Why I love a country that once betrayed me | George Takei

1,629,937 views ・ 2014-07-04

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

00:12
I'm a veteran of the starship Enterprise.
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I soared through the galaxy
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driving a huge starship
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with a crew made up of people
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from all over this world,
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many different races, many different cultures,
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many different heritages,
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all working together,
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and our mission was to explore strange new worlds,
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to seek out new life and new civilizations,
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to boldly go where no one has gone before.
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Well —
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(Applause) —
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I am the grandson of immigrants from Japan
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who went to America,
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boldly going to a strange new world,
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seeking new opportunities.
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My mother was born in Sacramento, California.
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My father was a San Franciscan.
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They met and married in Los Angeles,
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and I was born there.
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I was four years old
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when Pearl Harbor was bombed
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on December 7, 1941 by Japan,
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and overnight, the world was plunged
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into a world war.
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America suddenly was swept up
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by hysteria.
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Japanese-Americans,
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American citizens of Japanese ancestry,
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were looked on
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with suspicion and fear
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and with outright hatred
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simply because we happened to look like
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the people that bombed Pearl Harbor.
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And the hysteria grew and grew
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until in February 1942,
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the president of the United States,
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Franklin Delano Roosevelt,
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ordered all Japanese-Americans
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on the West Coast of America
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to be summarily rounded up
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with no charges, with no trial,
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with no due process.
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Due process, this is a core pillar
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of our justice system.
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That all disappeared.
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We were to be rounded up
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and imprisoned in 10 barbed-wire prison camps
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in some of the most desolate places in America:
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the blistering hot desert of Arizona,
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the sultry swamps of Arkansas,
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the wastelands of Wyoming, Idaho, Utah, Colorado,
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and two of the most desolate places in California.
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On April 20th, I celebrated my fifth birthday,
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and just a few weeks after my birthday,
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my parents got my younger brother,
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my baby sister and me
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up very early one morning,
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and they dressed us hurriedly.
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My brother and I were in the living room
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looking out the front window,
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and we saw two soldiers marching up our driveway.
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They carried bayonets on their rifles.
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They stomped up the front porch
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and banged on the door.
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My father answered it,
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and the soldiers ordered us out of our home.
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My father gave my brother and me
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small luggages to carry,
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and we walked out and stood on the driveway
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waiting for our mother to come out,
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and when my mother finally came out,
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she had our baby sister in one arm,
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a huge duffel bag in the other,
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and tears were streaming down both her cheeks.
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I will never be able to forget that scene.
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It is burned into my memory.
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We were taken from our home
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and loaded on to train cars
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with other Japanese-American families.
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There were guards stationed
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at both ends of each car,
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as if we were criminals.
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We were taken two thirds of the way across the country,
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rocking on that train for four days and three nights,
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to the swamps of Arkansas.
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I still remember the barbed wire fence
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that confined me.
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I remember the tall sentry tower
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with the machine guns pointed at us.
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I remember the searchlight that followed me
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when I made the night runs
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from my barrack to the latrine.
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But to five-year-old me,
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I thought it was kind of nice that they'd lit the way
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for me to pee.
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I was a child,
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too young to understand the circumstances
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of my being there.
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Children are amazingly adaptable.
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What would be grotesquely abnormal
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became my normality
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in the prisoner of war camps.
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It became routine for me to line up three times a day
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to eat lousy food in a noisy mess hall.
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It became normal for me to go with my father
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to bathe in a mass shower.
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Being in a prison, a barbed-wire prison camp,
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became my normality.
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When the war ended,
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we were released,
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and given a one-way ticket
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to anywhere in the United States.
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My parents decided to go back home
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to Los Angeles,
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but Los Angeles was not a welcoming place.
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We were penniless.
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Everything had been taken from us,
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and the hostility was intense.
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Our first home was on Skid Row
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in the lowest part of our city,
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living with derelicts, drunkards
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and crazy people,
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the stench of urine all over,
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on the street, in the alley,
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in the hallway.
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It was a horrible experience,
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and for us kids, it was terrorizing.
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I remember once
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a drunkard came staggering down,
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fell down right in front of us,
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and threw up.
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My baby sister said, "Mama, let's go back home,"
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because behind barbed wires
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was for us
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home.
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My parents worked hard
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to get back on their feet.
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We had lost everything.
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They were at the middle of their lives
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and starting all over.
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They worked their fingers to the bone,
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and ultimately they were able
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to get the capital together to buy
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a three-bedroom home in a nice neighborhood.
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And I was a teenager,
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and I became very curious
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about my childhood imprisonment.
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I had read civics books that told me about
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the ideals of American democracy.
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All men are created equal,
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we have an inalienable right
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to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness,
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and I couldn't quite make that fit
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with what I knew to be my childhood imprisonment.
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I read history books,
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and I couldn't find anything about it.
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And so I engaged my father after dinner
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in long, sometimes heated conversations.
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We had many, many conversations like that,
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and what I got from them
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was my father's wisdom.
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He was the one that suffered the most
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under those conditions of imprisonment,
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and yet he understood American democracy.
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He told me that our democracy
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is a people's democracy,
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and it can be as great as the people can be,
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but it is also as fallible as people are.
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He told me that American democracy
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is vitally dependent on good people
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who cherish the ideals of our system
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and actively engage in the process
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of making our democracy work.
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And he took me to a campaign headquarters —
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the governor of Illinois was running for the presidency —
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and introduced me to American electoral politics.
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And he also told me about
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young Japanese-Americans
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during the Second World War.
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When Pearl Harbor was bombed,
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young Japanese-Americans, like all young Americans,
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rushed to their draft board
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to volunteer to fight for our country.
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That act of patriotism
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was answered with a slap in the face.
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We were denied service,
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and categorized as enemy non-alien.
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It was outrageous to be called an enemy
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when you're volunteering to fight for your country,
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but that was compounded with the word "non-alien,"
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which is a word that means
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"citizen" in the negative.
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They even took the word "citizen" away from us,
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and imprisoned them for a whole year.
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And then the government realized
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that there's a wartime manpower shortage,
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and as suddenly as they'd rounded us up,
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they opened up the military for service
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by young Japanese-Americans.
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It was totally irrational,
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but the amazing thing,
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the astounding thing,
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is that thousands of young
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Japanese-American men and women
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again went from behind those barbed-wire fences,
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put on the same uniform as that of our guards,
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leaving their families in imprisonment,
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to fight for this country.
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They said that they were going to fight
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not only to get their families out
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from behind those barbed-wire fences,
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but because they cherished the very ideal
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of what our government stands for,
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should stand for,
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and that was being abrogated
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by what was being done.
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All men are created equal.
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And they went to fight for this country.
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They were put into a segregated
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all Japanese-American unit
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and sent to the battlefields of Europe,
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and they threw themselves into it.
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They fought with amazing,
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incredible courage and valor.
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They were sent out on the most dangerous missions
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and they sustained the highest combat casualty rate
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of any unit proportionally.
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There is one battle that illustrates that.
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It was a battle for the Gothic Line.
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The Germans were embedded
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in this mountain hillside,
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rocky hillside,
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in impregnable caves,
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and three allied battalions
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had been pounding away at it
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for six months,
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and they were stalemated.
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The 442nd was called in
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to add to the fight,
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but the men of the 442nd
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came up with a unique
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but dangerous idea:
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The backside of the mountain
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was a sheer rock cliff.
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The Germans thought an attack from the backside
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would be impossible.
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The men of the 442nd decided to do the impossible.
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On a dark, moonless night,
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they began scaling that rock wall,
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a drop of more than 1,000 feet,
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in full combat gear.
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They climbed all night long
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on that sheer cliff.
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In the darkness,
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some lost their handhold
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or their footing
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and they fell to their deaths
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in the ravine below.
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They all fell silently.
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Not a single one cried out,
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so as not to give their position away.
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The men climbed for eight hours straight,
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and those who made it to the top
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stayed there until the first break of light,
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and as soon as light broke,
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they attacked.
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The Germans were surprised,
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and they took the hill
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and broke the Gothic Line.
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A six-month stalemate
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was broken by the 442nd
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in 32 minutes.
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It was an amazing act,
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and when the war ended,
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the 442nd returned to the United States
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as the most decorated unit
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of the entire Second World War.
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They were greeted back on the White House Lawn
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by President Truman, who said to them,
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"You fought not only the enemy
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but prejudice, and you won."
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They are my heroes.
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They clung to their belief
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in the shining ideals of this country,
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and they proved that being an American
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is not just for some people,
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that race is not how we define being an American.
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They expanded what it means to be an American,
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including Japanese-Americans
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that were feared and suspected and hated.
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They were change agents,
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and they left for me
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a legacy.
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They are my heroes
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and my father is my hero,
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who understood democracy
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and guided me through it.
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They gave me a legacy,
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and with that legacy comes a responsibility,
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and I am dedicated
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to making my country
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an even better America,
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to making our government
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an even truer democracy,
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and because of the heroes that I have
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and the struggles that we've gone through,
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I can stand before you
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as a gay Japanese-American,
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but even more than that,
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I am a proud American.
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Thank you very much.
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(Applause)
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