Discover Nikkei Logo

https://www.discovernikkei.org/en/interviews/clips/1841/

Coming back from camp

In fact, coming back from camp, San Bernardino was like…Emerald City. I can, because all my recollections start in camp. I don’t remember before camp at all.

But I can remember taking the train to the station there. They looked, it’s kind of Moorish looking, but it was so exotic to me. I can still remember as a kid, saying wow, this is like, a wonderful place.

There’s that department store called the Harris Company, it’s only three stories high, but they had flags on it, draping stuff on it. I remember looking up, we took a cab from there to our store and looking at that building and saying, wow, you know, this is, this is the big city here.


California imprisonment incarceration postwar San Bernardino United States World War II World War II camps

Date: Sep 8, 2011

Location: California, US

Interviewer: John Esaki, Kris Kuramitsu

Contributed by: Watase Media Arts Center, Japanese American National Museum

Interviewee Bio

Ben Sakoguchi, born in 1938, is a painter and printmaker who has lived in the Los Angeles area his entire life, except for the time when he and his family were incarcerated in Poston Arizona. After studying painting in the 1960s at the University of California, Los Angeles, he developed a distinctive style that is rooted in pairing a narrative painting tradition with a pop culture vocabulary. He is best known for his long running “Orange Crate Label” series, using the classic crate label format to explore diverse subject matter and to combine them in a way that allows for both sharp critique and wry humor. His work is deeply and politically engaged, and he takes a deep delight in the craft and beauty of painting itself. Sakoguchi was a professor at Pasadena City College for nearly 35 years. Visit his website at bensakoguchi.com. (Oct. 2011)

Yumi Matsubara
en
ja
es
pt
Yumi Matsubara

Concentration camp from a Japanese mother’s point of view (Japanese)

Shin-Issei from Gifu. Recently received U.S. citizenship

en
ja
es
pt
Henry Shimizu
en
ja
es
pt
Henry Shimizu

Sneaking out of the Hastings Park camp during World War II

(b. 1928) Doctor. Former Chair of the Japanese Canadian Redress Foundation.

en
ja
es
pt
Venancio Shinki
en
ja
es
pt
Venancio Shinki

Hiding out to avoid the concentration camps (Spanish)

(b. 1932-2016) Peruvian painter

en
ja
es
pt
Venancio Shinki
en
ja
es
pt
Venancio Shinki

Closing the Japanese school and deportation (Spanish)

(b. 1932-2016) Peruvian painter

en
ja
es
pt
Gordon Hirabayashi
en
ja
es
pt
Gordon Hirabayashi

A Dutiful Son

(1918-2012) Fought the constitutionality of Executive Order 9066.

en
ja
es
pt
Gordon Hirabayashi
en
ja
es
pt
Gordon Hirabayashi

Bypassing the Constitution

(1918-2012) Fought the constitutionality of Executive Order 9066.

en
ja
es
pt
Cherry Kinoshita
en
ja
es
pt
Cherry Kinoshita

Erasing the Bitterness

(1923–2008) One of the leaders behind the redress movement.

en
ja
es
pt
Bill Hosokawa
en
ja
es
pt
Bill Hosokawa

A Reporter’s Responsibility

(1915 - 2007) Journalist

en
ja
es
pt
Peter Irons
en
ja
es
pt
Peter Irons

Lesson to be Learned

(b. 1940) Attorney, Coram nobis cases.

en
ja
es
pt
Chiye Tomihiro
en
ja
es
pt
Chiye Tomihiro

Too Ashamed to Tell

Chaired the Chicago JACL's Redress Committee.

en
ja
es
pt
William Marutani
en
ja
es
pt
William Marutani

Recalling Pinedale and Tule Lake concentration camps

Judge, only Japanese American to serve on CWRIC.

en
ja
es
pt
William Marutani
en
ja
es
pt
William Marutani

A memorable CWRIC testimony of an unjust situation

Judge, only Japanese American to serve on CWRIC.

en
ja
es
pt
Frank Emi
en
ja
es
pt
Frank Emi

Fair Play Committee

(1916-2010) draft resister, helped form the Heart Mountain Fair Play Committee

en
ja
es
pt
Frank Emi
en
ja
es
pt
Frank Emi

Speaking out in camp

(1916-2010) draft resister, helped form the Heart Mountain Fair Play Committee

en
ja
es
pt
Frank Emi
en
ja
es
pt
Frank Emi

Wanting to take a stand

(1916-2010) draft resister, helped form the Heart Mountain Fair Play Committee

en
ja
es
pt

Discover Nikkei Updates

NIKKEI CHRONICLES #14
Nikkei Family 2: Remembering Roots, Leaving Legacies
Read the stories and give a star to the ones you like the most! Help select our Community Favorite.
Vote for Nima-kai Favorite!
VIRTUAL PROGRAM
Nikkei Uncovered V: a poetry reading
Tuesday, December 9
Hosted by traci kato-kiriyama
Featuring Aaron Caycedo-Kimura, Erica Isomura, and Syd Westley
SUPPORT THE PROJECT
Discover Nikkei’s 20 for 20 campaign celebrates our first 20 years and jumpstarts our next 20. Learn more and donate!