Transcript File

Citizenship, Civil Rights &
Japanese Internment
Historical Background
• Aliens & Immigrants traditionally have
faced racism in America
• Asian Immigration increased 1870s-1920s
First welcomed – Cheap laborers –
Railroad
Then were looked down upon – for the same
reasons.
Legacy of
Anti-Asian
Sentiment
Harper’s Weekly
illustration from 1870s
was critical of antiChinese sentiment.
December
• Japanese Attack
Pearl Harbor –
America panics.
- paranoia
- Xenophobia –
fear of foreigners
th
7 ,
1941
Wartime
Propaganda
“non-human”
looking
characteristics
based on
stereotypes
Even worse…
Even though this is not a
literal “license” it
displays some clear antiJapanese hatred.
You will not find German
or Italian “hunting
licenses” from the war
era.
How to Tell your Friends from the “Japs”
• “Virtually all Japanese are short. Japanese are likely to
be stockier and broader-hipped than short Chinese.
Japanese are seldom fat; they often dry up and grow
lean as they age. Although both have the typical
epicanthic fold of the upper eyelid, Japanese eyes are
usually set closer together. The Chinese expression is
likely to be more placid, kindly, open; the Japanese
more positive, dogmatic, arrogant. Japanese are
hesitant, nervous in conversation, laugh loudly at the
wrong time. Japanese walk stiffly erect, hard heeled.
Chinese, more relaxed, have an easy gait, sometimes
shuffle.”
~Time Magazine 12/22/41
Japanese Internment
• After Pearl Harbor, President Franklin
Roosevelt issued Executive Order 9066.
• Allowed the military to ignore
constitutional rights of American citizens in
the name of national defense.
• Led to evacuation and mass imprisonment
of 120,000 people of Japanese ancestry.
–Most on the West Coast.
Relocation Camps – 1942-1946
Affected American Citizens
• Issei – Japanese American Citizens
born in Japan
• Nisei – Japanese- American Citizens
who were born in America to
Issei Parents
•President Roosevelt himself called the
10 facilities “concentration camps.”
Wanto Grocery, owned by an Asian American, UC Berkeley
graduate. (California, December 1941)
Dorothea Lange, “One Nation Indivisible.” Pledge of Allegiance
at an Elementary School a few weeks prior to evacuation. (San
Francisco, 1942)
Japanese Americans waiting to board the train that will take them to
the internment camp in Owens Valley. (April 1942)
“All Packed Up and
Ready to Go”
Editorial Cartoon,
San Francisco News
(March 6, 1942)
Family arriving in internment camp barracks, from the Tacoma
New Tribune, University of Washington.
`
An American Soldier on guard duty at an internment camp holds a
Japanese American child. Tacoma News Tribune, University of
Washington.
G.S. Hante, a barber in Kent, Washington, displays his sentiments
about internment. (March 1944)
Korematsu v. United States, 1944
• Supreme Court Case that
challenged the constitutionality of
Japanese Internment camps.
• Fred Korematsu, a Nisei citizen,
refused to leave his home in
California – arrested.
• Korematsu lost.
The Ruling
• The Court stated; ”hardships are part of
war…Citizenship has its responsibilities as
well as its privileges, and in time of war the
burden is always heavier.”
In your opinion, do you think the war
effort justified the limiting of only
Japanese American citizenship? Why or
why not? Pair Share…
An Apology, Too Little Too Late
• It was not until the Civil
Liberties Act of 1988 that the
government admitted the
internment camps were wrong.
• All surviving victims of the
WW II internment were issued
$20,000 in reparations.