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Order 9066
Author: APM Reports & The Smithsonian
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© Copyright 2021 Minnesota Public Radio
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Order 9066 chronicles the history of the WWII Japanese American Incarceration through vivid, first-person accounts of those who lived through it. The series explores how this shocking violation of American democracy came to pass, and its legacy in the present.
14 Episodes
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Japanese Americans incarcerated during World War Two demand that the federal government take account of their suffering and make reparations.
At the end of 1944, the U.S. government lifted the order barring people of Japanese ancestry from the West Coast. Many people freed from camp faced racism and poverty as they tried to rebuild their lives. Some found that leaving camp was even harder than being sent there.
Two men who were imprisoned at Heart Mountain as boys remember their time in camp and how the experience shaped them as adults.
The Japanese Americans who protested their incarceration and defied the pressure to prove their patriotism.
A handmade pin tells an improbable love story from camp.
More than 33,000 Japanese American men and women served in World War II. They fought as soldiers in Europe, and as translators in the Pacific.
It was a time to persevere in the face of the unendurable, and to do so with dignity. The Japanese term for that is Gaman.
Kishi Bashi, the renowned alt-rock musician, has been improvising music in places connected to the Japanese American incarceration. That includes the top of Heart Mountain, in Wyoming. Hear Kishi Bashi climb the mountain and perform a song that is part of his "songfilm" project, Omoiyari.
In the first months of incarceration, Japanese Americans were hit with the humiliating conditions of camp life. The U.S. government denied that people of Japanese ancestry living in the "assembly centers" were prisoners, but the first summer in these camps proved otherwise.
Musicians Julian Saporiti and Erin Aoyama perform songs about the incarceration in a former barrack at Heart Mountain in Wyoming. With a special appearance from Kishi Bashi.
After Pearl Harbor, pressure grew to forcibly relocate all persons of Japanese ancestry from the Pacific coast. This episode tells the story behind FDR's decision to sign Order 9066, and Japanese Americans recall the painful process of leaving their lives and belongings -- and even their family pets -- behind.
Order 9066 co-host Sab Shimono's family was incarcerated during WWII. He shares childhood memories of living behind barbed wire.
Japanese warplanes bombed Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. Hours later, the FBI began rounding up people of Japanese ancestry on the West Coast. This episode explores the history of anti-Asian prejudice in the United States that laid the groundwork for an assault on Japanese American communities after Pearl Harbor. Narrated by veteran actor Sab Shimono.
First episode: Monday, Feb. 19.
Very well done!We all need to remember thistragic piece of history especially right now!
Excellent podcast. I thought I knew a lot about the incarceration of my family, but I learned a lot. an important and, unfortunately, still relevant story.
Thank you for providing this podcast. Preserving the ugly past through this medium helps educate us of our American history. Growing up in Hawaii with grand parents of this generation, we have heard the stories of the bombing of Pearl Harbor and of the 442/100 th battalion.
unfortunately none of this seems too far fetched of a possibility to happen even today
I always thought this should be a movie. I’ve written it 100 times in my head. I lived in Elk Grove for 20 years and was close to Mary and Marielle Tsukamoto. Our school district had required 4th grade curriculum about the internment camps and read Journey to Topaz. The book by the Tsukamoto’s, “We the People” is an amazing work. EG was the largest supplier of strawberries in CA. When the strawberry farms owned by Japanese Americans were taken, that agricultural gem never really bounced back. At the Smithsonian in DC, there are lots of photos of the towns of Florin and Elk Grove. It’s amazing. I noticed that recently the new immigrants (mostly Hmong) have started up road side booths selling strawberries as the Japanese immigrants did so many years ago. It’s an amazing story and I wish you the best of luck!