Houston Chronicle

Calif. to apologize for internment of Japanese Americans

- By Cuneyt Dil

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Les Ouchida was born an American just outside California’s capital city, but his citizenshi­p mattered little after Japan bombed Pearl Harbor and the United States declared war. Based solely on their Japanese ancestry, the 5-year-old and his family were taken from their home in 1942 and imprisoned far away in Arkansas.

They were among 120,000 Japanese Americans held at 10 internment camps during World War II, their only fault being “we had the wrong last names and wrong faces,” said Ouchida, now 82 and living a short drive from where he grew up and was taken as a boy due to fear that Japanese Americans would side with Japan in the war.

On Thursday, California’s Legislatur­e is expected to approve a resolution offering an apology to Ouchida and other internment victims for the state’s role in aiding the U.S. government’s policy and condemning actions that helped fan antiJapane­se discrimina­tion.

President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s executive order No. 9066 establishi­ng the camps was signed on Feb. 19, 1942, and 2/19 now is marked by Japanese Americans as a Day of Remembranc­e.

Assemblyma­n Al Muratsuchi was born in Japan and is one the roughly 430,000 people of Japanese descent living in California, the largest population of any state. The Democrat who represents Manhattan Beach and other beach communitie­s near Los Angeles introduced the resolution.

“We like to talk a lot about how we lead the nation by example,” he said. “Unfortunat­ely, in this case, California led the racist anti-Japanese American movement.”

A congressio­nal commission in 1983 concluded that the detentions were a result of “racial prejudice, war hysteria and failure of political leadership.” Five years later, the U.S. government formally apologized and paid $20,000 in reparation­s to each victim.

The California resolution doesn’t come with any compensati­on. It targets the actions of the California Legislatur­e at the time for supporting the internment­s. Two camps were located in the state — Manzanar on the eastern side of the Sierra Nevada in central California and Tule Lake near the Oregon state line, the largest of all the camps.

“I want the California Legislatur­e to officially acknowledg­e and apologize while these camp survivors are still alive,” Muratsuchi said.

He said anti-Japanese sentiment began in California as early as 1913, when the state passed the California Alien Land Law, targeting Japanese farmers who some in California’s massive agricultur­al industry perceived as a threat. Seven years later the state barred anyone with Japanese ancestry from buying farmland.

The internment of Ouchida, his older brother and parents began in Fresno, Calif. Three months later they were sent to Jerome, Ark., where they stayed for most of the war.

Given their young ages at the time, many living victims such as Ouchida don’t remember much of life in the camps. But he does recall straw-filled mattresses and little privacy.

Communal bathrooms had rows of toilets with no barriers between users. “They put a bag over their heads when they went to the bathroom” for privacy, said Ouchida, who teaches about the internment­s at the California Museum in Sacramento.

The resolution, co-introduced by California Assembly Republican Leader Marie Waldron of Escondido, makes a passing reference to “recent national events” and says they serve as a reminder “to learn from the mistakes of the past.”

Muratsuchi said the inspiratio­n for that passage were migrant children held in U.S. government custody over the past year.

 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i / Associated Press ?? Les Ouchida holds a 1943 photo taken at the internment camp of himself, front center, and his siblings. The family was forced to move from the Sacramento, Calif., area to a camp in Arkansas.
Rich Pedroncell­i / Associated Press Les Ouchida holds a 1943 photo taken at the internment camp of himself, front center, and his siblings. The family was forced to move from the Sacramento, Calif., area to a camp in Arkansas.
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