denshoによるコンテンツ

Detention Facility at Nyssa, Oregon
モルゲン・ヤング, Denshō
From May to November 1942, Nyssa [pronounced NISS-a], Oregon, served as the site of the first farm labor camp organized during the wartime Japanese American experience. Established as a result of the “Oregon Plan” for the forced removal and confinement of the state’s Nikkei residents, the camp held approximately three …

Oregon Plan
モルゲン・ヤング, Denshō
During the April 7, 1942 Salt Lake City governors’ meeting, George K. Aiken, executive secretary to Governor Charles Sprague of Oregon, presented the state’s plan for the forced removal and incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II. The so-called “Oregon Plan” was ultimately rejected by the War Relocation Authority …

Terrorism, 1945 Style
ブライアン・ニイヤ, Denshō
One of the articles I’ve been working on for the Densho Encyclopedia on and off is a piece on the terroristic incidents that greeted the first Nisei to return to the West Coast in the early months of 1945. I had remembered reading a bit about houses being burned down, …

From Densho's Archives
Hatsuji Becomes Harry: Names and Nisei Identity
Denshō
“When I got married and had kids, I didn’t try to share with them too many Japanese things. And when they were born, I made sure none of them had Japanese first names.” —May K. Sasaki

From Densho's Archives
Evacuation or Exclusion? Japanese Americans Exiled
Denshō
“They came here to be American.” —Earl Hanson

From Densho's Archives
Real Friends: Standing by the Japanese Americans
Denshō
"Everywhere there is community feeling to be mended, vicious legislation to be defeated, many urgent jobs calling for attention from real friends of the real America." --Letter from Friends of the American Way

From Densho's Archives
Pioneer Generation: Remembering the Issei
Denshō
They were early pioneers. And especially on farms it was very difficult for them." --Kara Kondo

From Densho's Archives
International Internees: The Family Camp at Crystal City
Denshō
"The bitterness of the incarceration was there, but they were able to circumvent it somehow and live a pretty decent...community family life." --Mako Nakagawa

From Densho's Archives
International Lives: The Horiuchi Interviews
Denshō
“The Nikkei I knew that were involved in the occupation…they were able to work more closely with the Japanese because the Japanese looked upon them as someone that could understand their culture, their history, and their motivation.”—Lucius Horiuchi

From Densho's Archives
Profile in Courage: George Sakato and a Belated Medal of Honor
Denshō
“I’m no hero, but I wear it for the guys that didn’t come back.” — George “Joe” Sakato