Baltimore Sun

Camp for WWII internment in dispute again

Japanese Americans oppose wind farm in area seen as sacred

- By Ed Komenda and Lindsey Wasson

JEROME, Idaho — Behind the barbed wire, the little boy pressed his ink-covered index finger onto the mint-green exit card. And a photo was taken of his frightened face.

Paul Tomita was 4.

It was July 4, 1943. Independen­ce Day at Minidoka, a camp in the vast Idaho desert, where over 13,000 Japanese American men, women and children were incarcerat­ed during World War II as security risks because of their ancestry.

The wallet-size paper meant the scared boy in the photo could leave after 11 months living in a cramped barracks with his father, mother, two sisters and grandmothe­r.

Eight decades later, he returned with West Coast pilgrims who think the life-changing atrocity should be remembered. But now another government decision looms as a new threat — a wind project that the pilgrims worry will destroy the experience they want to preserve.

If approved by the Bureau of Land Management, the Lava Ridge Wind Farm would put up 400 turbines on 118 square miles near Minidoka. Survivors say they are witnessing another attempt to bury the past.

“If Minidoka was a white memorial to white soldiers who died in whatever war it is, do you think that they would offer free land to Lava Ridge to develop their windmills there?” Tomita said. “Hell no.”

Two months after Japan’s Dec. 7, 1941, attack on Pearl Harbor, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066. Roughly 120,000 people of Japanese ancestry were taken from

Minidoka survivor Paul Tomita visits the Minidoka National Historic Site on July 8 with his wife, Mabel.

their homes and incarcerat­ed in camps as a potential threat against the U.S.

Thousands were elderly, disabled, children or infants. Desperate families sold belongings and packed what they could. Some had white friends care for houses, farms and businesses.

At Minidoka, they lived in wooden, tar-paper-covered barracks, braving summer heat and winter cold on 50 square miles of remote, high desert. In tight quarters without much privacy, women waited until night to use latrines. Up to eight family members shared rooms on cots with no mattresses. For Christmas dinner, kids ate hot dogs.

Under armed guard towers, Minidoka residents worked in fields cultivatin­g crops for little pay. But they built a community in what was essentiall­y a prison camp. They organized churches and planted gardens. They created a city of sorts with stores, watch

and radio repair shops, a health clinic, a barbershop, an ice rink, a swimming pool and a baseball diamond.

Today, few original structures remain as reminders of a chapter in U.S. history the government worked to erase before issuing reparation­s and designatin­g camps as national historic sites decades later.

Now, a new project with fences of a different kind is envisioned for the wideopen public land dotted with sagebrush and cheatgrass.

As the Biden administra­tion aimed to fight climate change by permitting 25 gigawatts of renewable energy on public lands within the decade, a company named Magic Valley pitched a wind farm that would be the secondlarg­est in the U.S. and produce up to 1,000 megawatts. Lava Ridge would erect towering turbines in parts of three counties and double Idaho’s wind energy production.

“There is a tremendous need, a market-based need for clean energy in Idaho and across the West ... being requested by utilities, by businesses, by state leaders, and really by many Americans who are trying to get this country toward energy independen­ce,” said Luke Papez, project manager at Magic Valley, a subsidiary of New York-based LS Power. “This is a very good site to locate a project.”

With global warming, wind farms have been framed as avenues to increased economic activity, new local tax revenues — and a vital tool for the White House’s clean energy goals.

“Renewable wind projects are a critical component of the Biden-Harris administra­tion’s commitment to confrontin­g climate change, promoting clean air and water for our current and future generation­s, creating thousands of good-paying union jobs, and jump-starting our country’s transition

to a clean energy future,” said Interior Secretary Deb Haaland in a statement.

Magic Valley now hopes to win BLM approval next year and to begin constructi­on in 2025 and start operations by 2026.

But opposition is nearly universal in the high desert where the company would build hundreds of miles of temporary fencing and roads, plus hundreds of concrete slabs for turbines.

There are fears the isolated landscape that draws travelers will be permanentl­y scarred, explosives used for constructi­on will damage an aquifer — and the project will cast shadows on the desert that Minidoka survivors visit.

As the BLM nears a decision, Minidoka survivors and descendant­s are declaring the site a place of healing that commemorat­es traumas their families still struggle to unpack and resolve.

During his 11 months at the desert camp, Paul Tomita longed for his Seattle home surrounded by lush greenery. He asked his mother: What did we do wrong to end up here? When are we going home?

“Of course, my mom had to song-and-dance around it,” said Tomita, now 84. “Even though I was that young, I knew something was wrong.”

Tomita’s family and thousands of other Japanese Americans were under control of the Army’s War Relocation Authority. “They told us when we could eat, when we could sleep, when we could do anything,” he said.

While Tomita’s family was incarcerat­ed, his father applied for an East Coast job with the Office of Strategic Services — a precursor of the CIA. His assignment: translatin­g U.S. propaganda into Japanese flyers urging surrender that would be dropped in the South Pacific.

To return to life outside, Tomita, his older sister and his younger sister, then 2, needed a leave card with a fingerprin­t and photo.

At war’s end, the family returned to Seattle, where neighbors had safeguarde­d typesettin­g equipment that allowed them to restart the family printing business.

When the children entered high school, their mom presented them with their Minidoka exit cards.

After earning a master’s degree in rehabilita­tion counseling at Oregon State University, Tomita provided consulting and rehabilita­tion services to companies and government agencies on the West Coast. He and his wife adopted a daughter, now 53 with a child of her own.

In July, Tomita brought a copy of his exit card when he returned to the camp for an annual pilgrimage. He wants future generation­s to be able to visit this treasured site for Japanese Americans.

“Because they dumped us there,” he said, “like it or not, it is our sacred land.”

 ?? LINDSEY WASSON/AP ??
LINDSEY WASSON/AP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States