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American Friends Service Committee — Part 1
Page 90
90 / 122
Mapas FEE te She rt ee a a
- ; \_)
had acceis to the facts, is one of the strongest indictments
of the Government. Likewise, no proved case of sabotage
by a Japanese on the Pacific Coast, on or since December 7,
has come to public attention. These facts still have not
been sufficiently publicized, and unfounded rumors con-
tinue to circulate.
Undoubtedly some of the alien Japanese and perhaps a -
few of the citizens are disloyal; these persons, presumably,
are among those taken into custody by th: F.B.J. On
the other hand. it should ae
L.
a, i SnUUIG De
nese aliens are not aliens by choice, but have not been per-
mitted to become American citizens. There is absolutely no
evidence to support the rumors that the Japanese, as @ racial
group, were either disloyal or an organized fifth column.
Certainly many of them five near deferse plants, and vital
harbors, highways, railways and power lines, but so do
millions of Americans, regardless of race, and to deduce
* disloyalty from'this is absurd.
That the Japanese on the West Coast have been in
danger because of their race since December 7, is acknowl-
edged, and from that fact many ‘believe that, however
tragic it may be, the evacuation has been necessary for the
- protection of the Japanese themselves. Some murders, sup-
posediy by Filipinos, naturally created great fear among
the Japanese but, since the first of the year, the number
of these incidents has dropped off, and steps were taken
to protect the Japanese in a way they should be protected—
by increasing focal police and F.B.I. aid. Evacuation
amounts to compulsory protective arrest, which sets a dan- |
gerous precedent in dealing with racial minorities and, in
the long run, greatly adds to the problem of the protection
of this particular minority. Meanwhile, the ‘social, psycho- -
logical and human damage caused by the Government's
policy is immensely more tragic than were the compara.
tively few cases of violence.
_ The economic loss to the Japanese and the Japanese-
Americans has been tremendous. The estimated wealth of
the group, $500,000,000, has diminished greatly, possibly
by as much as 75 or even 90 per cent. The loss of business,
agricultural and professional positions, gained by slow
and patient effort, means that the job of normal living in
American communities once again has to be started almost
from scratch.
Moreover, the effects upon our whole economy will be
pronounced. The 23 per cent of the evacuecs who are in
agriculture produced 40 per cent of. California's truck
~ erops, and in Los Angeles County, where 25,600 of the
county's 40,000 acres of producing farm land are affected, .
white replacements can be found to take over only a frac-
tion of the land. In other helds, 5,000 gardeners in greater
Los Angeles and many- nursery men and floriculturalists
are irteplaccable; fish fanciers will miss the Nippon Gold-
fish Company, largest in the Wrest; bacteriological reseacch
will miss the vital avre produced by a skilled young Nisei;
school boards will have 20,000 fewer elementary pupils
to plan for.
Some of the’ loss to the Japanese is , directly attributable
to profiteering, where expensive electric refrigerators, ra-
‘dios, etc., went. for a song: morc of it ts due to the major
unemployment and financtal problem that has struck them
_.38 2 racial croup sime. December. 2 anitn. the Incepe_eatin a Canctitutional, Amandemamh ta tale ccs
ad sh.
inted out inat most Japa- .
)
Civil liberties have suffered 2 heavy blow, too, for, as
the American Civil Liberties Union recently pointed out,
this action undermines the very basis of constitutional gov-
ernment and means that the Bill of Rights is not applicable
im any area declared military by the Government. The _
equal protection of the Government has been denied these
people who should have equal rights for participation in
’ community life, due process of law, and so on.
mn
eg
™
Psychological Vand physica suffering i is the inevitable ac-
companiment of life in what is essentially a concentration
camp. Some of the evacuees, pafticularly the idealistic
Nisets, ace resolved to make the most of this hardship, and
are going through with it in a spirit of love and a deter-
mination to train themselves and others for a better future.
But tor more of the Niseis, the effect of having thelr prop-
erty destroyed, their hopes for the future dashed, and
chances for normal living ended is one of at least partial
disintegration of personality. There is a fear that they will
be moved out into the desert and left there for many years,
forgotten by white Americans, and the moral problem that
has arisen in most of the camps is an indication of the psy-
chological frustrations that exist.
Living conditions are very crowded, with rooms twenty
by twenty-five feet intended to accommodate ten ‘people.
Eating is communal, and privacy. will be 2 thing almost un-
known, A Nisei girl, commenting on the unpleasant
climate at Manzanar, describes the dust that covers every-
thing, the extreme heat that makes her dread the summer,
and the Jack of anything creative to do. First-hand reports
of visitors to the camps and the Nése‘s who are in them
do not bear dut the romanticised stories that have appeared
*
in the press, and emphasize the great suffering that results .
when so many persons are detained on the desert in close
quarters.
Racial understanding has been dealt a severe blow, for
increased segregation of the Japanese, with corresponding
lack of assimilation into the American community,
feature of the plan. Where whites were coming into con-
tact with the Japanese, they were losing some of their
prejudice, and these contacts are now cut off. ‘For the
Nisei it means being thrown back into a racial consctous-
ness which he considers secondary to American citizenship,
while the white American sees all Japanese lumped to-
gether as disloyal and tends to regard them as inferior
as a group.
Racial intolerance is increased and its solution postponed
by the ev acuation.
ment authorities of the Government will be under great
pressure to release some of the Japanese te do work in the
is a
fe tha a diate F,, she
mi the immediate future ine, tesettle-
fields as fabor pangs, of to participate in other anti-social
ventures. Some of the Rocky Mountain and Middle West-
ern states already are taking action to prevent any perma-
nent resettlement of the Japanese within their boundaries,
and there is every reason to believe that resettlement will
become more and more difficult as time gocs on. Repre~
sentative Rankin, of Mississippi, urges that thes. -unlor-
tuinates be kept in detention for the duration and thea ie
shipped back to Japan, while other reactionarics are adva-
fans ihe.
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