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The Akune brothers: Siblings on opposite sides of war - Wendell Oshiro

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    There are many stories
    that can be told about World War II,
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    from the tragic to the inspring.
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    But perhaps one
    of the most heartrending experiences
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    was that of the Akune family,
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    divided by the war against each other
    and against their own identities.
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    Ichiro Akune and his wife Ukeyey
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    immigrated to American
    from Japan in 1918
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    in search of opportunity,
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    opening a small grocery store
    in Central California
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    and raising nine children.
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    But when Mrs. Akune died in 1933,
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    the children were sent to live
    with relatives in Japan,
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    their father following soon after.
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    Though the move was a difficult adjustment
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    after having been born
    and raised in America,
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    the oldest son, Harry, formed a close bond
    with his Grand Uncle,
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    who taught him the Japanese language,
    culture and values.
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    Nevertheless, as soon as Harry
    and his brother Ken
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    were old enough to work,
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    they returned to the country
    they considered home,
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    settling near Los Angeles.
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    But then, December 7, 1941,
    the attack on Pearl Harbor.
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    Now at war with Japan,
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    the United States government
    did not trust the loyalty
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    of those citizens who had family
    or ancestral ties to the enemy country.
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    In 1942, about 120,000 Japanese Americans
    living on the West Coast
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    were stripped of their civil rights
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    and forcibly relocated
    to internment camps,
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    even though most of them,
    like Harry and Ken, were Nisei,
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    American or dual citizens
    who had been born in the US
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    to Japanese immigrant parents.
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    The brothers not only had very limited
    contact with their family in Japan,
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    but found themselves confined
    to a camp in a remote part of Colorado.
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    But their story took another twist
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    when recruiters from the US Army's
    military intelligence service
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    arrived at the camp looking for
    Japanese-speaking volunteers.
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    Despite their treatment by the government,
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    Harry and Ken jumped
    at the chance to leave the camp
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    and prove their loyalty
    as American citizens.
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    Having been schooled in Japan,
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    they soon began their service,
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    translating captured documents,
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    interrogating Japanese soldiers,
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    and producing Japanese
    language propaganda
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    aimed at persuading
    enemy forces to surrender.
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    The brothers' work was invaluable
    to the war effort,
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    providing vital strategic information
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    about the size
    and location of Japanese forces.
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    But they still faced discrimination
    and mistrust from their fellow soldiers.
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    Harry recalled an instance
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    where his combat gear
    was mysteriously misplaced
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    just prior to parachuting
    into enemy territory,
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    with the white officer reluctant
    to give him a weapon.
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    Nevertheless, both brothers
    continued to serve loyally
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    through the end of the war.
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    But Harry and Ken were not the only Akune
    brothers fighting in the Pacific.
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    Unbeknownst to them, two younger brothers,
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    the third and fourth
    of the five Akune boys,
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    were serving dutifully
    in the Imperial Japanese Navy,
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    Saburo in the Naval Airforce,
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    and 15-year-old Shiro as
    an orientation trainer for new recruits.
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    When the war ended, Harry and Ken
    served in the allied occupational forces
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    and were seen as traitors by the locals.
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    When all the Akune brothers
    gathered at a family reunion
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    in Kagoshima for
    the first time in a decade,
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    it was revealed that the two pairs
    had fought on opposing sides.
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    Tempers flared
    and a fight almost broke out
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    until their father stepped in.
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    The brothers managed to make peace
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    and Saburo and Shiro joined
    Harry and Ken in California,
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    and later fought for the US Army in Korea.
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    It took until 1988 for the US Government
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    to acknowledge the injustice
    of its internment camps
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    and approve reparations payments
    to survivors.
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    For Harry, though, his greatest regret
    was not having the courage
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    to thank his Japanese Grand Uncle
    who had taught him so much.
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    The story of the Akune brothers
    is many things:
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    a family divided by circumstance,
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    the unjust treatment
    of Japanese Americans,
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    and the personal struggle of reconciling
    two national identities.
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    But it also reveals a larger story
    about American history:
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    the oppression faced by immigrant groups
    and their perseverance in overcoming it.
Title:
The Akune brothers: Siblings on opposite sides of war - Wendell Oshiro
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
04:54

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