The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

Full list compiled of Japanese American war detainees

- By Shin Watanabe Yomiuri Shimbun Correspond­ent

LOS ANGELES — A comprehens­ive listing of the 125,284 Japanese Americans incarcerat­ed in the United States during the Paci c War has recently been completed.

e about 1,200-page book, titled “Ireicho,” meaning “a sacred book of names as a monument,” was compiled by a 12-member team headed by Duncan Williams, a professor at the University of Southern California.

Williams, 53, stresses that the incarcerat­ion of Japanese Americans was not merely a matter of numbers, and that he was driven by a strong desire to make it clear that over 120,000 detainees actually existed. By recording each individual’s name, it underscore­s the point that each person had a life of their own, he says.

Williams’ team worked to collect the names of people who were con ned in 10 incarcerat­ion camps on the U.S. mainland, as well as facilities belonging to the U.S. Justice Department, the military, and other organizati­ons, covering a total of 75 sites. e project began in mid-2019 and took about three years to complete.

e team spent a great deal of time cross-checking detainees’ names because the lists were prepared by Americans who were unfamiliar with Japanese names and thus contained many errors and omissions. e team repeatedly checked the names against birth certi cates, census records and other old documents.

Errors in or the omission of names could compromise people’s honor and sense of justice, Williams says.

INCARCERAT­ION

In February 1942, following the outbreak

of war between the United States and Japan, then U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt signed an executive order authorizin­g the forced removal of Japanese Americans from certain areas.

Japanese Americans living in the United States, mainly on the West Coast and in Hawaii, were forcibly relocated to incarcerat­ion camps in depopulate­d areas, and as a result, many of them lost their jobs and property. e move was driven by prejudice and discrimina­tion against Japanese Americans.

In 1988, the U.S. government o cially apologized and announced the payment of compensati­on.

‘MOST DIFFICULT PERIOD’

is year marks 80 years since Japanese Americans began being rounded up. Survivors are aging and their number decreases each year.

Bacon Sakatani, a 93-year-old second-generation Japanese American living in California, had just turned 13 when he and six other family members were sent from California to the Heart Mountain camp in Wyoming in August 1942.

His father, a vegetable farmer, had just bought a new tractor. His family owned a piano, and his younger sister took lessons once a week. However, because of the incarcerat­ion they lost everything.

e Sakatani family spent about three years in the camp until their release in 1945. Many children in the camp were around his age, so he had no trouble

nding others to play with. His parents eventually became resigned to their situation and with life in the camp. Likewise, he was not dishearten­ed by the incarcerat­ion, he recalls.

Rather, it was when the family was released that they began to truly su er. With nowhere to go, they headed to a potato farm in Idaho. However, when the harvest was over and jobs disappeare­d, they returned to California six months later.

Sakatani’s father rented fallow land from a landowner and began farming again. Initially, they had no house and had to live in a tent for a while. Sakatani describes that time as the most di cult period of his life, saying no matter how hard he tries, he can never erase it from his memory.

NAME-CHECKING SYSTEM

“Ireicho” can be seen at the Japanese American National Museum in Los Angeles. e names listed in the book can be viewed by detainees and family members who are allowed to con rm that details are correct by stamping the relevant listing with a special blue seal.

ey can also rectify errors or omissions. e system is aimed at updating the historical record.

Last month, Sakatani stamped the seal on his father’s name. Of the seven members of his family, four, including his parents, have already passed away.

Sakatani says it is signi cant that the names have been compiled into a single book, adding that, as people’s memories of the incarcerat­ion fade, the book will help people remember the racial discrimina­tion that Japanese Americans su ered in the past. (Nov. 5)

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 ?? Yomiuri Shimbun photos ?? Left: University of Southern California Prof. Duncan Williams talks about the wartime incarcerat­ion of Japanese Americans as he stands in front of “Ireicho,” at the Japanese American National Museum in Los Angeles on Sept. 26. Right: Bacon Sakatani, pictured here in Los Angeles on Oct. 4, speaks about his time in an incarcerat­ion camp during the Pacific War.
Yomiuri Shimbun photos Left: University of Southern California Prof. Duncan Williams talks about the wartime incarcerat­ion of Japanese Americans as he stands in front of “Ireicho,” at the Japanese American National Museum in Los Angeles on Sept. 26. Right: Bacon Sakatani, pictured here in Los Angeles on Oct. 4, speaks about his time in an incarcerat­ion camp during the Pacific War.

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