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The power of pride: George Takei at TEDxKyoto

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    I am a veteran of
    the Starship Enterprise.
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    (Laughter)
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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,
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    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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    (Laughter)
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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,
    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, 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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    Over night, the world was
    plunged into a world war.
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    America suddenly
    was swept up by hysteria.
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    Japanese Americans,
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    American citizens
    of Japanese ancestry
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    were looked on
    with suspicion and fear,
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    and with outright hatred --
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    simply because we happened
    to look like the people
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    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,
    Franklin Delano Roosevelt,
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    ordered all Japanese Americans
    on the west coast of America
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    to be summarily rounded up,
    with no charges,
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    with no trial,
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    with no due process.
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    Due process is the core pillar
    of our justice system.
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    That all disappeared.
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    We were to be rounded up
    and imprisoned
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    in ten 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,
    my baby sister, and me
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    up very early one morning,
    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 rifle.
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    They stomped up the front porch
    and banged on the door.
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    My father answered it,
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    and these soldiers ordered us
    out of our home.
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    My father gave my brother and me
    small luggage to carry.
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    We walked out and stood on the driveway,
    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 duffle 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
    and loaded onto train cars
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    with other Japanese-American families.
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    There were guards stationed
    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
    that confined me.
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    I remember the tall sentry tower
    with the machine guns pointed at us.
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    I remember the search light
    that followed me
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    when I made the night-runs
    from my barrack to the latrine.
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    But to five-year-old me,
    I thought it was kind of nice
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    that they'd lit the way
    for me to pee.
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    (Laughter)
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    I was a child,
    too young to understand
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    the circumstances 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
    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,
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    a barbed-wire prison camp
    became my normality.
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    When the war ended,
    we were released
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    and given a one-way ticket
    to anywhere in the United States.
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    My parents decided to go
    back home 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,
    and the hostility was intense.
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    Our first home was on Skid Row,
    in the lowest part of our city,
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    living with derelicts, drunkards,
    and crazy people.
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    The stench of urine all over,
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    on the street,
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    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,
    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
    was, for us, home.
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    My parents worked hard
    to get back on their feet.
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    We'd lost everything.
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    They were at the middle of their lives
    and starting all over.
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    They worked their fingers to the bone,
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    and, ultimately, they were able
    to get the capital together
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    to buy a three-bedroom home
    in a nice neighborhood.
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    And I was teenager,
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    and I became very curious
    about my childhood imprisonment.
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    I'd read civics books,
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    that told me about the ideals
    of American democracy.
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    All men are created equal.
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    We have 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
    and I couldn't find anything about it.
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    And so I engaged my father after dinner
    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
    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
    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
    is vitally dependent
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    on good people who cherish
    the ideals of our system,
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    and actively engage in the process
    of making our democracy work.
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    And he took me to a campaign headquarter.
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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
    young Japanese Americans
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    during the Second Word War.
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    When Pearl Harbor was bombed,
    young Japanese Americans --
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    like all young Americans --
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    rushed to their draft board
    to volunteer to fight for our country.
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    That act of patriotism was answered
    with a slap in the face.
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    We were denied service
    and categorized as "enemy non-alien."
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    It was outrageous
    to be called an enemy
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    when you are 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
    "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 that
    there is a war-time manpower shortage.
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    And as suddenly as they rounded us up
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    they opened up the military
    for service by young Japanese Americans.
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    It was totally irrational
    but the amazing thing,
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    the astounding thing,
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    is that thousands of young
    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 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 --
    should stand for --
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    and that was being abrogated
    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
    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,
    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
    in this mountain hillside,
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    rocky hillside,
    in impregnable caves.
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    And three ally battalions had been
    pounding away at it for six months,
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    and they were stalemated.
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    The 442nd was called in
    to add to the fight.
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    But the men of the 442nd came up
    with a unique but dangerous idea.
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    The backside of the mountain
    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 a thousand 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, some lost
    their handhold or their footing,
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    and they fell to their death
    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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    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,
    they attacked.
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    The Germans were surprised,
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    and they took the hill
    and broke the Gothic Line.
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    A six months stalemate
    was broken by the 442nd 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
    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
    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
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    that being an American
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    is not just for some people,
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    that race is not
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    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 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
    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
    an even better America,
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    to making our government
    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)
Title:
The power of pride: George Takei at TEDxKyoto
Description:

This talk was given at TEDxKyoto, a local TEDx event, produced independently of the TED Conferences. George Takei draws his inspiration and strength from one of the darkest chapters of American history: the World War II uprooting and incarceration of more than 120,000 Japanese-American citizens.

Recalling his childhood spent behind the barbed wire of America's concentration camps, Mr. Takei reveals his life-long journey from bitter confusion to an impassioned admiration and pride in his fellow Japanese-Americans and his country that encompasses and celebrates us all.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
16:10

English subtitles

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