblance of life outside the camps,

but the reality of their
situation was unavoidable.

Like many younger incarcerees,
Aki was determined to leave her camp.

She finished her final year
of high school at Minidoka,

and with the aid of an anti-racist Quaker
organization,

she was able to enroll at
Friends University in Kansas.

For Aki’s family however, things wouldn’t
begin to change until late 1944.

A landmark Supreme Court case

ruled that continued detention of American
citizens without charges

was unconstitutional.

In the fall of 1945,

the war ended and the camps closed down.

Remaining incarcerees
were given a mere $25

and a train ticket to their
pre-war address,

but many no longer had a home
or job to return to.

Aki’s family had been able to
keep their apartment,

and Aki eventually returned
to Seattle after college.

However, post-war prejudice
made finding work difficult.

Incarcarees faced discrimination
and resentment

from workers and tenants
who replaced them.

Fortunately, Japanese Americans
weren’t alone

in the fight against
racial discrimination.

Aki found work with one of Seattle’s first
interracial labor unions

and joined the Congress
of Racial Equality.

She became a teacher,
and over the next several decades,

her advocacy for multicultural, socially
conscious education

would impact thousands of students.

However, many ex-incarcerees,
particularly members of older generations,

were unable to rebuild
their lives after the war.

Children of incarcerees began a movement

calling for the United States to atone
for this historic injustice.

In 1988, the US government officially
apologized for the wartime incarceration–

admitting it was the catastrophic result
of racism, hysteria,

and failed political leadership.

Three years after this apology,

Aki Kurose was awarded the
Human Rights Award

from the Seattle Chapter
of the United Nations,

celebrating her vision of peace and
respect for people of all backgrounds.

1941 年 12 月 7 日,当日本飞机袭击珍珠港时,

16 岁的 Aki Kurose 分享
了数百万美国人的恐惧

她不知道的

是,这种共同的经历

将如何很快离开她的家人和
超过 120,000 名日裔美国人

无论是在社会上还是身体上都与他们的国家疏远了。

截至 1941 年,

日裔美国人社区
在美国已经发展了 50 多年。

其中大约三分之一是移民,

其中许多人定居在西海岸
并在那里生活了几十年。

其余的人都是美国公民,
就像阿基一样。 Aki

出生于西雅图的 Akiko Kato,

在一个多元化的社区长大,在

那里她从不认为自己
是美国人——

直到袭击发生后的第二天,一位
老师告诉她:

“你们轰炸了珍珠港。”

在种族主义、偏执狂、
和对破坏的恐惧,

人们将日裔美国人
称为潜在的叛徒。

联邦调查局特工开始搜查房屋,
没收财物

并拘留社区领导人,
而没有经过审判

。Aki 的家人没有立即
受到这些极端措施,

但 1942 年 2 月 19 日,
罗斯福总统发布 第 9066 号行政命令。

该命令授权将任何
可疑的敌人——

包括任何具有
部分日本血统的人——

从指定的“军事区”中撤出。

起初,

日裔美国人被迫离开
限制区并迁移到内陆。

但随着政府冻结
他们的 银行账户

和实施宵禁等当地限制

许多人无法离开——
其中包括 Aki 的家人。3

月,一项禁止日本人的公告
美国人不要改变他们的居住地,

把他们困在军事区。

5 月,军队将 Aki 和她的家人

以及居住在西雅图的 7,000 多名日裔美国人

转移到
华盛顿皮阿拉普的“和谐营”。

这是前集市和赛马场的几个临时
拘留中心之一

在那里,整个家庭都被挤在
改建不良的马厩和营房中。

在接下来的几个月里

,军队将日裔美国人
转移到

西部和南部荒凉地区的长期营地,

将 Aki 和她的家人转移到
爱达荷州南部的 Minidoka。

由武装士兵看守,

当被监禁者搬进来时,许多这些营地仍在建造中。

这些仓促建造的监狱
人满为患,不卫生。

人们经常生病,
无法得到适当的医疗护理。

战争搬迁局依靠
被监禁者来维持营地的运转。

许多人在营地设施工作或
在设备简陋的教室任教,

而其他人则种植庄稼和动物。

一些日裔美国人造反,
组织罢工,甚至暴动。

但更多的人,
比如 Aki 的父母,忍受了。

他们不断寻求
在营地外重建一些生活的表象,

但他们的现实
情况是不可避免的。

像许多年轻的被监禁者一样,
Aki 决心离开她的营地。


在 Minidoka 完成了高中的最后一年,在

一个反种族主义的贵格会组织的帮助下

她得以
进入堪萨斯州的朋友大学就读。

然而,对于 Aki 的家人来说,事情
直到 1944 年底才开始改变。

一个具有里程碑意义的最高法院案件

裁定,在
没有指控的情况下继续拘留美国公民

是违宪的。

1945 年秋天

,战争结束,集中营关闭。

剩下的被监禁
者只得到了 25 美元

和一张前往
战前地址的火车票,

但许多人不再有家
或工作可以返回。

Aki 的家人已经能够
保留他们的公寓

,Aki 最终
在大学毕业后回到了西雅图。

然而,战后的偏见
使找工作变得困难。

被监禁的人面临着取代他们

的工人和租户的歧视和不满

幸运的是,

在反对种族歧视的斗争中,并非只有日裔美国人

Aki 在西雅图最早的跨种族工会之一找到了工作,

并加入
了种族平等大会。

她成为一名教师
,在接下来的几十年里,

她倡导的多元文化、具有社会
意识的教育

将影响成千上万的学生。

然而,许多前被监禁的人,
特别是老一辈的成员,

在战后无法重建
生活。

被监禁的孩子们发起了一场运动,

呼吁美国
为这一历史性的不公正行为赎罪。

1988 年,美国政府
为战时监禁正式道歉——

承认这
是种族主义、歇斯底里

和失败的政治领导的灾难性结果。

道歉三年后,

Aki Kurose 获得了联合国西雅图分会颁发的
人权奖

,以

表彰她对和平的愿景以及
对各种背景的人的尊重。