Texarkana Gazette

Japanese Americans won redress, fight for Black reparation­s

- JANIE HAR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SAN FRANCISCO — When Miya Iwataki and other Japanese Americans fought in the 1980s for the U.S. government to apologize to the families it imprisoned during World War II, Black politician­s and civil rights leaders were integral to the movement.

Thirty-five years after they won that apology — and survivors of prison camps received $20,000 each— those advocates are now demanding atonement for Black Americans whose ancestors were enslaved. From California to Washington, D.C., activists are joining revived reparation­s movements and pushing for formal government compensati­on for the lasting harm of slavery’s legacy on subsequent generation­s, from access to housing and education to voting rights and employment.

Advocating for reparation­s is “the right thing to do,” said Iwataki, a resident of South Pasadena, California who is in her 70s. She cited cross-cultural solidarity that has built up over decades.

Black lawmakers such as the late California congressme­n Mervyn Dymally and Ron Dellums played critical roles in winning the Civil Liberties Act of 1988, which formalized the government’s apology and redress payments.

Last Sunday marked the 81st anniversar­y of President Franklin D. Roosevelt signing an executive order that allowed the government to force an estimated 125,000 people — twothirds of them U.S. citizens — from their homes and businesses, and incarcerat­e them in desolate, barbed-wire camps throughout the west.

“We want to help other communitie­s win reparation­s, because it was so important to us,” Iwataki said.

After stalling for decades at the federal level, reparation­s for slavery has received new interest amid a national reckoning over the 2020 police killing of George Floyd. Amid nationwide protests that year, California Gov. Gavin Newsom signed legislatio­n that establishe­d a first-in-the-nation task force to address the topic of slave reparation­s.

Other cities and counties have since followed, including Boston, St. Louis, and San Francisco, where an advisory committee issued a draft recommenda­tion last year proposing a lump-sum payment of $5 million apiece for eligible individual­s.

In December, the National Nikkei Reparation­s Coalition, alongside more than 70 other Japanese American and Asian American organizati­ons, submitted a letter calling on the Biden administra­tion to establish a presidenti­al commission.

Japanese American activists in California are studying the landmark report issued by California’s task force — and plan to reach out to college students, churches and other community groups to raise awareness about why Black reparation­s is needed — and how it intersects with their own struggle.

 ?? ?? Ron Wakabayash­i pauses for a picture Feb. 11 at the Japanese American National Museum in Los Angeles. “Probably the more important thing that we got out of that was the generation­al healing, and the restoratio­n of our identity,” said Wakabayash­i of hearings set up by a 1980 federal commission on Japanese internment. (AP Photo/damian Dovarganes)
Ron Wakabayash­i pauses for a picture Feb. 11 at the Japanese American National Museum in Los Angeles. “Probably the more important thing that we got out of that was the generation­al healing, and the restoratio­n of our identity,” said Wakabayash­i of hearings set up by a 1980 federal commission on Japanese internment. (AP Photo/damian Dovarganes)

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