2017-02-20

SALEM, Ore. (AP) – States in the American West are marking the 75th anniversary of the signing of Executive Order 9066 by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt that forced 120,000 Japanese immigrants and Japanese-Americans into internment camps.

Most were from Oregon, California and Washington state. Adults, including the elderly, and children could only bring what they could carry and were transported by bus and train, often with blacked-out windows, They were sent, ostensibly to avoid sabotage and spying, to camps in California, Idaho, Wyoming, Colorado, Arizona and other states as far away as Arkansas.

Oregon, California and Washington are not only marking Sunday’s anniversary, but politicians and activists say America must learn from this dark chapter of history.

Here’s a look at what states are doing to recognize the mass incarceration of Japanese-Americans:

OREGON

The Oregon Legislature is considering a bill to recognize a Day of Remembrance of the mass incarceration.

Carol Suzuki’s father and grandparents were forced to relocate from their home in Oregon’s Hood River Valley to detention camps in California and Idaho. After President Donald Trump recently signed immigration executive orders, her 9-year-old daughter asked if she, too, would be put away.

“Sometimes the words of an innocent child are the ones that affect you the most,” Suzuki testified Monday before the Oregon Senate committee considering the Day of Remembrance bill.

Suzuki blinked away tears as she described the conversation with her daughter, who “should never be afraid of her own government.”

George Nakata, 83, of Portland, told the committee about his firsthand experience with a “dark chapter in American history … not found in many school textbooks.”

He recalled being sent with thousands of other Japanese-Americans to a former livestock exhibition center in Portland, where the families were confined until rural detention camps were built. “I can never forget, upon entering the building, the smell of livestock urine, the pungent odor of manure underneath the wooden floors.”

At the Minidoka relocation center in Idaho, Nakata as a young boy recited the Pledge of Allegiance as he looked out at barbed wire and guard towers from tar-papered barracks.

The committee unanimously endorsed the bill. The House is scheduled to take it up on Monday.

WASHINGTON

Washington state began recognizing Feb. 19 as an annual Day of Remembrance 14 years ago.

Vigils, a taiko drum concert and other events are planned in Seattle to mark the anniversary Sunday.

Gov. Jay Inslee tweeted that “this anniversary should serve as an all too real reminder of what can happen when America acts out of fear.” Inslee also met with former detainees.

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