Sunday, July 11, 2010

All Things In Common


On of my favorite books last year was Jamie Ford's "Hotel On The Corner Of Bitter And Sweet" which, in large part dealt with the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II. It was certainly not the first time I had heard of the internment but it definitely opened my eyes as to the way the movement of these people was handled. And it was the first time I recalled reading a book that talked about this part of American history.

Then, just a few months later, I picked up Jean Davies Okimoto's "The Love Ceiling." The mother of the lead character, Anna, was Japanese and her family had been sent with other Seattle area Japanese Americans to an internment camp in Minidoka, Idaho, the same camp that the characters in "Bitter and Sweet" were sent to.

This is that camp. Can you even imagine what it felt like to come from verdant, wet Seattle to this? To say nothing of having to give up nearly everything that you owned, never to get it back? To be honest, given the fact that Russian spies were just found to have been living deep undercover in the U.S., I can somewhat understand why Americans would have been concerned that there might be some spies amongst the Japanese in America. But it is almost beyond comprehension that an entire population, nearly all innocent of any wrongdoing, would be stripped of nearly everything they own, sent hundreds of miles away from their homes and put into camps that were not nearly sufficient to handle the number of people they had to handle nor the climate in which they were located. Shameful.

Thanks to both of these authors for bringing this part of our history into the light.

9 comments:

  1. I like the Hotel on the Corner of Bitter Sweet. I understand why people might have been afraid that the Japanese were spies but to sell these people's homes and everything they had without evidence was shameful. We don't do that to convicted felons.
    Ann
    Cozy In Texas

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  2. Great post on a subject that I don't is discussed near enough in US History. Another great book is Tallgrass by Sandra Dallas...I read that one right after Hotel.

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  3. I'm so glad I finally got to read Hotel this year and it was everything I expected it to be. Not only did I learn much about this dark period of U.S. history but the story just swept me away.

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  4. This is certainly a part of our history that we need to remember so we never repeat it. It's amazing what people do because of hysteria.

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  5. We did the same here to Germans during WWII.
    Unfortunately we have echoes of similar themes running through Oz society today with our treatment of asylum seekers who come into Oz by boat.
    Humans are sometimes rally bad at being humane to one another.

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  6. I haven't read much about internment camps during this period of history, but it does sound like a shameful situation from an American perspective. I have heard such good things about Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet, but for some reason, I always get it mixed up with The Literary and Potato Peel Society. I think the covers may be sort of similar, but it never fails, I always get those two mixed up!

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  7. I first learned about this issue when I read Obasan by Joy Kogawa in college. It's about the relocation of Japanese Canadians during the war.

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  8. I've never heard of "Obasan," Anna. Add another one to the wish list! I guess I wasn't even aware that Japanese Canadians had also been subjected to internment. I love how much I'm learning from comments on these posts!

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  9. I once read a romance fiction that dealt with the same theme. I forgot the name of the book but Japanese internment was at its core. It was a shocking thing to read about. To hold the members of a community guilty of a decision they had no part in.

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