Ugly History: Japanese American incarceration camps - Densho

1,629,202 views ・ 2019-10-01

TED-Ed


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On December 7, 1941,
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16 year-old Aki Kurose shared in the horror of millions of Americans
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when Japanese planes attacked Pearl Harbor.
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What she did not know,
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was how that shared experience
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would soon leave her family and over 120,000 Japanese Americans
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alienated from their country,
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both socially and physically.
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As of 1941,
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Japanese American communities had been growing in the US for over 50 years.
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About one-third of them were immigrants,
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many of whom settled on the West Coast and had lived there for decades.
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The rest were born as American citizens, like Aki.
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Born Akiko Kato in Seattle,
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Aki grew up in a diverse neighborhood
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where she never thought of herself as anything but American–
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until the day after the attack, when a teacher told her:
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“You people bombed Pearl Harbor."
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Amid racism, paranoia, and fears of sabotage,
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people labelled Japanese Americans as potential traitors.
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FBI agents began to search homes, confiscate belongings
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and detain community leaders without trial.
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Aki’s family was not immediately subjected to these extreme measures,
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but on February 19, 1942, President Roosevelt issued Executive Order 9066.
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The order authorized the removal of any suspected enemies–
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including anyone of even partial Japanese heritage–
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from designated ‘military areas.’
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At first,
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Japanese Americans were pushed to leave restricted areas and migrate inland.
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But as the government froze their bank accounts
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and imposed local restrictions such as curfews,
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many were unable to leave– Aki’s family among them.
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In March, a proclamation forbid Japanese Americans from changing their residency,
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trapping them in military zones.
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In May, the army moved Aki and her family,
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along with over 7,000 Japanese Americans living in Seattle
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to "Camp Harmony" in Puyallup, Washington.
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This was one of several makeshift detention centers
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at former fairgrounds and racetracks,
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where entire families were packed into poorly converted stables and barracks.
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Over the ensuing months,
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the army moved Japanese Americans into long-term camps
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in desolate areas of the West and South,
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moving Aki and her family to Minidoka in southern Idaho.
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Guarded by armed soldiers,
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many of these camps were still being constructed when incarcerees moved in.
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These hastily built prisons were overcrowded and unsanitary.
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People frequently fell ill and were unable to receive proper medical care.
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The War Relocation Authority relied on incarcerees to keep the camps running.
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Many worked in camp facilities or taught in poorly equipped classrooms,
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while others raised crops and animals.
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Some Japanese Americans rebelled, organizing labor strikes and even rioting.
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But many more, like Aki’s parents, endured.
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They constantly sought to recreate some semblance of life outside the camps,
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but the reality of their situation was unavoidable.
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Like many younger incarcerees, Aki was determined to leave her camp.
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She finished her final year of high school at Minidoka,
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and with the aid of an anti-racist Quaker organization,
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she was able to enroll at Friends University in Kansas.
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For Aki’s family however, things wouldn’t begin to change until late 1944.
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A landmark Supreme Court case
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ruled that continued detention of American citizens without charges
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was unconstitutional.
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In the fall of 1945,
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the war ended and the camps closed down.
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Remaining incarcerees were given a mere $25
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and a train ticket to their pre-war address,
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but many no longer had a home or job to return to.
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Aki’s family had been able to keep their apartment,
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and Aki eventually returned to Seattle after college.
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However, post-war prejudice made finding work difficult.
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Incarcarees faced discrimination and resentment
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from workers and tenants who replaced them.
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Fortunately, Japanese Americans weren’t alone
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in the fight against racial discrimination.
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Aki found work with one of Seattle’s first interracial labor unions
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and joined the Congress of Racial Equality.
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She became a teacher, and over the next several decades,
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her advocacy for multicultural, socially conscious education
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would impact thousands of students.
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However, many ex-incarcerees, particularly members of older generations,
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were unable to rebuild their lives after the war.
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Children of incarcerees began a movement
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calling for the United States to atone for this historic injustice.
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In 1988, the US government officially apologized for the wartime incarceration–
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admitting it was the catastrophic result of racism, hysteria,
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and failed political leadership.
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Three years after this apology,
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Aki Kurose was awarded the Human Rights Award
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from the Seattle Chapter of the United Nations,
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celebrating her vision of peace and respect for people of all backgrounds.
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