Los Angeles Times

‘Concentrat­ion camp’ debate is nothing new for California

Congresswo­man’s remark on border facilities reignited a long-running dispute

- By Teresa Watanabe

What’s a concentrat­ion camp — and, more importantl­y, who owns the term?

U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) ignited a national debate last month when she compared the government-run facilities packed with migrant detainees near the U.S.-Mexico border to Nazi concentrat­ion camps.

Many Republican­s have pushed back in recent weeks, including Stephen Miller, a senior advisor to President Trump, who said that the comments outraged him “as a Jew.”

“It is a historical smear,” he told Fox News on July 21. “It is a sinful comment. It minimizes the death of 6 million of my Jewish brothers and sisters.”

But this debate started long before Ocasio-Cortez tweeted about it. Japanese Americans and Jews have been arguing for decades over how and when to use the term “concentrat­ion camp” — and, in many ways, it all started in California.

The first major controvers­y broke out in 1972, when state officials agreed to install a plaque establishi­ng Manzanar, the first of 10 concentrat­ion camps that held 10,000 people of Japanese ancestry during World War II, as a historical landmark. The decision angered many in the surroundin­g Owens Valley, and someone destroyed the “c” in “concentrat­ion” on the plaque.

Then in 1994, the Japanese American National Museum in Little Tokyo opened the exhibit “America’s Concentrat­ion Camps,” which further explored the history of mass incarcerat­ion of ethnic Japanese during the war.

But when the museum was invited to share the exhibit at the Ellis Island Immigratio­n Museum four years later, there was one condition: The exhibit had to be renamed, the foundation that runs the site said, because using the term concentrat­ion camp would offend the Jewish community in New York City.

After several meetings — and an interventi­on by Sen. Daniel K. Inouye of Hawaii, who

made a direct appeal to U.S. Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt — Ellis Island officials dropped their demands.

The exhibit opened in April 1998 with a placard that noted difference­s between the camps for Japanese Americans and Jews.

Karen Ishizuka, the Japanese American museum’s chief curator, recounted that history at a recent forum in Los Angeles. She said her institutio­n never intended to imply a moral equivalenc­y. But several community members, she said, bristled at others trying to dictate what words Japanese Americans, especially those who were incarcerat­ed, could use to describe their experience­s.

Museum officials believed the more commonly used term, “internment camps,” was euphemisti­c and inaccurate, she said.

Technicall­y speaking, World War II internment camps held Japanese, German and Italian nationals who were arrested on suspicion of being potentiall­y dangerous enemy aliens and given hearings under the Geneva Convention­s. That due process was not extended to the 120,000 people of Japanese ancestry — twothirds of them U.S. citizens — who were rounded up en masse and incarcerat­ed at other camps, including Manzanar in Inyo County.

President Franklin D. Roosevelt and other U.S. officials referred to mass detention facilities, in general, as concentrat­ion camps, Ishizuka said.

But the War Relocation Authority, the federal agency created to manage the incarcerat­ion process, did a “political spin” and created euphemisti­c terms, she said.

For example, the forced removal of ethnic Japanese from the West Coast was an “evacuation.” Those removed were to be “interned,” not incarcerat­ed. And the facilities were “relocation centers,” not concentrat­ion camps.

Actor George Takei, who tweeted support for Ocasio Cortez’s comments, told the audience at the forum that one dictionary defines them as places where “people of common heritage, race, faith or culture are imprisoned together for

Then he shared his family’s harrowing experience. In 1942, a few months after Japan’s attack on Pearl Harbor prompted Roosevelt to issue an executive order that political purposes.” led to the mass incarcerat­ion, U.S. solders armed with rif les pounded on the door of his family’s Los Angeles home.

Takei, then 5, said the soldiers ordered his family outside to be transporte­d to a temporary center at the Santa Anita racetrack. The family was later sent to a camp hastily built atop swampland in Rohwer, Ark.

“We were in concentrat­ion camps,” Takei said.

But Takei added that he calls the facilities “internment camps” in public talks to avoid the focus shifting to the Holocaust, as has occurred in the past.

Several American Jewish organizati­ons have, in fact, argued that the Japanese American camps and migrant detention centers aren’t concentrat­ion camps. In a recent statement, the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum said it “unequivoca­lly rejects efforts to create analogies between the Holocaust and other events, whether historical or contempora­ry.”

Rabbi Abraham Cooper of the Simon Wiesenthal Center said he didn’t necessaril­y believe that the term should be exclusivel­y reserved for the Nazi sites. Concentrat­ion camps feature systematic brutality and dehumaniza­tion, he said, adding that the definition might apply to China’s extrajudic­ial camps for millions of Muslim Uighurs who are being stripped of their language, traditions and culture.

Cooper said he sympathize­s with the suffering of Japanese Americans during World War II but finds it inappropri­ate to call the sites that detained them concentrat­ion camps.

“To me, it offends memory,” he said. “You’re demeaning history.”

Others, however, disagree. Michael Rothberg, a UCLA professor of English and comparativ­e literature who holds the 1939 Society Samuel Goetz Chair in Holocaust Studies, said he agrees with Andrea Pitzer, a journalist and expert on concentrat­ion camps, who defines them as places of “mass detention of civilians without trial.”

Under that definition, Rothberg said, using the term for the Japanese American camps and migrant detention facilities now along the U.S.-Mexico border is “within the realm of reason.”

Rothberg noted that the Nazis did not invent concentrat­ion camps. The Spanish used them in the late 19th century to quell Cuban opposition to their colonial rule, as the British did later to incarcerat­e South Africans during the Boer War.

He also said that Nazi concentrat­ion camps did not target only Jews. The Nazis began building the camps in 1933 and initially rounded up political opponents, socialists, communists and those considered “asocial,” such as gay people, Jehovah’s Witnesses and the Romani people, Rothberg said.

Only after the Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941 did the systematic killing of Jews begin, he said. Among thousands of camps, six were explicitly outfitted with gas chambers and other means to kill Jews.

“If we reserve the name concentrat­ion camp for the Holocaust, we misunderst­and the history of the Holocaust and the history of concentrat­ion camps,” Rothberg said.

As new controvers­y swirls over the term, Ishizuka and Rothberg stress the same thing: The name of the sites matters far less than the treatment of those they confine.

“My bottom line is that whatever you call them, the atrocities and travesties of democracy have to stop,” Ishizuka said.

 ?? Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ?? ASYLUM seekers huddle in El Paso. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez has compared migrant detention facilities to concentrat­ion camps.
Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ASYLUM seekers huddle in El Paso. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez has compared migrant detention facilities to concentrat­ion camps.
 ?? Los Angeles Library ?? THE MANZANAR center in Inyo County was the first of 10 such camps in the U.S. that held ethnic Japanese people during World War II.
Los Angeles Library THE MANZANAR center in Inyo County was the first of 10 such camps in the U.S. that held ethnic Japanese people during World War II.
 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? ALANA MOUCHARD of Irvine places a f lower on a monument at the Manzanar camp in April.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ALANA MOUCHARD of Irvine places a f lower on a monument at the Manzanar camp in April.
 ?? Los Angeles Library ?? HUNDREDS of Japanese Americans at Manzanar, shown in 1942, after Japan’s attack on Pearl Harbor.
Los Angeles Library HUNDREDS of Japanese Americans at Manzanar, shown in 1942, after Japan’s attack on Pearl Harbor.

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