Friday, May 1, 2009

Santa Fe Japanese American Internment Camp

World War II was fought in order to save the world from Adolph Hitler’s ruthless Gestapo, the Nazis’ inhuman treatment of conquered people, and concentration camps in Europe, as well as from Japanese military aggression in Asia. How paradoxical that in fighting to prevent such barbaric behavior, the United States itself imprisoned 120,000 Japanese-Americans, two-thirds of them U.S. citizens, in “concentration” camps during the war.

In 1942, during the months immediately after Pearl Harbor, there was widespread panic in the U.S. about possible attacks on the West Coast. The disaster at Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, was blamed by many Americans as due to espionage by Japanese Americans, rather than on the lack of preparedness by American military forces. Actually the Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civilians declared after the war that “Not a single documented act of espionage, sabotage, or fifth column activity was committed by an American citizen of Japanese ancestry or by a resident Japanese alien on the West Coast.”

The Santa Fe Internment Detention Camp and later Internment Camp housed only male internees who were identified as “enemy aliens” and were separated from their families because of their potential to be spies because of their livelihoods or community leadership. Ironically, these “dangerous” detainees or internees were brought to Santa Fe, New Mexico, the gateway for persons working on the largest secret of World War II, the atomic bomb research in nearby Los Alamos.

On April 20, 2002, an historical marker was placed overlooking the site of the former camp to identify the internment camp life and internment camp conditions. It succinctly states:

DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE SANTA FE INTERNMENT CAMP

At this site, due east and below the hill, 4555 men of Japanese ancestry were incarcerated in a Department of Justice Internment Camp from March 1942 to April 1946. Most were excluded by law from becoming United States citizens and were removed primarily from the West Coast and Hawaii.

During World War II, their loyalty to the Untied States was questioned. Many of the men held here without due process were long time resident religious leaders, businessmen, teachers, fishermen, farmers, and others. No person of Japanese ancestry in the U.S. was ever charged or convicted of espionage throughout the course of the war.

Many of the internees had relatives who served with distinction in the American Armed Forces in Europe and in the Pacific.

This marker is placed here as a reminder that history is a valuable teacher only if we do not forget our past.

Information about the Santa Fe Internment Camp is difficult to find, so the chapter in Silent Voices of World War II is rare, describing life in the Japanese American camp.

* * * * *

The following are sites where Japanese Americans were held, visited by N. Bartlit preparing for her second book about the Japanese American internment in Santa Fe, NM.

U.S. Department of Justice Camp Sites (three men-only sites; only one for family)
  • Santa Fe, NM
  • Missoula, MT
U.S. Army War Relocation Centers
  • Minidoka, ID
  • Amache, CO
  • Replica of Manzanar, CA exhibit at the Japanese American National Museum, Los Angeles, CA
U.S. Army Camp
  • Lordsburg, NM
Japanese American community
  • San Jose, CA Little Tokyo, where museum and downtown has educational plaques about the internment camp evacuations
  • Torrance, CA “Go For Broke” headquarters
N. Bartlit has been attending or presenting talks on her WWII research since 1997 at regional conferences on Asian affairs held from El Paso, TX; Boulder and Denver, CO; Salt Lake City and Ogden, UT; Phoenix and Tucson, AZ, Boise, ID; Long Beach, CA; Seattle, WA; and Albuquerque, NM. She attended a national Asian conference in Boston, MA and spoke about the Santa Fe camp at an international conference in Tokyo, Japan.

Contact Bartlit/Buy Silent Voices



1 comment:

Unknown said...

YOU CAN'T BE SERIOUS!! YOU DON'T KNOW OF THE "BLACK DRAGONS" WHO WERE THREATENING PRO-U.S. INTERNEES WITH DEATH? YOU'VE NEVER ENCOUNTERED MS. ELAINE YONEDA'S BIO 'RED ANGEL' WHERE SHE HAD TO FLEE IN THE MIDDLE OF THE NIGHT INTO THE ADM. SIDE OF THE CAMP WITH HER SON TO ESCAPE THREATS FROM SUCH AS HARRY UYENO? YOU DON'T KNOW OF HER HUSBAND, VOLUNTEERING FOR U.S. SERVICE AND BEING TOLD BY UYENO, "IN A FEW MONTHS, WHEN THE JAPANESE INFANTRY MARCHES INTO THIS CAMP, "YOU'LL BE THE FIRST ONE I HAVE STOOD UP AGAINST THE WALL AND SHOT!"

YOUR IGNORANCE IS, SADLY, COMMONPLACE. WHILE SOME PRO-AXIS JAPANESE HERE WERE KNOWN TO OUR MILITARY INTELL. SERVICES, THERE WAS WAS NO POSSIBLE WAY TO HAVE ANTICIPATED THE HATRED AGAINST THE ALLIED CAUSE AS REPRESENTED BY THOSE SUCH AS UYENO AND HIS FASCIST COHORTS: THEY WERE ANONYMOUS AMONG THE JAPANESE RESIDING HERE.

UNLIKE, AMONG THE GERMAN AND ITALIAN PRO-AXIS SYMPATHIZERS,THE U.S. INELLIGENCE ORGANIZATIONS, WITHOUT ANY PROF.AGENTS WHO COULD USE JAPANESE WITH NATIVE FLUENCY.

THE J.A.C.L. WAS COOPERATIVE BUT COULD EXPECT BEATINGS FROM THE PRO-FACISTS: SEARCH, ON-LINE, FOR 'FRED TAYAMA', SHOULD YOU DOUBT MY WORDS- OR PERHAPS SEARCH FOR 'TOKIE' SLOCUM? SLOCUM DECLINED TO FURTHER ASSIST THE F.B.I. ON THE GROUNDS THAT HE WOULD FIND HIMSELF "IN A WOODEN KIMONO".

WE DIDN'T NEED A FEW THOUSAND PRO-JAPANESE FANATICS IN THE WEST COAST DEFENSE ZONE ALL CAPABLE OF DOING WHAT TIMOTHY MCVEIGH DID TO THE FED. BUILDING WITH ONE SMALL TRUCK LOADED WITH CHEMICAL.

LINCOLN SUSPENDED BASIC CIVIL LIBERTIES ('HABEAS CORPUS')- ALL OUR MILITARY, AT THAT TIME~ (AND TO THIS DAY)WERE SHIPPED TO BARRACKS, WERE DENIED THEIR CIVIL RIGHTS IN A SIGNIFICANT MANNER AND TO EXPECT THE WWII INTERNEES TO NOT BE SIMILARLY INCONVENIENCED IS SENSELESS. BTY: 10,00 NO JAPANESE AXIS WERE INTERNED AND MANY DEPORTED TO GERMANY, ITALY, ETC. (SEARCH FOR 'ARTHUR JACOBS'). WHY NO ACKNOWLEDGEMENT OF THEIR INTERNMENT? "HINT": IT REFUTES THE 'RACIST' CHARGE?

I'M SURE YOU ARE A KINDLY PERSON, BUT YOUR MISUNDERSTANDING IS UNFORTUNATE..

LEE BRANCH. PH.D