Ugly History: Japanese American incarceration camps - Densho

1,644,416 views ・ 2019-10-01

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:07
On December 7, 1941,
0
7851
2500
00:10
16 year-old Aki Kurose shared in the horror of millions of Americans
1
10351
5490
00:15
when Japanese planes attacked Pearl Harbor.
2
15841
3612
00:19
What she did not know,
3
19453
1330
00:20
was how that shared experience
4
20783
1780
00:22
would soon leave her family and over 120,000 Japanese Americans
5
22563
5070
00:27
alienated from their country,
6
27633
1920
00:29
both socially and physically.
7
29553
2440
00:31
As of 1941,
8
31993
1590
00:33
Japanese American communities had been growing in the US for over 50 years.
9
33583
4943
00:38
About one-third of them were immigrants,
10
38526
2174
00:40
many of whom settled on the West Coast and had lived there for decades.
11
40700
4000
00:44
The rest were born as American citizens, like Aki.
12
44700
3780
00:48
Born Akiko Kato in Seattle,
13
48480
2380
00:50
Aki grew up in a diverse neighborhood
14
50860
2310
00:53
where she never thought of herself as anything but American–
15
53170
3610
00:56
until the day after the attack, when a teacher told her:
16
56780
4050
01:00
“You people bombed Pearl Harbor."
17
60830
2473
01:03
Amid racism, paranoia, and fears of sabotage,
18
63303
3590
01:06
people labelled Japanese Americans as potential traitors.
19
66893
4070
01:10
FBI agents began to search homes, confiscate belongings
20
70963
3774
01:14
and detain community leaders without trial.
21
74737
3130
01:17
Aki’s family was not immediately subjected to these extreme measures,
22
77867
4000
01:21
but on February 19, 1942, President Roosevelt issued Executive Order 9066.
23
81867
7130
01:28
The order authorized the removal of any suspected enemies–
24
88997
4150
01:33
including anyone of even partial Japanese heritage–
25
93147
3717
01:36
from designated ‘military areas.’
26
96864
3070
01:39
At first,
27
99934
1130
01:41
Japanese Americans were pushed to leave restricted areas and migrate inland.
28
101064
4980
01:46
But as the government froze their bank accounts
29
106044
2380
01:48
and imposed local restrictions such as curfews,
30
108424
3070
01:51
many were unable to leave– Aki’s family among them.
31
111494
3880
01:55
In March, a proclamation forbid Japanese Americans from changing their residency,
32
115374
5790
02:01
trapping them in military zones.
33
121164
2870
02:04
In May, the army moved Aki and her family,
34
124034
2940
02:06
along with over 7,000 Japanese Americans living in Seattle
35
126974
4060
02:11
to "Camp Harmony" in Puyallup, Washington.
36
131034
3290
02:14
This was one of several makeshift detention centers
37
134324
2852
02:17
at former fairgrounds and racetracks,
38
137176
2560
02:19
where entire families were packed into poorly converted stables and barracks.
39
139736
5420
02:25
Over the ensuing months,
40
145156
1500
02:26
the army moved Japanese Americans into long-term camps
41
146656
3530
02:30
in desolate areas of the West and South,
42
150186
3200
02:33
moving Aki and her family to Minidoka in southern Idaho.
43
153386
4180
02:37
Guarded by armed soldiers,
44
157566
2180
02:39
many of these camps were still being constructed when incarcerees moved in.
45
159746
4830
02:44
These hastily built prisons were overcrowded and unsanitary.
46
164576
4081
02:48
People frequently fell ill and were unable to receive proper medical care.
47
168657
4431
02:53
The War Relocation Authority relied on incarcerees to keep the camps running.
48
173088
5313
02:58
Many worked in camp facilities or taught in poorly equipped classrooms,
49
178401
4368
03:02
while others raised crops and animals.
50
182769
3397
03:06
Some Japanese Americans rebelled, organizing labor strikes and even rioting.
51
186166
4840
03:11
But many more, like Aki’s parents, endured.
52
191006
3520
03:14
They constantly sought to recreate some semblance of life outside the camps,
53
194526
4520
03:19
but the reality of their situation was unavoidable.
54
199046
3895
03:22
Like many younger incarcerees, Aki was determined to leave her camp.
55
202941
4640
03:27
She finished her final year of high school at Minidoka,
56
207581
3040
03:30
and with the aid of an anti-racist Quaker organization,
57
210621
3350
03:33
she was able to enroll at Friends University in Kansas.
58
213971
4200
03:38
For Aki’s family however, things wouldn’t begin to change until late 1944.
59
218171
5550
03:43
A landmark Supreme Court case
60
223721
1856
03:45
ruled that continued detention of American citizens without charges
61
225577
3980
03:49
was unconstitutional.
62
229557
1570
03:51
In the fall of 1945,
63
231127
1930
03:53
the war ended and the camps closed down.
64
233057
2820
03:55
Remaining incarcerees were given a mere $25
65
235877
3920
03:59
and a train ticket to their pre-war address,
66
239797
3172
04:02
but many no longer had a home or job to return to.
67
242969
4040
04:07
Aki’s family had been able to keep their apartment,
68
247009
2915
04:09
and Aki eventually returned to Seattle after college.
69
249924
3590
04:13
However, post-war prejudice made finding work difficult.
70
253514
4180
04:17
Incarcarees faced discrimination and resentment
71
257694
3047
04:20
from workers and tenants who replaced them.
72
260741
3230
04:23
Fortunately, Japanese Americans weren’t alone
73
263971
3220
04:27
in the fight against racial discrimination.
74
267191
2720
04:29
Aki found work with one of Seattle’s first interracial labor unions
75
269911
4300
04:34
and joined the Congress of Racial Equality.
76
274211
2720
04:36
She became a teacher, and over the next several decades,
77
276931
3020
04:39
her advocacy for multicultural, socially conscious education
78
279951
3770
04:43
would impact thousands of students.
79
283721
2490
04:46
However, many ex-incarcerees, particularly members of older generations,
80
286211
5270
04:51
were unable to rebuild their lives after the war.
81
291481
2980
04:54
Children of incarcerees began a movement
82
294461
3020
04:57
calling for the United States to atone for this historic injustice.
83
297481
4040
05:01
In 1988, the US government officially apologized for the wartime incarceration–
84
301521
5238
05:06
admitting it was the catastrophic result of racism, hysteria,
85
306759
4272
05:11
and failed political leadership.
86
311031
2643
05:13
Three years after this apology,
87
313674
1830
05:15
Aki Kurose was awarded the Human Rights Award
88
315504
2900
05:18
from the Seattle Chapter of the United Nations,
89
318404
2980
05:21
celebrating her vision of peace and respect for people of all backgrounds.
90
321384
5040
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7