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Survival
on the Slough: "Shikata Na Gai"
Let
me begin my story from the Assembly Center, the former
Pacific International Exposition Building on Marine
Drive. This was the place we entered in May of 1942.
We were housed in a barn where the animals had been
placed for the exhibition show. Our compartment had
plywood flooring covering the entry way. The only furniture
was the six cots for our family of six. Our clothes
were in two suitcases we were allowed for the entire
family. . . . Our endurance throughout the hot summer
days, with the penetration of animal odors and our anxiety
over our future, finally came to a close in September.
We were all hurded into trains for our next home, [Minidoka]
Hunt, Idaho. Mae
Ninomiya, Kenton resident since 1933
Military Police posting
Civilian Exclusion Order No. 1. Photograph in Final
report, Japanese evacuation from the West coast, 1942.
Washington D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1943,
pg. 435.
On
December 8, 1941, a day after the bombing of Pearl Harbor,
the United States declared war on Japan. President Franklin
Delano Roosevelt immediately announced that all nationals
and subjects of nations at war with the U.S. were enemy
aliens. Unlike European immigrants, racially discriminatory
legislation barred Japanese from becoming U.S. citizens.
When war broke out, Japanese nationals comprised 37.3%
of the Japanese American population in the U.S.
In
February 1942 President Roosevelt, reacting to wartime
hysteria, issued Executive Order 9066 requiring all Japanese
Americans, including those born in the U.S., who were
living on the west coast to relocate to inland areas.
At
the time of our evacuation, I was very bitter. The only
country we knew evicted us from our homes and our businesses.
When the controversy of evacuation began to emerge I
was of the opinion that my alien folks and minor brothers
would be interned. But, never did I think I would be
involved since I had reached adulthood. But, my dad
said 'Shikata Ga Nai' (There is nothing we can do, so
make the best of it.) That was his philosophy.
Mae Okazaki Ninomiya, Kenton
resident since 1933,
Kenton
History
Before
transfer to inland internment camps, the army established
temporary "assembly" centers to gather and house
Japanese families. With their civil rights removed and
few possessions, families such as the Okazakis were held
from May through September, 1942, at the Portland Assembly
Center on north Marine Drive. Assembly Center prisoners
experienced much discomfort, including close quarters,
theft, hunger, cold, and illness. "Today we did not
have any bread for lunch or dinner either. I did not have
enough to eat," wrote Saku Tomita on May 9, 1942.
For
three years the U.S. government held people of Japanese
descent as prisoners in the internment camps. In August,
1945, the Okazaki family returned Kenton where they faced
animosity and resentment from some former neighbors. Many
initially refused to visit their store, but over time,
and with the return of two Okazaki sons who served in
the armed forces, the family resumed their former place
in the community. In 1980, Hidekichi Okazaki received
the prestigious Order of Emperor's Award from the Japanese
government for working toward better relations between
Japan and the United States.
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Executive Order 9066
"Portland Assemby Center: Diary of
Saku Tomita," from Oregon Historical Quarterly, Summer 1980
Oral History -- Mae Ninomiya discusses the
Portland Assembly Center
1945 Oregon State Alien
Land Law

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