Home | Forums | Mark forums read | Search | FAQ | Login

Advanced search
Hot Topics
Buraku hot topic There'll be fewer cows getting off that Qantas flight
Buraku hot topic Japan will fingerprint and photograph all foreigners!
Buraku hot topic This is the bomb!
Buraku hot topic Debito reinvents himself as a Uyoku movie star!
Buraku hot topic Japanese jazz pianist beaten up on NYC subway
Buraku hot topic Best Official Japan Souvenirs
Buraku hot topic Fleeing from the dungeon
Buraku hot topic As if gaijin men didn't have a bad enough reputation...
Buraku hot topic 'Paris Syndrome' strikes Japanese
Buraku hot topic
Change font size
  • fuckedgaijin ‹ General ‹ F*cked News

Fred Korematsu, US Hero

Odd news from Japan and all things Japanese around the world.
Post a reply
16 posts • Page 1 of 1

Fred Korematsu, US Hero

Postby gkanai » Fri Jul 02, 2004 2:07 pm

Salon's Gary Kamiya does a great profile of Fred Korematsu, a nissei who challenged the internment orders for Japanese-Americans during WW2. Korematsu lost the initial lawsuit, but documents found over 40 years later proved that the US government willfully lied to the Supreme Court, and thus the conviction was overturned. Clinton awarded Korematsu with the Presidential Medal of Freedom a few years after the conviction was overturned.

Resisting arrest:Six decades before Guantanamo, Fred Korematsu refused to go quietly when the government tried to put him in a prison camp because of his race [salon.com]

Resisting arrest
Six decades before Guantanamo, Fred Korematsu refused to go quietly when the government tried to put him in a prison camp because of his race

- - - - - - - - - - - -
By Gary Kamiya



June 29, 2004 | On Monday, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that "enemy combatants" -- prisoners seized in the "war on terror" who the Bush administration argued had no legal recourse -- have the right to challenge their detention in American courts. Writing for the majority, Justice Sandra Day O'Connor wrote, "A state of war is not a blank check for the President when it comes to the rights of the Nation's citizens."

Somewhere in the San Francisco Bay Area, a soft-spoken man named Fred Korematsu is smiling.

Americans assume that their civil rights are sacrosanct, that civic tradition and the Constitution are a sure bulwark against the state's power to treat them without due process. They're wrong. Civil rights are only as strong as the nation's commitment to defending them. And the grim truth is that during wartime, that commitment often fails -- especially when the gasoline of racism is poured onto the flames of fear.

That is true today, as the dark-skinned prisoners in Guantánamo and the thousands of harmless Arabs and Muslims deported or harassed after 9/11 can attest. And it was true in 1942, when Fred Korematsu, along with 120,000 other law-abiding Americans of Japanese ancestry -- two-thirds of them American citizens -- were forcibly removed from their homes, farms, businesses and communities and sent into imprisonment in desolate camps throughout the West. Their crime? Being of Japanese descent. It was the greatest mass violation of civil rights in 20th century American history.

Fred Korematsu resisted the order. He took his case to the Supreme Court. Of the four Supreme Court cases brought by Japanese-Americans involving the internment order, his was the only one in which the court directly ruled on the constitutionality of the relocation order. In what is now regarded as one of the most disgraceful rulings in the court's history, he lost -- and to this day, the right of the government to act as it did in 1942 has never been overturned. But his defeat carried within it the seeds of a larger victory. Forty-one years later, a legal team made up of mostly young Japanese-American lawyers -- many of whose parents had been in the camps -- brought suit to bring justice not just to Korematsu, but also to all those who had been wronged by the internment orders. In a stunned and tearful California courtroom, his conviction for refusing to report to an "assembly center" was overturned, and the shame of a dark moment in American history was finally washed away.

Five years later, President Bill Clinton awarded Korematsu the nation's highest civilian award, the Presidential Medal of Freedom. That award recognized that the unassuming young welder had stood up for something larger than himself. Fred Korematsu, who would not go into the camps, had joined Rosa Parks, who would not give up her seat, in the most exclusive, yet most universal, American club: the club of ordinary heroes.

"We should be vigilant to make sure this will never happen again," Korematsu said upon receiving the Medal of Freedom. And he has practiced that vigilance himself. Last October, he joined a friend-of-the-court brief to the Supreme Court, arguing that the extended executive detentions of "enemy combatants" are unconstitutional. Few amicus petitioners have carried more moral authority.

The event that was to change Fred Korematsu's life forever took place on Feb. 19, 1942, a little more than two months after Pearl Harbor. That was the day that President Franklin Delano Roosevelt -- acting under pressure from military authorities, the media and West Coast political leaders -- signed Executive Order 9066, authorizing the mass evacuation of 120,000 Americans of Japanese ancestry from the West Coast. The reason given was that the Japanese constituted a military threat. No evidence was ever presented for this claim. Roosevelt did not discuss the order with his cabinet, nor did he ask for justification.

Among the thousands of those affected was the Korematsu family, which ran a nursery in Oakland. The elder Korematsus, like almost all other Americans of Japanese descent, planned to obey without protest. But their son, 22-year-old Fred Korematsu, took a different view. He thought it was wrong and unfair that he should be forced to abandon his home and be sent to a far-off prison camp simply because of his race. After talking things over with his parents and his Italian-American girlfriend, he decided not to go. He was one of only a handful of Japanese-Americans who refused to comply with the internment order.

Korematsu, who had been working as a welder in a shipyard, changed his name and had minor plastic surgery to make himself look less Japanese. He succeeded in avoiding the authorities for about three months, but on May 30, 1942, someone recognized him in a San Leandro store and called police. He was arrested and sent to Tanforan Race Track, where Japanese-Americans were processed (sleeping in horse stalls reeking of manure) before being shipped off to various desolate camps on the wind-swept plateaus of the West. Korematsu was sent to the internment camp at Topaz, Utah.

Before he departed, however, he was visited in jail by a man named Ernest Besig, the executive director of the Northern California chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union. He had read about Korematsu in the paper. He had been looking for a Japanese-American who would challenge the legality of the internment order -- a test case. Besig was acting without institutional sanction: the national ACLU, intimidated by war fervor, had decided not to challenge the constitutionality of the internment. He asked the young man if he would agree to go to court.

Korematsu was utterly alone. His family was already gone. His girlfriend was, too -- in fact, he never saw her again. His community was scattered. The conservative Japanese American Citizens League, the sole group representing both Issei (Japan-born Americans, forbidden by racist U.S. law from becoming citizens) and Nisei (their American-born children) had decided for strategic reasons to go along quietly with whatever the authorities ordered. By fighting the government, Korematsu risked alienating himself from his peers, many of whom had decided that the only way to prove their loyalty was to keep their heads down.

Korematsu agreed to fight the government in court. In October 1944, with World War II heading into its brutal final winter, Korematsu's case reached the Supreme Court. The government's lawyers argued that in wartime, the military was required to take all steps necessary to protect the national security. It cited a report by General DeWitt, the officer responsible for the defense of the West Coast (and whose recommendation was responsible for Executive Order 9066), claiming that many people of Japanese ancestry were disloyal and that there was no time to figure out which of them were loyal and which were not.

Korematsu's lawyers charged that the evacuation orders were transparently racist and denied an entire class of people due process and equal protection under the law. They pointed out that not a single episode of espionage or sabotage had taken place during the four months between Pearl Harbor and General DeWitt's first evacuation order. (This fact did not faze DeWitt, who in his "Final Report: Japanese Evacuation From the West Coast" boldly made the Orwellian argument that "the very fact that no sabotage or espionage has taken place to date is disturbing and confirming indication that such action will take place.") They argued that DeWitt was himself a racist, citing this statement he made in 1943 before a congressional committee:

"A Jap's a Jap. It makes no difference whether he is an American citizen or not. I don't want any of them ... They are a dangerous element, whether loyal or not."

DeWitt's viewpoint was probably shared in some form by most Americans. At bottom, the fear was of a racially tinged "clash of civilizations": the Japanese were mysterious and opaque, not "real" Americans, and when the chips were down they were likely to betray their new nation in favor of their race. This belief was eloquently expressed by none other than Earl Warren, the California attorney general who was later to become the famously liberal chief justice of the United States. Testifying in 1942 before a House committee, Warren said, "the consensus of opinion among the law-enforcement officers of this State is that there is more potential danger among the group of Japanese who are born in this country than from the alien Japanese who were born in Japan. We believe that when we are dealing with the Caucasian race we have methods that will test the loyalty of them, and we believe that we can, in dealing with the Germans and Italians, arrive at some fairly sound conclusions because of our knowledge of the way they live in the community and have lived for many years. But when we deal with the Japanese we are in an entirely different field and we can not form any opinion that we believe to be sound."

This, then, was the intellectual climate in which the Supreme Court heard the case. On Dec. 18, 1944, the court handed down its decision. The divided court (6-3) ruled against Korematsu. In his majority opinion, Justice Hugo Black essentially deferred to the military authorities and Congress, who had stated that the presence of an uncertain number of disloyal Japanese made it necessary to remove all of them from the coast. Quoting the Court's opinion in Hirabayashi, an earlier case involving a Japanese-American who knowingly violated a curfew, Black wrote, "We cannot reject as unfounded the judgment of the military authorities and of Congress that there were disloyal members of that population, whose number and strength could not be precisely and quickly ascertained. We cannot say that the war-making branches of the Government did not have ground for believing that in a critical hour such persons could not readily be isolated and separately dealt with, and constituted a menace to the national defense and safety, which demanded that prompt and adequate measures be taken to guard against it."


Black denied that racism lay behind the relocation order, only military necessity. But neither he nor the rest of the majority seemed interested in trying to find out just what that military necessity was. Certainly little evidence, and no convincing evidence, was advanced of Japanese-American disloyalty. (In fact, not a single case of sabotage or espionage by Japanese-Americans ever took place during the entire war.) Black cited the fact that 5,000 internees refused to swear unqualified allegiance to the United States, overlooking the fact that their forcible removal from their homes and businesses without legal recourse might have had something to do with their refusal. Nor did he deal with the uncomfortable fact that neither Italian-Americans nor German-Americans were evacuated from their homes and forced into prison camps.

It is difficult to escape the conclusion that Black, who was a former member of the Ku Klux Klan, subscribed at some level to the same racist beliefs that infected so many other Americans. Why else would he have so uncritically accepted the feeble national-security arguments advanced by the government?

Whatever his motivations, it was a decision that was reportedly to haunt Black for the rest of his life. After all, Black was one of the court's greatest defenders of civil liberties, author of the now-classic decision in the landmark Pentagon Papers case. (Ironically, the most towering civil liberties advocate in court history, Justice William O. Douglas, concurred with the majority in Korematsu.) But though troubled by the ruling, Black was never able to bring himself to admit he was wrong. In a 1967 interview, Black said, "I would do precisely the same thing today, in any part of the country. I would probably issue the same order were I President. We had a situation where we were at war. People were rightly fearful of the Japanese in Los Angeles, many loyal to the United States, many undoubtedly not, having dual citizenship -- lots of them. They all look alike to a person not a Jap. Had they [the Japanese] attacked our shores you'd have a large number fighting with the Japanese troops. And a lot of innocent Japanese-Americans would have been shot in the panic. Under these circumstances I saw nothing wrong in moving them away from the danger area."

In a biting dissent, Justice Frank Murphy called the ruling "a legalization of racism." But Korematsu had lost.

The war ended and Korematsu, along with thousands of other internees, got out of the camps and on with his life. He did not like to talk about his Supreme Court case; in fact, his own daughter only learned about it in class. He wanted to reopen his case but didn't know how. It was not until 1983 that his now-ancient legal battle stirred again.

As recounted in Eric Paul Fournier's moving 2000 documentary "Of Civil Rights and Wrongs," which with Steven Okazaki's "Unfinished Business" offers a powerful account of Korematsu's fight, a San Diego historian and law professor named Peter Irons made the kind of discovery that historians, lawyers and journalists can only dream about He came upon documentary evidence proving that the government had knowingly lied to the Supreme Court in the original Korematsu case.

In researching a book on the internment cases, Irons made a request to the National Archives for the actual case files, which had been misfiled. "It was just by chance that one slip of paper survived stating where the cases were," Irons says in the film. "In fact, they were sitting in three cardboard boxes that were covered with dust, tied up with string. And it was obvious that I was the first person in more than 40 years who'd looked at these files. I knew that there would be a lot of case material, the kind of stuff that lawyers produce -- memos, briefs, things like that. What I did not expect to find was literally on the top of the first file, a document from one of the Justice Department lawyers to the Solicitor General of the United States saying we are telling lies to the Supreme Court. We have an obligation to tell the truth to the court."

The documents showed that the solicitor-general of the United States, Charles Fahey, knew that all of the military's arguments that Japanese-Americans were engaging in subversive behavior were contradicted by reports from the FBI and military intelligence -- and failed to share that information with the court. Smoking guns don't get much more billowing.

Irons visited Korematsu at his San Leandro home and showed him the documents. Korematsu sat in silence for 15 or 20 minutes, puffing on his pipe, reading the documents. Then he asked Irons, "Are you a lawyer?" Irons said he was. "Would you be my lawyer?"

And so the battle was joined again. This time, Korematsu would win.

A legal team led by Irons and a young Sansei (third-generation Japanese-American) lawyer named Dale Minami filed a coram nobis petition on Korematsu's behalf in a San Francisco district court. "Coram nobis" is Latin for "before us": Like the related writ of habeas corpus, which protects against illegal detention, coram nobis applies to those individuals who have been convicted wrongfully and have served their sentence. To prove coram nobis, the petitioner must show that a fundamental error or manifest injustice has been committed. Only egregious errors of fact or prosecutorial misconduct, not interpretations of the law, will result in a successful coram nobis writ.

Fortunately, that is exactly what Korematsu's attorneys had. In fact, so incendiary were the documents that the lawyers feared they would "disappear"; they met in secret for many months. The team made a tactical decision to file in the District Court, rather than to the high court, because there was a much greater chance they would lose in the Supreme Court.

The government, clearly aware that it was doomed, stalled, arguing about procedure. It offered Korematsu a pardon -- which of course implies guilt. Korematsu refused.

Finally the judge hearing the case, Marilyn Hall Patel, grew impatient with the government's delaying tactics. She asked the lead government attorney whether the government was going to oppose the petition or agree to it. The attorney said he didn't have the authority to make that decision. She told him to go call someone "right now" who did have that authority. He came back and said he still couldn't make that decision. At this point, Patel decided that the government had in effect confessed error, "even though they don't say in those magic incantation words 'we confess error.' They had done substantially the same thing." She prepared a substantive decision to read in the courtroom the next day, knowing that it would be packed with people.

The next day, the government made its arguments. It argued that the case should not be reopened because to do so would be to reopen old wounds. There was no reason to go back and try to find out what actually happened back then, the government said -- why not just let bygones be bygones?

Minami responded by pointing out that the only "old wounds" that would be reopened would be those of a government that had lied to the Supreme Court, not those of people who had already lost their homes and livelihood. Then he asked if Fred Korematsu could make a short statement.

Korematsu said that 41 years ago, he entered this courtroom in handcuffs and was sent to a camp that was not fit for human habitation. Horse stalls are for horses, not people. He asked the court to overturn his conviction, saying, in Minami's recollection, "that what happened to him could happen to any American citizen who looks different or who comes from a different country and that it was important for this court to understand that the relief given to him was not just for him personally, but in a sense, for the benefit of the whole country."

When Korematsu finished, Patel read her ruling to the courtroom right from the bench. She said that there was sufficient evidence of governmental misconduct to overturn the conviction. Evidence had been suppressed. The policies of the U.S. government were infected with racism. She said that the Constitution had to be protected at all times for all people. Then she got up and left the court.

For a moment, after she left, the entire audience was stunned. History had been made in front of their eyes: a great injustice had been legally expunged. But it was too big to take in. Korematsu asked someone, "What happened?" He was told, "You won." Then it sank in. The crowd, many of them camp survivors, was overcome with emotion. They swarmed Korematsu, hugged him. Tears flowed -- but this time they were tears of vindication. The young shipyard welder's long odyssey had finally ended. He had carried not just himself, but also his people, into the safe harbor of belated justice. That justice did not make up for lives shattered, property lost, hopes blighted. But it helped.

Korematsu's victory was not complete. The Supreme Court ruling in his case has never been overturned; it remains on the books, like a malignant virus, waiting to be activated when racist paranoia and war hysteria sweep aside Americans' commitment to civil rights. Every generation seems condemned to fight the same battles on different grounds: Guantánamo is today's Heart Mountain. But the knowledge that ordinary people like Fred Korematsu are there, willing to stand quietly up for their rights, makes it possible to dream that one day the battle will be won.


- - - - - - - - - - - -

gkanai
Maezumo
 
Posts: 582
Joined: Sun Dec 22, 2002 6:59 pm
Top

Postby gkanai » Fri Jul 02, 2004 2:11 pm

This part was pretty surprising.

The conservative Japanese American Citizens League, the sole group representing both Issei (Japan-born Americans, forbidden by racist U.S. law from becoming citizens) and Nisei (their American-born children) had decided for strategic reasons to go along quietly with whatever the authorities ordered.


No wonder the JACL spent the rest of the years after the war fighting for restitution/redress. For shame! :cry:
gkanai
Maezumo
 
Posts: 582
Joined: Sun Dec 22, 2002 6:59 pm
Top

Postby kamome » Fri Jul 02, 2004 3:04 pm

The Korematsu case and Plessy vs. Ferguson (the Supreme Court decision legalizing separate but equal "Jim Crow" laws) were two of the most embarrassing and racist decisions the Court ever handed down. Cases like this (and the ones that the Court can be proud of, such as Brown v. Board) often reflect the political zeitgeist of that period rather than pure legal analysis.
YBF is as ageless as time itself.--Cranky Bastard, 7/23/08

FG is my WaiWai--baka tono 6/26/08

There is no such category as "low" when classifying your basic Asian Beaver. There is only excellent and magnifico!--Greji, 1/7/06
User avatar
kamome
 
Posts: 5558
Joined: Tue Apr 02, 2002 11:50 am
Location: "Riding the hardhat into tuna town"
Top

Postby cstaylor » Fri Jul 02, 2004 5:01 pm

kamome wrote:Cases like this (and the ones that the Court can be proud of, such as Brown v. Board) often reflect the political zeitgeist of that period rather than pure legal analysis.
Well, IIRC, when President Andrew Jackson was handed a decision to the Worcester v. Georgia case by Chief Justice Marshall, he replied: "John Marshall has rendered his decision; now let him enforce it". Without the support of one of the other two branches of the Federal government (in this case, Congress to push through a law nullifying an act of the Executive, even moving to censure or impeach the President), the decisions don't get very far. :idea:
User avatar
cstaylor
 
Posts: 6383
Joined: Mon Apr 29, 2002 2:07 am
Location: Yokohama, Japan
  • Website
Top

Postby kamome » Fri Jul 02, 2004 5:38 pm

[quote="cstaylor"]Well, IIRC, when President Andrew Jackson was handed a decision to the Worcester v. Georgia case by Chief Justice Marshall, he replied: "John Marshall has rendered his decision]

That's right. The legitimacy of the judicial branch was very much in doubt back in Andrew Jackson's time, and was still questioned when Brown v. Board came out in 1955. There will always be a debate about the proper role of the Court in its interpretation of the Constitution (the classic "originalist" versus "activist" debate) and the appropriateness of the Court getting involved in policymaking. Without legitimacy, enforcement of holdings by the Court is more difficult (as in the Brown case with it's "all deliberate speed" language).

But I was talking more about how the Court reaches its decisions. Some people like to think it's all about legal logic, but in reality, politics plays a big role in hefty decisions like abortion, race, etc. Gore v. Bush is a prime example of politics in the Supreme Court :roll:
YBF is as ageless as time itself.--Cranky Bastard, 7/23/08

FG is my WaiWai--baka tono 6/26/08

There is no such category as "low" when classifying your basic Asian Beaver. There is only excellent and magnifico!--Greji, 1/7/06
User avatar
kamome
 
Posts: 5558
Joined: Tue Apr 02, 2002 11:50 am
Location: "Riding the hardhat into tuna town"
Top

Re: Fred Korematsu, US Hero

Postby bejiita » Fri Jul 02, 2004 6:46 pm

Justice Sandra Day O'Connor wrote:A state of war is not a blank check for the President when it comes to the rights of the Nation's citizens.


Which still makes me wonder. Since the executive branch is in charge of enforcement, what happens if President Bush refuses to obey the U.S.S.C's order? The Court will find him in contempt but who will enforce the contempt order? Has such an actual physical showdown ever occured in U.S. history? Will officers of the court attempt to arrest Bush only to be rebuked by his secret service agents?
bejiita
Maezumo
 
Posts: 354
Joined: Mon Jan 20, 2003 9:08 am
Top

Re: Fred Korematsu, US Hero

Postby cstaylor » Fri Jul 02, 2004 7:12 pm

bejiita wrote:
Justice Sandra Day O'Connor wrote:A state of war is not a blank check for the President when it comes to the rights of the Nation's citizens.


Which still makes me wonder. Since the executive branch is in charge of enforcement, what happens if President Bush refuses to obey the U.S.S.C's order? The Court will find him in contempt but who will enforce the contempt order? Has such an actual physical showdown ever occured in U.S. history? Will officers of the court attempt to arrest Bush only to be rebuked by his secret service agents?
IANAL, but I would assume that it would require congress to impeach the President.
User avatar
cstaylor
 
Posts: 6383
Joined: Mon Apr 29, 2002 2:07 am
Location: Yokohama, Japan
  • Website
Top

Postby bejiita » Fri Jul 02, 2004 7:26 pm

Yes, Congress can move to impeach him, but in the meantime, he's still defying the court order. Even then, is contempt of a court order sufficient grounds for impeachment? Since the majority of the House of Representatives' members are affiliated with the Republican party, it seems very unlikely that they would move to impeach Bush for disobeying a contempt order. Unlike the swift action they took for a current best selling author.
bejiita
Maezumo
 
Posts: 354
Joined: Mon Jan 20, 2003 9:08 am
Top

Postby cstaylor » Fri Jul 02, 2004 7:35 pm

bejiita wrote:Yes, Congress can move to impeach him, but in the meantime, he's still defying the court order. Even then, is contempt of a court order sufficient grounds for impeachment? Since the majority of the House of Representatives' members are affiliated with the Republican party, it seems very unlikely that they would move to impeach Bush for disobeying a contempt order. Unlike the swift action they took for a current best selling author.
Then it's up to the people. Western states like California have a recall provision amended to their state constitutions, so they could threaten
to recall any House rep that refused to vote for impeachment. Other states would need to wait until their representatives were up for reelection, and then
stick it to them.

I really think if this Supreme court, tilted to the right as it is, held the administration in contempt, I think that would push a lot of the House republicans to move for impeachment, or at least censure.
User avatar
cstaylor
 
Posts: 6383
Joined: Mon Apr 29, 2002 2:07 am
Location: Yokohama, Japan
  • Website
Top

Postby bejiita » Fri Jul 02, 2004 7:45 pm

But the State recall provisions only apply to State elected officials, not Federally elected officials like Congress members. That's why California term limits apply to State Officials but they can't apply to Federally elected officials.

As for voting out members of Congress, the political system favors seniority. The longer you are in office, the more choice committee assignments you get, and the more powerful and influential the representative becomes. To vote out a representative just because they did or did not impeach will take away that State's ability to influence Federal legislation in its favor. Sort of like cutting off your nose to spite yourself.
bejiita
Maezumo
 
Posts: 354
Joined: Mon Jan 20, 2003 9:08 am
Top

Postby cstaylor » Fri Jul 02, 2004 10:27 pm

bejiita wrote:But the State recall provisions only apply to State elected officials, not Federally elected officials like Congress members. That's why California term limits apply to State Officials but they can't apply to Federally elected officials.
Well, the Constitution doesn't say that they can't be recalled, and since they are the elected representatives of the population within a district of a state, I'm sure that they could go forward with the recall vote. If it came close to passing, the representative would probably be pressured to step down.
bejiita wrote:As for voting out members of Congress, the political system favors seniority.
That's not so true in the House, if it looks like the incumbent will be punished in the next election (as were some of the Republicans after the Clinton impeachment), their political party will usually desert them. Impeachment occurs in the House, convinction in the Senate.
User avatar
cstaylor
 
Posts: 6383
Joined: Mon Apr 29, 2002 2:07 am
Location: Yokohama, Japan
  • Website
Top

Postby Socratesabroad » Sat Jul 03, 2004 12:24 am

It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs, who comes short again and again, because there is no effort without error and shortcoming...
User avatar
Socratesabroad
Maezumo
 
Posts: 781
Joined: Fri Jul 04, 2003 11:13 am
Top

A Japanese-American Internment Icon's Legacy

Postby Ptyx » Thu Apr 21, 2005 10:38 pm

Japan Focus: A Japanese-American Internment Icon's Legacy and the Civil Rights Movement
NEW YORK -- The Japanese-American who waited 40 years for justice is dead.

Fred Korematsu, hailed by many as the Rosa Parks (a heroine of the African American civil rights movement) of World War II, passed away Wednesday in the northern California community of Larkspur. He was 86.

The beginning of Korematsu's battle began in a jail cell in Oakland, California. It passed through defeat after defeat in US courts all the way to the Supreme Court, and ended with his total exoneration -- and the award of the Presidential Medal of Honor.

In between was one of the most egregious chapters in the history of US civil rights.
Careful design helps exorcise noise demons
User avatar
Ptyx
Maezumo
 
Posts: 393
Joined: Fri Sep 19, 2003 3:01 am
Location: Tokyo
  • Website
Top

Postby Mulboyne » Mon Apr 25, 2005 12:11 pm

Image
Asahi: Japanese-American KOs Marine Corps
Bruce Yamashita has never regretted the racial discrimination he suffered at the hands of the U.S. Marine Corps or the long legal process that culminated in a landmark legal victory. He says the lessons he learned served to enrich his life as a human being and as a lawyer... In restrospect, Yamashita admits he was naive about racial matters...But while studying at Georgetown he finally caught up with some hard truths. One case caught his attention: the 40-year-long lawsuit Fred Korematsu waged against the U.S. government for the forced relocation of Japanese-Americans during World War II...more
User avatar
Mulboyne
 
Posts: 18608
Joined: Thu May 06, 2004 1:39 pm
Location: London
Top

Postby Mulboyne » Tue Sep 06, 2005 1:03 am

NCM: Japanese AmericanCivil Rights Leader in Line for Posthumous Honor
He was an ordinary man thrust into extraordinary circumstances, an unlikely hero who, like Rosa Parks in the South, sparked monumental
resistance to cruel injustice. But several months after his death on March 30 at the age of 86, another movement is quietly being undertaken to name a Yolo County elementary school after late civil rights icon Fred Korematsu, whose challenge of forced relocation during World War II, and attempts to throw out his wartime conviction 40 years later, helped spark the Japanese American Redress Movement. The Davis Joint Unified School District Board of Education near Sacramento, California is in the process of hearing five recommendations set forth by the city-appointed Naming Committee for the new elementary school in Mace Ranch, located in East Davis. One of the names may even be approved at the meeting, said a source close to the situation. It would be a historic move to recognize Korematsu, honor the contributions of Asian Americans, and provide an inspiring story for future generations, say advocates.
User avatar
Mulboyne
 
Posts: 18608
Joined: Thu May 06, 2004 1:39 pm
Location: London
Top

Postby Samurai_Jerk » Fri Jan 06, 2012 6:36 pm

Gordon Hirabayashi Has Died

"This order for the mass evacuation of all persons of Japanese descent denies them the right to live," Seattle native Gordon Hirabayashi wrote in 1942. "I consider it my duty to maintain the democratic standards for which this nation lives. Therefore, I must refuse this order of evacuation."

With that, Hirabayashi became one of just a handful of Japanese-Americans who defied the government's move to put more than 100,000 of them in detention camps following the attack on Pearl Harbor. For his refusal, he was imprisoned more than a year.

It took four decades for Hirabayashi to be vindicated, with a U.S. Supreme Court decision that the internment policy "had been based on political expediency, not on any risk to national security," as The Associated Press writes.

By then, Hirabayashi had become a respected sociologist and a hero in the Japanese-American community.

Monday, at the age of 93, he died. A son says Hirabayaski had Alzheimer's disease, The New York Times reports.
Faith is believing what you know ain't so. -- Mark Twain
User avatar
Samurai_Jerk
Maezumo
 
Posts: 14387
Joined: Mon Feb 09, 2004 7:11 am
Location: Tokyo
Top


Post a reply
16 posts • Page 1 of 1

Return to F*cked News

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 5 guests

  • Board index
  • The team • Delete all board cookies • All times are UTC + 9 hours
Powered by phpBB® Forum Software © phpBB Group