Discover Nikkei Logo

https://www.discovernikkei.org/en/interviews/clips/475/

Discharged from the U.S. Army after Pearl Harbor

I was in the service of the United States Army on December 7 that was the station on Angel Island in San Francisco Bay. And the …but in February, actually on February 14, 1942, I was discharged. I was transferred to the reserve court because I was Japanese. And I had a letter to that effect from the commanding officer, saying that army let Japanese back in together. He would be glad to take me back in. I was very disappointed to be released. Very much so. Some of the Niseis were transferred to inland posts if you remember, but others were released. I was the one among those that were released.

I*: When you released, then where did you go?

Came home.

I: Came home.

Yes.

I: And what was it like when you got home?

My father had just been taken by FBI that day. The very morning that I came home, he was taken by FBI. One of the…what do you call it…enemy alien. Enemy alien status. Taken to the…eventually taken to Missoula, Montana.

I: Was your mother frightened?

Oh, yes. Oh yes. She was pretty much upset. And we had the store still open, even though I wasn’t doing much business. Store was open. I came home to that situation and eventually we sold the store.

* “I” indicates an interviewer (Akemi Kikumura Yano).


discrimination interpersonal relations United States Army World War II

Date: December 5, 2005

Location: Oregon, US

Interviewer: Akemi Kikumura Yano, Sojin Kim

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

Interviewee Bio

Ichiro George Azumano was born in Portland, Oregon in 1918 to Issei parents. He was the first-born son in his family and had one sister. His parents gave him his American name, George, years later. George was involved in the Japanese American sports leagues, including baseball and basketball. He attended Japanese school in the late 1920s and early 1930s. George studied business at the University of Oregon.

George was in the U.S. Army stationed at Angel Island in San Francisco when Pearl Harbor was attacked on December 7, 1941. Soon after, however, he was discharged because of his Japanese heritage. When he returned to Portland, he and his family were soon evacuated to the concentration camp in Minidoka, Idaho. George temporarily left the campgrounds for various jobs working in the sugar beets fields near camp and an automobile battery manufacturing company in Dayton, Ohio. He was finally released from camp in October 1944 and worked for the U.S. Army Ordinances Department in Utah.

In 1946, George moved back to Portland with his family and found a job working for an insurance company in Japantown. He eventually opened his own insurance business in 1949 that later became Azumano Travel, a travel agency that primarily served Japanese Americans. Today, Azumano Travel is one of the most successful and well-respected businesses throughout the Pacific Northwest. (October 26, 2006)

Frank Emi
en
ja
es
pt
Frank Emi

Draft resisters sent to jail

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

en
ja
es
pt
Young O. Kim
en
ja
es
pt
Young O. Kim

Appearance vs. Combat Effectiveness

(1919 - 2006) World War II and Korean War veteran

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

Would do the same again

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

en
ja
es
pt
Young O. Kim
en
ja
es
pt
Young O. Kim

Basic Training

(1919 - 2006) World War II and Korean War veteran

en
ja
es
pt
Young O. Kim
en
ja
es
pt
Young O. Kim

A visit to Jerome after OCS

(1919 - 2006) World War II and Korean War veteran

en
ja
es
pt
Young O. Kim
en
ja
es
pt
Young O. Kim

Do it for all Asians

(1919 - 2006) World War II and Korean War veteran

en
ja
es
pt
Young O. Kim
en
ja
es
pt
Young O. Kim

Horrible pictures of war

(1919 - 2006) World War II and Korean War veteran

en
ja
es
pt
Young O. Kim
en
ja
es
pt
Young O. Kim

Near-death experience

(1919 - 2006) World War II and Korean War veteran

en
ja
es
pt
Young O. Kim
en
ja
es
pt
Young O. Kim

General Ryder’s faith in the 100th infantry battalion

(1919 - 2006) World War II and Korean War veteran

en
ja
es
pt
Young O. Kim
en
ja
es
pt
Young O. Kim

Comfortable in combat

(1919 - 2006) World War II and Korean War veteran

en
ja
es
pt
Sakaye Shigekawa
en
ja
es
pt
Sakaye Shigekawa

Lost respect for the flag after incarceration

(1913-2013) Doctor specializing in obstetrics in Southern California

en
ja
es
pt
Sakaye Shigekawa
en
ja
es
pt
Sakaye Shigekawa

Traumatic experiences before camp

(1913-2013) Doctor specializing in obstetrics in Southern California

en
ja
es
pt
Sakaye Shigekawa
en
ja
es
pt
Sakaye Shigekawa

Joining the hospital unit in Santa Anita Race Track

(1913-2013) Doctor specializing in obstetrics in Southern California

en
ja
es
pt
Sakaye Shigekawa
en
ja
es
pt
Sakaye Shigekawa

“Everybody went in like sheep”

(1913-2013) Doctor specializing in obstetrics in Southern California

en
ja
es
pt
Henry Suto
en
ja
es
pt
Henry Suto

The horror of Hiroshima after the atomic bombing (Japanese)

(1928 - 2008) Drafted into both the Japanese Imperial Army and the U.S. Army.

en
ja
es
pt

Discover Nikkei Updates

SUMMER INTERNSHIP
Discover Nikkei is hosting a summer intern through the Nikkei Community Internship. College students, apply by April 4!
SUPPORT THE PROJECT
Discover Nikkei’s 20 for 20 campaign celebrates our first 20 years and jumpstarts our next 20. Learn more and donate!
PROJECT UPDATES
New Site Design
See exciting new changes to Discover Nikkei. Find out what’s new and what’s coming soon!