Historical Background
Between 1901 and 1907, almost 110,000 Japanese immigrated to the United States. They were
drawn by promises of ready work -- American railroads actually sent recruiters to Japanese
port cities, offering laborers three to five times their customary wages -- and by
worsening economic conditions in their homeland, which was undergoing social upheaval in
the aftermath of the Meiji Restoration. Although many originally came as dekaseginin --
temporary sojourners -- work was plentiful, not only on the railroads, but in the lumber
camps, salmon fisheries, and fruit orchards of Oregon and Washington. Increasingly,
the newcomers stayed on. Many purchased their own farms. In time, these issei --
first-generation Japanese -- started families.
The Japanese government actively encouraged emigration, and although the Gentleman's
Agreement of 1908 curbed the flow of Japanese men, it allowed unrestricted entry to their
wives and children. Many women were "picture brides," who came to join husbands
they knew only through photographs and letters and whom they had "married" by
proxy in ceremonies in their native villages.
Very quickly the newcomers encountered antagonism. Although Japanese constituted less than
two percent of all immigrants to the U.S., newspapers trumpeted an "invasion."
The mayor of San Francisco proclaimed that "the Japanese are not the stuff of which
American citizens can be made." The Sacramento Bee warned that "the Japs...will
increase like rats" if allowed to settle down. The Asiatic Exclusion League agitated
for legislation to halt all Japanese immigration. Politicians ran for office on
anti-Japanese platforms. In 1923, the state of Oregon prohibited issei from legally buying
land. A year later, Congress passed the National Origins Act, which banned all immigration
from Japan.
In spite of this, the newcomers thrived. They found ways of getting around
some laws (under Oregon's Alien Land Law, first-generation Japanese could legalize their
land purchases by registering them in the names of their American born -- or nisei --
children). They tolerated other laws. Meanwhile, the immigrants preserved the
ceremonies and values of Japan even as they encouraged their children to acculturate and,
particularly, to educate themselves. "You must outperform your detractors," one
issei counseled his children. Typically, the nisei grew up thinking of themselves as
Americans, yet were reminded of their difference every time they encountered the taunts
and ostracism of their white neighbors.
Following the Japanese surprise attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, hostility
turned into paranoia -- and paranoia became law. Japanese who had lived in America for
thirty years were accused of spying for their native land. The day after Pearl Harbor, the
U.S. Treasury Department ordered all Japanese-owned businesses closed and all issei bank
accounts frozen. The U.S. government had already compiled lists of Japanese whose
loyalties might be suspect, and more than 1,000 businessmen, community leaders, priests,
and educators were arrested up and down the West Coast.
The restrictions escalated. Japanese homes were searched for contraband. Telephone service
was cut off. One newspaper columnist wrote: "I am for the immediate removal of every
Japanese on the West Coast to a point deep in the interior....Herd 'em up, pack 'em off
and give 'em the inside room in the badlands...let 'em be pinched, hurt, and hungry."
In February 1942, President Franklin Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066, which
empowered the government to remove "any and all" persons of Japanese ancestry
from sensitive military areas in four western states. Japanese residents had only days in
which to evacuate. They were compelled to sell their land and businesses for a fraction of
their value, or to lease them to neighbors who would later refuse to pay their rent. All
told, some 110,000 Japanese Americans were deported from their homes to hastily built
camps such as Tule Lake and Manzanar, where they lived behind barbed wire for the duration
of the war.
Neither Germans nor Italians living in this country were subject to similar
restrictions, and recently declassified documents reveal that the Japanese population was
never considered a serious threat to American security. In all of World War II, no person
of Japanese ancestry living in the United States, Alaska, or Hawaii was ever charged with
any act of espionage or sabotage. As one nisei later wrote, the victims of Executive Order
9066 were people whose "only crime was their face."
In 1988, the U.S. government formally apologized to Japanese citizens who had been
deprived of their civil liberties during World War II.
This information was gathered from:
Kessler, Lauren. Stubborn Twig: Three Generations in the Life of a Japanese-American
Family. New York: Random House, 1993.
"Snow Falling on Cedars." Reading Group Center. 11 Jan. 2002
< http://www.randomhouse.com/vintage/read/snow
>.