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Author shares reality of citizens being imprisoned without a trial during WWII


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By Kathryn Reed

“Crimes of the government can become sins against the innocent, especially in the mind of a child.”

“In 1942, all three branches of the government violated the Constitution.”

“Immigrants are often scapegoats.”

Those are some of the thoughts Jeanne Watatsuki Houston shared with nearly 200 people who listened to her speak this month in South Lake Tahoe. She, with husband James Houston, wrote “Farewell to Manzanar” – a story about her three-year internment at the Eastern Sierra “prison” during World War II.

She was a 7-year-old living in Southern California in 1942 when the government started posting posters on telephone poles telling those who were of Japanese heritage to turn up at bus depots and train stations on a certain day. It didn’t matter if they were U.S. citizens.

Jeanne Houston tells her story about being forced to live in an internment camp during World War II. Photo/Kathryn Reed

Jeanne Houston tells her story about being forced to live in an internment camp during World War II. Photo/Kathryn Reed

“We looked like the enemy,” Houston said.

Soldiers with guns herded them onto their transport. While not confrontational, at least for Houston’s family, it was still a military act.

Her father had already been whisked away. He was arrested the first day after Pearl Harbor because he was not a citizen. He had come to the United States with his parents in 1904 when he was 17.

“He was considered a dangerous person,” Houston said. He was a fisherman by trade. Her dad was sent to a federal prison in Bismarck, N.D.

The laws didn’t allow him to become a citizen until 1952.

“There had already been 100 years of anti-Asian laws,” the author said.

And while the United States was at war with other countries at this time, it was only Japanese who were rousted from their homes. Those other countries were in Europe where the people looked more like those in Washington, D.C., who were making the decisions.

It has been 40 years since Houston published the book. It took her more than two decades after being released from what was essentially a prison – not a camp in any sense of the word – to begin writing her story. It was a story that her husband did not know before they married.

“I don’t want others to feel guilty, it is understanding we want,” Houston said.

She realizes this segment of U.S. history is still unknown to many. People don’t realize the government rounded up 120,000 people – 70 percent of who were born in the United States – and sent them to one of 10 internment camps. That is why she continues to tell her story. (The May 14 talk was sponsored by the South Lake Tahoe Friends of the Library.)

“I don’t think it will happen again, but I think it could,” Houston said.

Today, Manzanar is a National Historic Site. It’s a bit like a ghost town. While Manzanar means apple orchard in Spanish, the dusty outpost in the Owens Valley with decaying remnants of the past and a visitors center with stories of the country’s racist act, sits in the middle of nowhere as a reminder of what the government can do to its own people.

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Comments (4)
  1. Denise says - Posted: May 19, 2013

    This was the follow up comments from Mrs. Houston, “I am now home and of course, catching up with emails and settling back into domestic routine…in that order! Thank you so much for a most enjoyable and hospitable visit to South Lake Tahoe. It was restful and the natural beauty of the very unique and pristine (still) environment was inspiring. I thought the library event was very successful, and I congratulate you on your part in making it so. The audience was genuinely interested, and I felt they seemed grateful that the library had sponsored the talk.”

  2. Know Bears says - Posted: May 19, 2013

    I’m grateful to all who share their personal stories of this shameful time in our history.

    One wants to believe such things won’t ever happen again, but the sad truth is that human nature doesn’t change. Our best defense against repetition is to keep the stories alive. Our second best defense is to elect diverse representatives who will further diversify the judicial branch of government.

  3. ljames says - Posted: May 19, 2013

    well said by “Know Bears” – ditto

  4. Not over yet says - Posted: May 23, 2013

    Know Bears/All American Citizens: The tools for American Citizens being unconstitutionally detained “Indefinitely, without trial” are already in place. Google ‘National Defense Authorization Act of 2012’ and the ‘NDAA of 2013.’ These CURRENT LAWS allow the US Government detain you indefinitely, suspends habius corpus, and allows the U.S. Government detain ANYONE who is deemed a threat to Government or U.S. policy. Makes you proud to be a part of the “Land of the Free!”