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How many of you are familiar with the
Japanese-American incarceration?
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[audience raises hands]
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Oh! Thank you, and good night.
[laughter]
-
You guys are wonderful.
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I was a prisoner of war,
during World War II.
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Held by my own country.
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I was six years old.
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This is my prison number: 125...
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[checks paper]
12524.
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I'm the letter D.
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My family had 12524.
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My family and I were incarcerated for
three and a half years.
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In Poston, Arizona, during World War II.
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As a teacher, I would ask my students,
sometimes on the first day of school:
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"Draw an American for me."
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"Take out a piece of paper, and
draw an American for me. Okay?"
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And then I would go around the room,
and check the drawings.
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And sometimes, the drawings would be of
a stick figure.
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Not much better than kindergarten.
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Excuse me, Marsha.
-
Marsha is a kindergarten teacher, my wife.
[audience laughs]
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Draw an American for me.
You get somebody in mind?
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Hm?
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How many of you thought of drawing a
woman?
-
[audience stays silent]
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Thank you.
-
A majority of Americans are women.
-
Who says it's a man's world?
-
Men, [laughs].
-
Women can do everything a man can do.
And more.
-
How many of you thought of drawing a
blonde, blue-eyed, hunk of a guy?
-
[a few people raise their hands]
-
Hitler would have been so proud of you.
[audience laughs]
-
To many Americans, WASP is the
American—White Anglo-Saxon Protestant.
-
If you're not a White Anglo-Saxon
Protestant, you're not really an American.
-
You know, I'm not Japanese.
-
I've never been Japanese.
-
I'm an American, of Japanese ancestry.
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My father was Japanese, my mother was
Japanese, but I'm not Japanese.
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When I go to Japan, and I speak,
they laugh and they go:
-
"We don't talk like that anymore."
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They know I'm a 外人 (Gai-jin),
a foreigner.
-
When I was in London, shopping,
-
and I had a nice conversation with
the sales lady,
-
and at the end she says:
"Oh, you Yanks."
-
She's looking at me, and I'm a Yank.
-
But in this country—parts of this country—
I'm a damned Jap.
-
And I don't mean just the South.
-
There are parts of Idaho,
Montana, North Dakota and such.
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It's kind of dangerous for me to travel.
-
Racism still prevails in this country.
-
After 9/11—the attack on the twin towers
in New York—there was talk about
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rounding up all the Arabs and Muslim
Americans in this country, and
-
incarcerating them in concentration camps.
-
Now to his credit, George W. Bush—the
president—he, called the Cabinet meeting.
-
And he told his Cabinet members:
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"We're not going to do, to the Arab and
Muslim Americans in this country,
-
what we did to Norm Mineta
and his family."
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And all talk, about rounding up the Arab
and Muslims, stopped.
-
And we were grateful.
-
Now, why was Norm, his family, and 120,000
Japanese and Japanese-Americans
-
—two-thirds were American citizens—from
Washington, Oregon, and California,
-
incarcerated after the attack on
Pearl Harbour?
-
Well, Cabrillo College instructor,
Sandy Lydon—historian emeritus—
-
said the Japanese strawberry farmer of
Watsonville had nothing to do with the
-
attack on Pearl Harbour.
-
Did you know that there were 158,000
Japanese and Japanese-Americans
-
living in the territory of Hawaii—it
wasn't a state yet—
-
who were not incarcerated,
with the exception of about 2,000.
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They're in the war zone.
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Well they needed the Japanese and
Japanese-Americans in Hawaii
-
to run the economy of Hawaii.
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They were the plurality, they were 37% of
the population—census was taken in 1940.
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Their general Evman said it's not
necessary to do this.
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There is no plans for sabotage.
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We, who were 2,500 miles away from
the war zone, we get incarcerated.
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Why?
-
I have to take you back a little bit, in
American history.
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United States Constitution legalized
slavery.
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The U.S. government condoned,
and practiced racism.
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The Naturalization act in 1790,
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Asians, could not become citizens of
the United States.
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The Cherokee Nation.
-
You've heard of the trail of tears?
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They were forced, out of their homes.
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Dred Scott decision, he was a slave.
Even free territory.
-
There was an anti-Irish catholic mentality
in this country.
-
There were signs that were printed,
and displayed: 'No Irish Need Apply.'
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Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882.
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Plessy vs. Ferguson.
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Separate but equal.
-
How can the separate be equal?
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A. Mitchell Palmer Raids, 1919-1920.
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The communists, and, and Jews too,
were deported without trial.
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Just placed on a ship and shipped out.
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Immigration Act of 1924.
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Japanese could not come to this country
anymore.
-
Fred Korematsu case.
-
Our history is a history of racism.
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Discrimination regarding immigration
as well.
-
In the early 20th century, it was said in
the newspapers—Examiner, The Chronicle,
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The McClatchy papers, you know,
Sacramento Bee, Fresno Bee, and
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The Sentinel—that the Japanese race is
an alien race which can never be
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assimilated into the American way of life.
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There is nothing of value, of
Japanese culture.
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Nothing of value.
-
How many of you have eaten sushi?
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[audience laughs]
Oh yeah, sushi's good for you.
-
What about bonsai?
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Ikebana flower arranging?
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Origami?
-
Wax on, wax off?
[audience laughs]
-
Karate?
-
Ah, Japanese culture is rich.
-
And so many enjoy participating in
Japanese culture.
-
To make sure the Japanese did not
assimilate into this country,
-
laws were passed.
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Asians could not own property,
marry whites,
-
become citizens of the United States.
-
After the attack on Pearl Harbour,
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December 7th, 1941.
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John L. DeWitt, commander of the western,
as his fourth army.
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At the Presidio of San Francisco.
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Had the ear of the President of
the United States.
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He said: "A Jap's a Jap."
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"It makes no difference whether that Jap
is a citizen or not."
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J. Edgar Hoover said: "Mr. President,
we don't need to do this."
-
Francis Biddle who was the Attorney
General at the time said:
-
"Mr. President, I don't think we
can do this."
-
There were no lawsuits filed
on our behalf.
-
Executive Order 9066, was past
75 years ago.
-
You know, there was one group, nationally,
one group, that supported us.
-
The American Quakers.
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The American friends.
-
They're the only ones.
-
Nationally, not even the ACLU (American
Civil Liberties Union) supported us.
-
Locally, luckily, we had some friends.
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City attorney of Watsonville, with John
McCarthy.
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Our police chief, Matt Graves.
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School teachers, public school teachers.
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And many others supported us.
-
You know, the reward,
-
they were called 'Jap Lovers'
for supporting us.
-
They had their homes and cars vandalized.
-
And they were among the very first to
welcome us back.
-
We had some very dear friends.
-
In 1942, our homes were searched,
without search warrants.
-
The FBI came into our homes
-
—they got the information from
the Bureau of the Census.
-
The Bureau of the Census is not supposed
to do that.
-
We were hacked.
[laughs]
-
There were no trials, except for four
people.
-
But for the rest of us, we had no charges,
-
no attorneys, no due process of law.
-
[shows paper] This, the Constitution
of the United States,
-
ceased to exist for us.
-
From camp—there were ten major camps—
-
and from the camps, our men and
women volunteered to serve
-
in the United States Armed Forces.
-
The men—many of them were in the
hundred 442nd Regimental Combat Team,
-
the most decorated army unit for its
size and length of service.
-
My two brothers were in the MIS—
Military Intelligence Service—
-
because they could read and
write Japanese.
-
They went to Japanese school after
high school each day.
-
They fought against the Japanese.
-
We used the Japanese language as a weapon,
against the Japanese.
-
The MIS stayed after the war,
-
with the restoration,
occupation restoration of Japan.
-
Their service during the war saved
countless American and Japanese lives.
-
It is estimated that it shortened the
war by two years.
-
Congress formally acknowledged the work
-
of the hundred 442nd and MIS, with
a Congressional Gold Medal.
-
And we're grateful.
-
Our forced removal was illegal.
-
Right?
-
No.
-
No.
-
It's legal.
-
The government of United States can
evict anyone from their homes.
-
If, under the guise of
"military necessity."
-
Today, we won't use that term.
-
We'll use the term "national security."
-
Congress and the president apologized
for our wartime experience.
-
Civil Liberties Act was passed on
August 10th, 1988.
-
We have an official apology.
-
You know, of the 120,000
[laughs]
-
the government expected 60,000 to have
died, and 60,000 were still alive.
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But we fooled them.
-
80,000 of us were still alive.
-
You see, sushi is good for you.
[laughter]
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There's only one race,
-
that's the human race.
-
There are those who wish to classify us.
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Oh, you're Caucasian American,
-
you're Asian American,
-
you're Hispanic American,
-
Black American.
-
There's only one race.
-
You know dogs, we call them German
Shepards, French Poodles,
-
and Chihuahuas.
-
They go to anybody, huh.
Right?
-
They're colorblind.
-
I wish humans were colorblind.
-
[sighs]
-
Today, the present administration
-
is constantly issuing new executive
orders, policies regarding immigration.
-
Contrary to the spirit of America.
-
Fortunately—now—we have the Southern
Poverty Law Center,
-
the American Civil Liberties Union.
-
We have so many groups and individuals
-
supporting what really is of
true America.
-
Something we didn't see in 1942.
-
Will it happen again?
-
Memory is short.
-
No.
Not under the guise of military necessity.
-
So who's the biggest threat?
-
Some suspect it will be the reporters and
producers of fake news.
-
[laughs]
-
It doesn't have to be an individual
or group.
-
A national group, a racial group.
-
It could be an occupation.
-
The days of Walter Cronkite, the conscious
of America, are long gone.
-
Now we have the internet, radio talk
show hosts, TV commentators.
-
I'm grateful to be living here in
Santa Cruz county.
-
The second most liberal county in
the nation.
-
You know, if you know the history of Santa
Cruz city, it wasn't always that way.
-
Yeah, minorities were not welcomed in
Santa Cruz.
-
Growing up, I didn't come to
Santa Cruz very often.
-
But that all changed.
-
How?
-
Thanks to Cabrillo College.
-
And the University of Santa Cruz—
University of California, at Santa Cruz.
-
The intelligentsia came.
-
And it changed the whole county.
-
Today, this is the most wonderful place
in the whole world to live.
-
And I kid you not.
-
Gordon Hirabayashi.
-
He was a student at the
University of Washington.
-
A Quaker.
-
He was arrested, convicted, imprisoned.
-
The prosecuting attorneys lied
to the judges.
-
Yeah, he spent some time.
-
Now, his conviction was vacated.
-
Not overturned, vacated.
-
Gordon Hirabayashi said:
"Ancestry is not a crime."
-
Today we would add:
"Islam is not a crime."
-
With our newfound energy, we have
a lot of work to do.
-
You know those, gentlemen who live not
too far from Charlottesville, Virginia,
-
at a place called Monticello.
-
Thomas Jefferson,
-
"Eternal vigilance is a price of liberty."
-
It's up to us, all of us, to work in
peace, and harmony, compassion,
-
to overcome hate and bigotry.
-
And we can do it.
-
Thank you.
-
[audience applause]