| Behind
the Wire
On December 7, 1941, the Imperial Japanese
Navy attacked the U.S. fleet at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, bringing
the U.S. into the Second World War. In so doing, it also plunged
Japanese immigrants and their children into the greatest crisis
they had ever known, and put their very survival as a community
into grave doubt.
Hours after the attack, U.S. security personnel
began rounding up and arresting prominent Japanese Americans—businessmen,
journalists, teachers, and civic officials—as security
risks. Within a week, more than 2,000 Issei, the leaders of
the Japanese American community, were behind bars. The press
responded with a wave of paranoid hysteria, publishing virulent
attacks on Japanese Americans and demonizing them as spies,
saboteurs, and enemy agents. More ad hoc internments followed,
and Japanese Americans throughout the West Coast began to be
forced out of their jobs, subjected to warrantless military
searches, and abused and attacked in public places.
In February of 1942, President Roosevelt issued
Executive Order 9066, which authorized the U.S. military to
evacuate any and all persons from "military areas" and provide
accommodation for them elsewhere. In March, the army issued
its first Civilian Exclusion Orders, requiring that "all Japanese
persons, both alien and non-alien, will be evacuated" from a
number of areas on the Pacific coast and confined to "relocation
camps" further inland. By the middle of November, all of California
and much of Washington and Oregon had been declared military
areas, and 100,000 Japanese Americans, Nisei and Issei, citizen
and non-citizen alike, had been uprooted and transferred hundreds
or thousands of miles away from home. By the end of the war
in 1945, 125,000 people, half of them children, had spent time
in what even Roosevelt admitted were concentration camps.
For the Japanese Americans who were forced
into internment, the relocation process was a nightmare of dislocation
and uncertainty. Once an exclusion order was issued, Japanese
Americans were given one week in which to register with the
authorities, gather whatever possessions they could carry, and
report to an assembly center nearby. The evacuees were required
to liquidate their assets in few days, and so homeowners were
required to sell their houses, and business owners their farms,
stores, and restaurants, hurriedly and at steep discounts, often
for pennies on the dollar. The assembly centers were usually
converted racetracks and fairgrounds, where thousands of people
slept in stables, livestock stalls, or the open air while they
waited to be transported to their assigned internment camps.
This large-scale
imprisonment of U.S. citizens solely on the basis of their ancestry
was met with almost universal approval by the non-Japanese-American
population, and was accepted largely without question. No serious
explanations were offered as to why no large-scale internment
of German or Italian Americans ever took place, or why internment
of people of Japanese descent was necessary on the mainland
but not in Hawaii, where the large Japanese-Hawaiian population
went largely unmolested. The army was never required to prove
that the Americans interned in the camps posed any military
threat, or that the relocations in any way made the nation safer
from attack; their ancestry was considered evidence enough.
No Japanese American was ever convicted of any act of sabotage
during World War II.
When they reached the camps themselves, they
saw spare, prison-like compounds situated on sun-baked deserts
or bare Ozark hillsides, dotted with watchtowers and surrounded
by barbed wire. The sites of the camps—Topaz in Utah,
Minidoka
in Idaho, Gila River and Poston in Arizona, Heart Mountain in
Wyoming, Amache in Colorado, Rohwer and Jerome in Arkansas,
and Tule
Lake and Manzanar
in California—had been chosen for their remoteness, and
for most internees they must have seemed as alien as the surface
of the moon. Life in the camps had a military flavor; internees
slept in barracks or small compartments
with no running water, took their meals in vast mess halls,
and went about most of their daily business in public. Physical
mistreatment was rare, but the armed guards and the ever-present
snipers in the watchtowers were constant reminders of the residents'
new status.
Over time, life in the internment camps began
to follow its own routine. Students were sent to school
every morning, and adult internees were given jobs, usually
farming
or maintaining the physical plant. Each camp had a governing
council, and many of the institutions of normal community
life—newspapers,
businesses,
sports
teams, concerts,
places
of worship—grew and thrived within the barbed wire.
At the same time, however, camp life worked to erode some of
the most distinctive tenets of the Japanese American community.
The traditional structure of the Japanese family, with its emphasis
on close bonds and respect for elders, was undermined by the
camps' informal social milieu, where children could play for
hours unsupervised and young people ate their meals with their
friends rather than their parents. More importantly, however,
paying jobs were only given to U.S. citizens-that is, to the
Nisei. The younger generation, as the breadwinners, soon began
to take on leadership roles in the internee community, while
the Issei, who had worked for decades to build up businesses
and lead their families, found themselves sidelined.
For an in-depth look at daily life in a Japanese
American internment camp, go to the collection "Suffering
Under a Great Injustice": Ansel Adams's Photographs of Japanese-American
Internment at Manzanar.
Throughout the war, interned Japanese Americans
protested against their treatment and insisted that they be
recognized as loyal Americans. Many sought to demonstrate their
patriotism by trying to enlist in the armed forces. Although
early in the war Japanese Americans were barred from military
service, by 1943 the army had begun actively recruiting Nisei
to join new all-Japanese American units. More than 300,000 Nisei
men served in uniform, mostly in Europe, although a few were
sufficiently fluent in Japanese to work as translators in the
Pacific. One all-Nisei unit, the 442nd Regimental Combat Team,
went on to become the most decorated unit of its size in U.S.
history, having received more than 18,000 individual decorations,
including 52 Distinguished Service Crosses and one Congressional
Medal of Honor. |