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Tule Lake National Monument

The Tule Lake National Monument[4] in Modoc and Siskiyou counties in California, consists primarily of the site of the Tule Lake War Relocation Center, one of ten concentration camps constructed in 1942 by the United States government to incarcerate Japanese Americans forcibly removed from their homes on the West Coast. They totaled nearly 120,000 people, more than two-thirds of whom were United States citizens. Among the inmates, the notation "鶴嶺湖 (Tsurureiko)" was sometimes applied.[citation needed]

Tule Lake National Monument
View of the Tule Lake War Relocation Center
LocationNortheast side CA 139,
Newell, California
Coordinates41°53′22″N 121°22′29″W / 41.88944°N 121.37472°W / 41.88944; -121.37472
WebsiteTule Lake National Monument
NRHP reference No.06000210[1]
CHISL No.850-2[2]
Significant dates
Added to NRHPFebruary 17, 2006
Designated NHLFebruary 17, 2006[3]

After a period of use, this facility was renamed the Tule Lake Segregation Center in 1943, and used as a maximum security, segregation camp to separate and hold those prisoners considered disloyal or disruptive to the operations of other camps. Inmates from other camps were sent here to segregate them from the general population. Draft resisters and others who protested the injustices of the camps, including by their answers on the loyalty questionnaire, were sent here. At its peak, Tule Lake Segregation Center (with 18,700 inmates) was the largest of the ten camps and the most controversial.[3] 29,840 people were held there over the four years it was open.[5]

After the war it became a holding area for Japanese Americans slated for deportation or expatriation to Japan, including some who had renounced US citizenship under duress. Many joined a class action suit because of civil rights abuses; many gained the chance to stay in the United States through court hearings but did not regain their citizenship due to opposition by the Department of Justice. The camp was not closed until March 20, 1946, months after the end of the war. Twenty years later, members of the class action suit gained restoration of US citizenship through court rulings.

California later designated this Tule Lake camp site as a California Historical Landmark[2] and in 2006, it was named a National Historic Landmark.[3] In December 2008, the Tule Lake Unit was designated by President George W. Bush as one of nine sites—the only one in the contiguous 48 states—to be part of the new World War II Valor in the Pacific National Monument, marking areas of major events during the war.[4] In addition to remains of the concentration camp, this unit includes Tulelake camp, also used during the war; as well as the rock formation known as the Peninsula/Castle Rock. The John D. Dingell, Jr. Conservation, Management, and Recreation Act, signed March 12, 2019, split up the three units of the monument, creating a new Tule Lake National Monument.[6]

History edit

 
Tule Lake War Relocation Center - Master Layout

Executive Order 9066, issued by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in early 1942 as a response to the attack on Pearl Harbor, authorized establishing an Exclusion Zone on the West Coast, from which local military authorities could remove certain populations under wartime exigency. Military commanders ordered the forced removal and incarceration of the nearly 120,000 Japanese Americans living on the West Coast of the United States, two-thirds of whom were United States citizens. A late 20th-century study revealed that internal government studies of the time recommended against such mass exclusion and incarceration, and the study concluded this decision was based on racism, wartime hysteria and failed political leadership.

The War Relocation Authority (WRA) built ten concentration camps, referred to euphemistically as "relocation centers," in remote rural areas in the interior of the country. Tule Lake Relocation Center opened on May 27, 1942, and initially held approximately 11,800 Japanese Americans, who were primarily from Sacramento, King and Hood River counties in California, Washington and Oregon, respectively.[7]

The Tulean Dispatch is a newsletter that was established in June 1942 and ended in October 1943, when Tule Lake became a segregation center. It was the shortest-running newspaper of the ten concentration camps.[8]

In late 1943, the WRA issued a questionnaire intended to assess the loyalty of imprisoned Japanese Americans. The "loyalty questionnaire," as it came to be known, was originally a form circulated among draft-age men whom the military hoped to conscript into service—after assessing their loyalty and "Americanness." It soon was made mandatory for all adults in the ten camps.[9] Two questions stirred up confusion and unrest among camp inmates. Question 27 asked, "Are you willing to serve in the armed forces of the United States on combat duty, wherever ordered?" The final question 28 asked, "Will you swear unqualified allegiance to the United States and faithfully defend the United States from any or all attack by foreign or domestic forces, and forswear any form of allegiance or obedience to the Japanese emperor, or any other foreign government, power or organization?"

The first question met resistance from young men who, while not opposed to military service outright, felt insulted that the government, having stripped them of their rights as citizens, would ask them to risk their lives in combat. Many responded with qualified statements such as, "I'll serve in the Army when my family is freed," or refused to answer the questions altogether.

Many interns had problems with the second question. Many were insulted that the question implied they ever had allegiance to a country they had either left behind decades before or, for most US citizens, never visited. Others, especially the non-citizen Issei, feared they would be deported to Japan no matter how they answered, and worried that an affirmative answer would cause them to be seen as enemy aliens by the Japanese. Issei, and many Nisei and Kibei who held dual citizenship, worried they would lose their Japanese citizenship, leaving them stateless if they were expatriated from the United States, which they feared was inevitable, given what had already occurred. In addition to these concerns, some inmates answered "no" to both questions in protest of their imprisonment and loss of civil rights.[10] Often Issei and Kibei, who spoke little or no English, simply did not understand the poorly phrased questions or their implications, and did not answer.

Tule Lake Segregation Center edit

 
Japanese Americans who protested or resisted the unjust World War II detention were segregated and imprisoned at Tule Lake. More than 24,000 men, women and children were confined here.[citation needed]

In 1943 the center was renamed the Tule Lake Segregation Center.[11] The War Relocation Authority proposed to use it to separate inmates suspected of being disloyal or those who protested conditions and were disruptive in their camps. It was fortified as a maximum security facility and it quickly became the most repressive of the government's 10 concentration camps.[3] Interns who had responded with unqualified "yes" answers to the loyalty questionnaire were given the choice to transfer from Tule Lake to another WRA camp. Approximately 6,500 "loyal" Tule Lake inmates were transferred to six camps in Colorado, Utah, Idaho, and Arkansas.

The more than 12,000 imprisoned Japanese Americans classified as "disloyal" because of their responses to the poorly worded loyalty questions were gradually transferred to Tule Lake during the remainder of 1943.[7][12] Unsanitary, squalid living conditions, inadequate medical care, poor food, and unsafe or underpaid working conditions prompted prisoner protests at Tule Lake and several other camps. On November 14, after a series of meetings and demonstrations by prisoners over the poor living conditions at the overpopulated camp, the army imposed martial law in Tule Lake.[7][12] The Army had additional barracks constructed early in 1944 to accommodate a second influx of segregated inmates, pushing the already swollen population to 18,700.[12] The camp quickly became violent and unsafe. Martial law in Tule Lake ended on January 15, 1944, but many prisoners were bitter after months of living with a curfew, unannounced barracks searches, and restrictions that put a stop to recreational activities and most employment in the camp.[7]

In the spring of 1944, Ernest Besig of the Northern California branch of the ACLU became aware of a hastily constructed stockade at Tule Lake, in which internees were routinely being brutalized and held for months without due process. Besig was forbidden by the national ACLU to intervene on behalf of the stockade prisoners or even to visit the Tule Lake camp without prior written approval from the ACLU's Roger Baldwin.[13] Unable to help directly, Besig turned to civil rights attorney Wayne M. Collins for assistance. Collins, using the threat of habeas corpus suits, managed to have the stockade closed down. A year later, after learning that the stockade had been reestablished, he returned to the camp and had it closed down for good.[13][14]

On July 1, the Renunciation Act of 1944, drafted by Attorney General Francis Biddle, was passed into law; U.S. citizens could, during time of war, renounce their citizenship without first leaving the country—and once they did, the government could treat them as enemy aliens, and detain or deport them with impunity. Angry at the abuses of their U.S. citizenship and convinced there was nothing left for them in the country of their birth, or coerced either by WRA authorities and pro-Japan groups in camp, a total of 5,589 Nisei and Kibei internees[12] chose to renounce their citizenship.[15][16] Ninety-eight percent of those who renounced their citizenship were inmates at Tule Lake, where conditions had been so harsh.[17]

 
Internees transplanting celery at Tule Lake War Relocation Center

In 1945 after the war's end, the other nine WRA camps were closed as Japanese Americans gradually returned to their hometowns or settled elsewhere. Tule Lake was operated to hold those who had renounced their citizenship and Issei who had requested repatriation to Japan. Most no longer wished to leave the United States (and many had never truly wanted to leave in the first place). Those who wanted to stay in the United States and regain their citizenship (if they had it), were confined in Tule Lake until hearings at which their cases would be heard and fates determined. After the last cases were decided, the camp closed in March 1946. Although these Japanese Americans were released from camp and allowed to stay in the U.S., Nisei and Kibei who had renounced their citizenship were not able to have it restored. Wayne M. Collins filed a class action suit on their behalf and the presiding judge voided the renunciations, finding they had been given under duress, but the ruling was overturned by the Department of Justice.[12]

After a 23-year legal battle, Collins finally succeeded in gaining restoration in the late 1960s of the citizenship of those covered by the class action suit.[18][19] Collins also helped 3,000 of the 4,327 Japanese Americans originally slated for deportation remain in the United States as their choice.[17]

Victory for Tule Lake draft resisters edit

 
Mr. Masaaki Kuwabara (1913–1993)

Some of the Japanese-American draft resisters wanted to use their cases to challenge their incarceration and loss of rights as US citizens. United States v. Masaaki Kuwabara,[20] was the only World War II-era Japanese-American draft resistance case to be dismissed out of court based on a due process violation of the U.S. Constitution. It was a forerunner of the Korematsu and Endo cases argued before the US Supreme Court, later in December 1944.

Judge Louis E. Goodman went out of his way to help fellow native Californian and lead defendant Masaaki Kuwabara by hand-picking his defense attorney, Blaine McGowan, who entered a Motion to Quash Proceedings based on the government's abrogation of his client's due process rights, guaranteed to every American citizen by the U.S. Constitution. Without explicitly describing Kuwabara as a victim of federal anti-Japanese racism, Judge Goodman viewed the man's experience in this light. He ruled against the United States, which incarcerated the defendant in a U.S. concentration camp; categorized him as a Class 4-C Enemy Alien; and then drafted him into military service. Kuwabara refused to obey the draft until his rights as an American citizen were restored to him.

Events since the late 20th century edit

Japanese-American activists revisited the civil rights issues of the forced relocation and incarceration of their people from the West Coast. They were the only ethnic group associated with the Axis Powers who were incarcerated en masse in the United States. In Hawaii, where 150,000 Japanese Americans comprised one-third of the population, only a small number were interned during the war. Japanese-American groups began to organize to educate the public, build support for their case, and lobby the government for redress. Finally the Japanese American Citizens League joined this movement, although it had initially opposed it.

Pilgrimages edit

Starting in 1974, Tule Lake was the site of several pilgrimages by activists calling for an official apology from the U.S. government for the injustices to Japanese Americans, both citizens and non-citizens. The pilgrimages (every even year, around the 4th of July), serving educational purposes, continue to this day. This Redress Movement gradually gained widespread support and Congress passed the Civil Liberties Act of 1988, which was signed into law by President Ronald Reagan. It included an official governmental apology for the injustices and payment of compensation to camp survivors. A similar law was passed in 1992 to provide for compensation to additional Japanese Americans.

Groups making the annual pilgrimage have organized them around specific themes, and used them as a basis for education, as in the following:

Recent themes
  • 2000 – 'Honoring our Living Treasures, Forging New Links' (7/1-4)
  • 2002 – 'As We Revisit the Meaning of Patriotism and Loyalty' (7/4-7)
  • 2004 – 'Citizens Betrayed' (7/2-5)
  • 2006 – 'Dignity and Survival in a Divided Community'
  • 2009 – 'Shared Remembrances' (7/2-5)
  • 2010 – 'Untold Stories of Tule Lake' (7/2-5)
  • 2012 – 'Understanding No-No and Renunciation' (6/30-7/3)

Federal grant program edit

On December 21, 2006, U.S. President George W. Bush signed H.R. 1492 into law, creating the Japanese American Confinement Sites grant program. This authorized the appropriation of $38,000,000 in federal grant money to preserve and interpret the system of Japanese-American incarceration sites, including the temporary WCCA sites, the ten WRA concentration camps and the Department of Justice internment camps.[21]

Monument management edit

 
Map of the Tule Lake National Monument

The Monument is jointly managed by the National Park Service (NPS) and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) with a total area of 1,391 acres (5.63 km2).[22][23][24]

The national monument consists of three separate units: the Tule Lake Segregation Center near Newell, nearby Camp Tulelake, and a rock formation known as the Peninsula/Castle Rock near Newell. The Tule Lake Segregation Center is solely managed by the NPS. Camp Tulelake is jointly managed by the NPS and USFWS; the USFWS manages/owns the land, and the NPS maintains the buildings and provides interpretive programs. The Peninsula/Castle Rock is solely managed by the USFWS. Locally, USFWS responsibilities are handled by the administration of Lava Beds National Monument and the Tule Lake National Wildlife Refuge.

Notable inmates edit

 
Recent UC Berkeley valedictorian Harvey Itano at Sacramento Assembly Center in May 1942, prior to his incarceration at Tule Lake

Terminology edit

Since the end of World War II, there has been debate over the terminology used to refer to Tule Lake, and the other camps in which Japanese Americans were imprisoned by the United States Government during the war.[27][28][29] Tule Lake has been referred to as a "relocation camp," "relocation center," "internment camp", "concentration camp", and "segregation center," and the controversy over which term is the most accurate and appropriate continues into the early 21st century.[30][31] Activists and scholars believe the government terms: relocation and internment, are euphemisms for forced deportation and concentration camps.

In 1998, use of the term "concentration camps" gained greater credibility prior to the opening of an exhibit at Ellis Island about the World War II incarceration of Japanese Americans. Initially, the American Jewish Committee (AJC) and the National Park Service, which manages Ellis Island, objected to the use of the term in the exhibit.[32] But, during a subsequent meeting held at the offices of the AJC in New York City, leaders representing Japanese Americans and Jewish Americans reached an understanding about the use of the term.[33] After the meeting, the Japanese American National Museum and the AJC issued a joint statement (which was included in the exhibit) that read in part:

A concentration camp is a place where people are imprisoned not because of any crimes they have committed, but simply because of who they are. Although many groups have been singled out for such persecution throughout history, the term 'concentration camp' was first used at the turn of the century in the Spanish–American and Boer Wars. During World War II, America's concentration camps were clearly distinguishable from Nazi Germany's. Nazi camps were places of torture, barbarous medical experiments and summary executions; some were extermination centers with gas chambers. Six million Jews were slaughtered in the Holocaust. Many others, including Gypsies, Poles, homosexuals and political dissidents were also victims of the Nazi concentration camps. In recent years, concentration camps have existed in the former Soviet Union, Cambodia and Bosnia. Despite differences, all had one thing in common: the people in power removed a minority group from the general population and the rest of society let it happen.[34][35]

The New York Times published an unsigned editorial supporting the use of the term "concentration camp" in the exhibit.[36] An article quoted Jonathan Mark, a columnist for The Jewish Week, who wrote, "Can no one else speak of slavery, gas, trains, camps? It's Jewish malpractice to monopolize pain and minimize victims."[37] AJC Executive Director David A. Harris stated during the controversy, "We have not claimed Jewish exclusivity for the term 'concentration camps.'"[38]

On July 7, 2012, at their annual convention, the National Council of the Japanese American Citizens League unanimously ratified the Power of Words Handbook, calling for the use of

truthful and accurate terms, and retiring the misleading euphemisms created by the government to cover up the denial of Constitutional and human rights, the force, oppressive conditions, and racism against 120,000 innocent people of Japanese ancestry locked up in America's World War II concentration camps."[39]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. January 23, 2007.
  2. ^ a b "California Historical Landmarks: Modoc County". Office of Historical Preservation, California State Parks. from the original on October 14, 2012. Retrieved October 10, 2012.
  3. ^ a b c d . National Park Service. February 17, 2006. Archived from the original on October 8, 2012. Retrieved October 6, 2012.
  4. ^ a b "Tule Lake Unit". National Park Service. from the original on October 13, 2012. Retrieved October 6, 2012.
  5. ^ "Tule Lake (U.S. National Park Service)". www.nps.gov. Retrieved March 18, 2019.
  6. ^ "Text - S.47 - John D. Dingell, Jr. Conservation, Management, and Recreation Act". United States Congress. March 12, 2019. from the original on March 18, 2019. Retrieved March 12, 2019.
  7. ^ a b c d Barbara Takei. "Tule Lake," 2013-05-11 at the Wayback Machine Densho Encyclopedia (accessed 18 Mar 2014).
  8. ^ "Tulean Dispatch (newspaper)". encyclopedia.densho.org. Retrieved February 14, 2021.
  9. ^ Cherstin M. Lyon. "Loyalty questionnaire," 2018-02-09 at the Wayback Machine Densho Encyclopedia (accessed 18 Mar 2014).
  10. ^ Hatamiya, Leslie (1993). Righting A Wrong: Japanese Americans and the Passage of the Civil Liberties Act of 1988. Stanford University Press. p. 20.
  11. ^ Memorandum of Agreement Between the War Department and the War Relocation Authority (webpage image of dept/authority document), JAvadc.org, August 5, 1943, from the original on May 3, 2020, retrieved May 26, 2014{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  12. ^ a b c d e Tule Lake Committee 2006-04-14 at the Wayback Machine, "History" (accessed 17 Mar 2014).
  13. ^ a b Yamato, Sharon (October 21, 2014). "Carrying the Torch: Wayne Collins Jr. on His Father's Defense of the Renunciants". Discover Nikkei.
  14. ^ Wollenberg, Charles (2018). Rebel Lawyer: Wayne Collins and the Defense of Japanese American Rights. Heyday. pp. 49-51. ISBN 9781597144360.
  15. ^ Turnbull, Lornett (June 30, 2004). "WWII brought hard choice for some Japanese-Americans internees". The Seattle Times. from the original on July 24, 2008. Retrieved April 12, 2009.
  16. ^ "Japanese Americans, the Civil Rights Movement and Beyond" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on July 14, 2011. Retrieved April 10, 2009.
  17. ^ a b Chersin M. Lyon. "Segregation," 2014-03-13 at the Wayback Machine Densho Encyclopedia (accessed 18 Mar 2014).
  18. ^ Christgau, John (February 1985). "Collins versus the World: The Fight to Restore Citizenship to Japanese American Renunciants of World War II". Pacific Historical Review. University of California Press. 54 (1): 1–31. doi:10.2307/3638863. JSTOR 3638863.
  19. ^ Kennedy, Ellen Clare (October 2006). "The Japanese-American Renunciants: Due Process and the Danger of Making Laws During Times of Fear". from the original on August 15, 2009. Retrieved April 11, 2009.
  20. ^ 56 F. Supp. 716 (N.D. Cal 1944)
  21. ^ "H.R. 1492". georgewbush-whitehouse.archives.gov. from the original on September 26, 2017. Retrieved September 17, 2017.
  22. ^ Proclamation 8327 of December 5, 2008, Establishment of the World War II Valor in the Pacific National Monument 2019-05-05 at the Wayback Machine, 73 FR 75293 (2008-12-10).
  23. ^ "Management - Tule Lake National Monument (U.S. National Park Service)". National Park Service. from the original on May 17, 2019. Retrieved May 17, 2019.
  24. ^ "Statistical Data Tables for Fish & Wildlife Service Lands (as of 9/30/2017)" (PDF). U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service. September 30, 2017. (PDF) from the original on February 17, 2018. Retrieved February 3, 2018. Table 10. National Monuments
  25. ^ United States v. Masaaki Kuwabara, 56 Federal Supplement 716 (Northern District, California), July 22, 1944.
  26. ^ United States v. Masaaki Kuwabara, 56 F. Supp. 716 (N.D. Cal 1944)
  27. ^ "The Manzanar Controversy". Public Broadcasting System. from the original on November 8, 2012. Retrieved July 18, 2007.
  28. ^ Daniels, Roger (May 2002). . The History Teacher. 35 (3): 4–6. doi:10.2307/3054440. JSTOR 3054440. Archived from the original on December 29, 2002. Retrieved July 18, 2007.
  29. ^ Ito, Robert (September 15, 1998). "Concentration Camp Or Summer Camp?". Mother Jones. from the original on January 4, 2011. Retrieved November 18, 2010.
  30. ^ "CLPEF Resolution Regarding Terminology". Civil Liberties Public Education Fund. 1996. from the original on July 3, 2007. Retrieved July 20, 2007.
  31. ^ . Densho. 1997. Archived from the original on June 24, 2007. Retrieved July 15, 2007.
  32. ^ Sengupta, Somini (March 8, 1998). "What Is a Concentration Camp? Ellis Island Exhibit Prompts a Debate". New York Times. from the original on November 7, 2012. Retrieved July 11, 2011.
  33. ^ McCarthy, Sheryl (July–August 1999). "Suffering Isn't One Group's Exclusive Privilege". HumanQuest.
  34. ^ "American Jewish Committee, Japanese American National Museum Issue Joint Statement About Ellis Island Exhibit Set To Open April 3" (Press release). Japanese American National Museum and American Jewish Committee. March 13, 1998. from the original on June 17, 2010. Retrieved December 30, 2007.
  35. ^ Sengupta, Somini (March 10, 1998). "Accord On Term "Concentration Camp"". New York Times. from the original on November 7, 2012. Retrieved June 13, 2010.
  36. ^ "Words for Suffering". New York Times. March 10, 1998. Retrieved December 31, 2007.
  37. ^ Haberman, Clyde (March 13, 1998). "NYC; Defending Jews' Lexicon Of Anguish". New York Times. from the original on November 7, 2012. Retrieved July 11, 2011.
  38. ^ Harris, David A (March 13, 1998). "Exhibition on Camps". New York Times. from the original on February 9, 2011. Retrieved July 11, 2011.
  39. ^ Noguchi, Andy (July 15, 2012). "JACL Ratifies Power Of Words Handbook: What Are The Next Steps?". Japanese American Citizens League via the Manzanar Committee. from the original on May 17, 2013. Retrieved July 22, 2012.

Further reading edit

Articles edit

  • "A request to be honored as patriots: World War II internees vote for recognition", by Lee Juillerat H&N Regional Editor, Herald and News (July 3, 2012).
  • "At Internment Camp, Exploring Choices of the Past", Tulelake Journal, by Norimitsu Onishi, New York Times (July 8, 2012).
  • 'Former Tule Lake segregation camp prisoners make pilgrimage, recall lost years', by Alex Powers, Herald and News (July 4, 2012).
  • 'Interest in Tule Lake Unit goes beyond Basin: Concerned public seeks monument's conservation', by Lee Juillerat H&N Regional Editor, Herald and News (8/19/2012).
  • 'Photographer finds dignity in a dark time', by Ayako Mie, Staff writer for The Japan Times (8/16/2012).

Books edit

Nisei Draft Resisters edit

  • Free to Die for their Country: The Story of the Japanese American Draft Resisters in World War II, 2001, by Eric Muller.

Renunciants edit

  • Native American Aliens: Disloyalty and the Renunciation of Citizenship by Japanese Americans during World War II, 1985, Donald E. Collins.

Tule Lake edit

Fiction edit
  • Tule Lake, 2006, a novel by Edward T. Miyakawa.
Non-Fiction edit
  • Kinenhi: Reflections on Tule Lake, by the Tule Lake Committee (1980).
  • Tule Lake Revisited: A Brief History and Guide to the Tule Lake Concentration Camp Site, Second edition, 2012, by Barbara Takei and Judy Tachibana.
  • Tule Lake: An Issei Memoir, by Noboru Shirai; an autobiographical account, published in English in 2001 by Muteki Press. ISBN 0971610800; ISBN 978-0971610804. Originally published in Tokyo, Japan, in 1981, by Kawade Shobo Shinsha, under the title, Kariforunia nikkeijin kyōsei shūyōjo.

U.S. concentration camps edit

  • Concentration Camps U.S.A: The Japanese Americans and World War II, 1971, by Roger Daniels.
  • Keeper of Concentration Camps: Dillon S. Myer and American Racism, 1987, by Richard T. Drinnon.
  • Years of Infamy: The Untold Story of America's Concentration Camps, 1976, by Michi Weglyn.

Dissertations edit

  • Bitter Sweet Home, 2005 dissertation by Junko Kobayashi on the Japanese-language literature of the wartime incarceration

Film edit

  • From a Silk Cocoon, a film about Itaru and Shizuko Ina and segregation at Tule Lake, 2004, produced and directed by Satsuki Ina.
  • Resistance at Tule Lake, directed by Konrad Aderer, 2017.

Journals edit

  • "A Question of Loyalty: Internment at Tule Lake," Journal of the Shaw Historical Library, Vol. 19, 2005, Klamath Falls, OR

External links edit

  • Official NPS Website Tule Lake National Monument
    • Tule Lake Unit General Management Plan
  • Takei, Barbara. "Densho Encyclopedia: Tule Lake". encyclopedia.densho.org. Densho. Retrieved July 13, 2016.
  • Tule Lake Relocation Center for Japanese Americans / photographed by Raymond Okamura, The Bancroft Library
  • Views of Tule Lake Relocation Center, The Bancroft Library
  • June letter : Tule Lake Relocation Center, to Satoka, 1943 Mar. 8, The Bancroft Library
  • Rosalie H. Wax Papers, The Bancroft Library
  • Tule Lake Relocation Center views, Calif. [graphic], The Bancroft Library
  • Tule Lake Committee History, photos, and VR panoramas.
  • 1944 "Aquila" Tri-State High School Yearbook The yearbook for the camp high school.
  • "Tulean Dispatch" Densho Encyclopedia article on the camp newspaper
  • Japanese Internment : Tule Lake, 1935-1988. Collection guide, California State Library, California History Room.
  • Japanese Relocation Center, Tule Lake Collection, 1943-1943. Collection guide, California State Library, California History Room.
  • Tulean Dispatch Collection available at Holt-Atherton Special Collections.

tule, lake, national, monument, confused, with, camp, tulelake, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news. Not to be confused with Camp Tulelake This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Tule Lake National Monument news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2008 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Tule Lake National Monument 4 in Modoc and Siskiyou counties in California consists primarily of the site of the Tule Lake War Relocation Center one of ten concentration camps constructed in 1942 by the United States government to incarcerate Japanese Americans forcibly removed from their homes on the West Coast They totaled nearly 120 000 people more than two thirds of whom were United States citizens Among the inmates the notation 鶴嶺湖 Tsurureiko was sometimes applied citation needed Tule Lake National MonumentU S National Register of Historic PlacesU S National Historic LandmarkCalifornia Historical Landmark No 850 2 2 View of the Tule Lake War Relocation CenterShow map of CaliforniaShow map of the United StatesLocationNortheast side CA 139 Newell CaliforniaCoordinates41 53 22 N 121 22 29 W 41 88944 N 121 37472 W 41 88944 121 37472WebsiteTule Lake National MonumentNRHP reference No 06000210 1 CHISL No 850 2 2 Significant datesAdded to NRHPFebruary 17 2006Designated NHLFebruary 17 2006 3 After a period of use this facility was renamed the Tule Lake Segregation Center in 1943 and used as a maximum security segregation camp to separate and hold those prisoners considered disloyal or disruptive to the operations of other camps Inmates from other camps were sent here to segregate them from the general population Draft resisters and others who protested the injustices of the camps including by their answers on the loyalty questionnaire were sent here At its peak Tule Lake Segregation Center with 18 700 inmates was the largest of the ten camps and the most controversial 3 29 840 people were held there over the four years it was open 5 After the war it became a holding area for Japanese Americans slated for deportation or expatriation to Japan including some who had renounced US citizenship under duress Many joined a class action suit because of civil rights abuses many gained the chance to stay in the United States through court hearings but did not regain their citizenship due to opposition by the Department of Justice The camp was not closed until March 20 1946 months after the end of the war Twenty years later members of the class action suit gained restoration of US citizenship through court rulings California later designated this Tule Lake camp site as a California Historical Landmark 2 and in 2006 it was named a National Historic Landmark 3 In December 2008 the Tule Lake Unit was designated by President George W Bush as one of nine sites the only one in the contiguous 48 states to be part of the new World War II Valor in the Pacific National Monument marking areas of major events during the war 4 In addition to remains of the concentration camp this unit includes Tulelake camp also used during the war as well as the rock formation known as the Peninsula Castle Rock The John D Dingell Jr Conservation Management and Recreation Act signed March 12 2019 split up the three units of the monument creating a new Tule Lake National Monument 6 Contents 1 History 1 1 Tule Lake Segregation Center 2 Victory for Tule Lake draft resisters 3 Events since the late 20th century 3 1 Pilgrimages 3 2 Federal grant program 4 Monument management 5 Notable inmates 6 Terminology 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 9 1 Articles 9 2 Books 9 2 1 Nisei Draft Resisters 9 2 2 Renunciants 9 2 3 Tule Lake 9 2 3 1 Fiction 9 2 3 2 Non Fiction 9 2 4 U S concentration camps 9 3 Dissertations 9 4 Film 9 5 Journals 10 External linksHistory editMain article Internment of Japanese Americans nbsp Tule Lake War Relocation Center Master LayoutExecutive Order 9066 issued by President Franklin D Roosevelt in early 1942 as a response to the attack on Pearl Harbor authorized establishing an Exclusion Zone on the West Coast from which local military authorities could remove certain populations under wartime exigency Military commanders ordered the forced removal and incarceration of the nearly 120 000 Japanese Americans living on the West Coast of the United States two thirds of whom were United States citizens A late 20th century study revealed that internal government studies of the time recommended against such mass exclusion and incarceration and the study concluded this decision was based on racism wartime hysteria and failed political leadership The War Relocation Authority WRA built ten concentration camps referred to euphemistically as relocation centers in remote rural areas in the interior of the country Tule Lake Relocation Center opened on May 27 1942 and initially held approximately 11 800 Japanese Americans who were primarily from Sacramento King and Hood River counties in California Washington and Oregon respectively 7 The Tulean Dispatch is a newsletter that was established in June 1942 and ended in October 1943 when Tule Lake became a segregation center It was the shortest running newspaper of the ten concentration camps 8 In late 1943 the WRA issued a questionnaire intended to assess the loyalty of imprisoned Japanese Americans The loyalty questionnaire as it came to be known was originally a form circulated among draft age men whom the military hoped to conscript into service after assessing their loyalty and Americanness It soon was made mandatory for all adults in the ten camps 9 Two questions stirred up confusion and unrest among camp inmates Question 27 asked Are you willing to serve in the armed forces of the United States on combat duty wherever ordered The final question 28 asked Will you swear unqualified allegiance to the United States and faithfully defend the United States from any or all attack by foreign or domestic forces and forswear any form of allegiance or obedience to the Japanese emperor or any other foreign government power or organization The first question met resistance from young men who while not opposed to military service outright felt insulted that the government having stripped them of their rights as citizens would ask them to risk their lives in combat Many responded with qualified statements such as I ll serve in the Army when my family is freed or refused to answer the questions altogether Many interns had problems with the second question Many were insulted that the question implied they ever had allegiance to a country they had either left behind decades before or for most US citizens never visited Others especially the non citizen Issei feared they would be deported to Japan no matter how they answered and worried that an affirmative answer would cause them to be seen as enemy aliens by the Japanese Issei and many Nisei and Kibei who held dual citizenship worried they would lose their Japanese citizenship leaving them stateless if they were expatriated from the United States which they feared was inevitable given what had already occurred In addition to these concerns some inmates answered no to both questions in protest of their imprisonment and loss of civil rights 10 Often Issei and Kibei who spoke little or no English simply did not understand the poorly phrased questions or their implications and did not answer Tule Lake Segregation Center edit nbsp Japanese Americans who protested or resisted the unjust World War II detention were segregated and imprisoned at Tule Lake More than 24 000 men women and children were confined here citation needed In 1943 the center was renamed the Tule Lake Segregation Center 11 The War Relocation Authority proposed to use it to separate inmates suspected of being disloyal or those who protested conditions and were disruptive in their camps It was fortified as a maximum security facility and it quickly became the most repressive of the government s 10 concentration camps 3 Interns who had responded with unqualified yes answers to the loyalty questionnaire were given the choice to transfer from Tule Lake to another WRA camp Approximately 6 500 loyal Tule Lake inmates were transferred to six camps in Colorado Utah Idaho and Arkansas The more than 12 000 imprisoned Japanese Americans classified as disloyal because of their responses to the poorly worded loyalty questions were gradually transferred to Tule Lake during the remainder of 1943 7 12 Unsanitary squalid living conditions inadequate medical care poor food and unsafe or underpaid working conditions prompted prisoner protests at Tule Lake and several other camps On November 14 after a series of meetings and demonstrations by prisoners over the poor living conditions at the overpopulated camp the army imposed martial law in Tule Lake 7 12 The Army had additional barracks constructed early in 1944 to accommodate a second influx of segregated inmates pushing the already swollen population to 18 700 12 The camp quickly became violent and unsafe Martial law in Tule Lake ended on January 15 1944 but many prisoners were bitter after months of living with a curfew unannounced barracks searches and restrictions that put a stop to recreational activities and most employment in the camp 7 In the spring of 1944 Ernest Besig of the Northern California branch of the ACLU became aware of a hastily constructed stockade at Tule Lake in which internees were routinely being brutalized and held for months without due process Besig was forbidden by the national ACLU to intervene on behalf of the stockade prisoners or even to visit the Tule Lake camp without prior written approval from the ACLU s Roger Baldwin 13 Unable to help directly Besig turned to civil rights attorney Wayne M Collins for assistance Collins using the threat of habeas corpus suits managed to have the stockade closed down A year later after learning that the stockade had been reestablished he returned to the camp and had it closed down for good 13 14 On July 1 the Renunciation Act of 1944 drafted by Attorney General Francis Biddle was passed into law U S citizens could during time of war renounce their citizenship without first leaving the country and once they did the government could treat them as enemy aliens and detain or deport them with impunity Angry at the abuses of their U S citizenship and convinced there was nothing left for them in the country of their birth or coerced either by WRA authorities and pro Japan groups in camp a total of 5 589 Nisei and Kibei internees 12 chose to renounce their citizenship 15 16 Ninety eight percent of those who renounced their citizenship were inmates at Tule Lake where conditions had been so harsh 17 nbsp Internees transplanting celery at Tule Lake War Relocation CenterIn 1945 after the war s end the other nine WRA camps were closed as Japanese Americans gradually returned to their hometowns or settled elsewhere Tule Lake was operated to hold those who had renounced their citizenship and Issei who had requested repatriation to Japan Most no longer wished to leave the United States and many had never truly wanted to leave in the first place Those who wanted to stay in the United States and regain their citizenship if they had it were confined in Tule Lake until hearings at which their cases would be heard and fates determined After the last cases were decided the camp closed in March 1946 Although these Japanese Americans were released from camp and allowed to stay in the U S Nisei and Kibei who had renounced their citizenship were not able to have it restored Wayne M Collins filed a class action suit on their behalf and the presiding judge voided the renunciations finding they had been given under duress but the ruling was overturned by the Department of Justice 12 After a 23 year legal battle Collins finally succeeded in gaining restoration in the late 1960s of the citizenship of those covered by the class action suit 18 19 Collins also helped 3 000 of the 4 327 Japanese Americans originally slated for deportation remain in the United States as their choice 17 Victory for Tule Lake draft resisters edit nbsp Mr Masaaki Kuwabara 1913 1993 Some of the Japanese American draft resisters wanted to use their cases to challenge their incarceration and loss of rights as US citizens United States v Masaaki Kuwabara 20 was the only World War II era Japanese American draft resistance case to be dismissed out of court based on a due process violation of the U S Constitution It was a forerunner of the Korematsu and Endo cases argued before the US Supreme Court later in December 1944 Judge Louis E Goodman went out of his way to help fellow native Californian and lead defendant Masaaki Kuwabara by hand picking his defense attorney Blaine McGowan who entered a Motion to Quash Proceedings based on the government s abrogation of his client s due process rights guaranteed to every American citizen by the U S Constitution Without explicitly describing Kuwabara as a victim of federal anti Japanese racism Judge Goodman viewed the man s experience in this light He ruled against the United States which incarcerated the defendant in a U S concentration camp categorized him as a Class 4 C Enemy Alien and then drafted him into military service Kuwabara refused to obey the draft until his rights as an American citizen were restored to him Events since the late 20th century editJapanese American activists revisited the civil rights issues of the forced relocation and incarceration of their people from the West Coast They were the only ethnic group associated with the Axis Powers who were incarcerated en masse in the United States In Hawaii where 150 000 Japanese Americans comprised one third of the population only a small number were interned during the war Japanese American groups began to organize to educate the public build support for their case and lobby the government for redress Finally the Japanese American Citizens League joined this movement although it had initially opposed it Pilgrimages edit Starting in 1974 Tule Lake was the site of several pilgrimages by activists calling for an official apology from the U S government for the injustices to Japanese Americans both citizens and non citizens The pilgrimages every even year around the 4th of July serving educational purposes continue to this day This Redress Movement gradually gained widespread support and Congress passed the Civil Liberties Act of 1988 which was signed into law by President Ronald Reagan It included an official governmental apology for the injustices and payment of compensation to camp survivors A similar law was passed in 1992 to provide for compensation to additional Japanese Americans Groups making the annual pilgrimage have organized them around specific themes and used them as a basis for education as in the following Recent themes2000 Honoring our Living Treasures Forging New Links 7 1 4 2002 As We Revisit the Meaning of Patriotism and Loyalty 7 4 7 2004 Citizens Betrayed 7 2 5 2006 Dignity and Survival in a Divided Community 2009 Shared Remembrances 7 2 5 2010 Untold Stories of Tule Lake 7 2 5 2012 Understanding No No and Renunciation 6 30 7 3 Federal grant program edit On December 21 2006 U S President George W Bush signed H R 1492 into law creating the Japanese American Confinement Sites grant program This authorized the appropriation of 38 000 000 in federal grant money to preserve and interpret the system of Japanese American incarceration sites including the temporary WCCA sites the ten WRA concentration camps and the Department of Justice internment camps 21 Monument management edit nbsp Map of the Tule Lake National MonumentThe Monument is jointly managed by the National Park Service NPS and the U S Fish and Wildlife Service USFWS with a total area of 1 391 acres 5 63 km2 22 23 24 The national monument consists of three separate units the Tule Lake Segregation Center near Newell nearby Camp Tulelake and a rock formation known as the Peninsula Castle Rock near Newell The Tule Lake Segregation Center is solely managed by the NPS Camp Tulelake is jointly managed by the NPS and USFWS the USFWS manages owns the land and the NPS maintains the buildings and provides interpretive programs The Peninsula Castle Rock is solely managed by the USFWS Locally USFWS responsibilities are handled by the administration of Lava Beds National Monument and the Tule Lake National Wildlife Refuge Notable inmates editViolet Kazue de Cristoforo 1917 2007 poet Also interned at Jerome Mitsuye Endo 1920 2006 plaintiff of the Ex parte Endo Supreme Court case that led to Japanese Americans being allowed to return to the West Coast and to the closing of the war relocation camps Also interned at Topaz Mary Matsuda Gruenewald 1925 2021 memoirist Also interned at Heart Mountain Hiroshi Honda 1910 1970 an American painter Yamato Ichihashi 1878 1963 one of the first academics of Asian ancestry in the United States Emerick Ishikawa 1920 2006 a weightlifting champion nbsp Recent UC Berkeley valedictorian Harvey Itano at Sacramento Assembly Center in May 1942 prior to his incarceration at Tule LakeHarvey Itano 1920 2010 became a biochemist best known for his work on the molecular basis of sickle cell anemia and other diseases Shizue Iwatsuki 1897 1984 a Japanese American poet Also interned at Minidoka Hiroshi Kashiwagi 1922 2019 became a poet playwright and actor Taky Kimura 1924 2021 martial arts practitioner and instructor Also interned at Minidoka Daisuke Kitagawa 1910 1970 a reverend and episcopal priest Mary Koga nee Mary Hisako Ishii 1920 2001 a photographer and social worker Tommy Kono 1930 2016 an Olympic gold medalist weightlifter and world record holder Joseph Kurihara 1895 1965 a renunciant Also interned at Manzanar Masaaki Kuwabara 1913 1993 lead defendant in United States v Masaaki Kuwabara 25 the only Japanese American draft resistance case to be dismissed on the basis of a due process violation of the U S Constitution William M Marutani 1923 2004 lawyer judge and member of the Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civilians Bob Matsui 1941 2005 was elected to 13 terms as member of the U S House of Representatives Toshiko Mayeda nee Kuki 1923 2004 a Japanese American chemist Tsutomu Jimmy Mirikitani 1920 2012 Sacramento California artist and subject of The Cats of Mirikitani an award winning documentary film Fujimatsu Moriguchi 1898 1962 an American businessman Sadako Moriguchi nee Tsutakawa 1907 2002 an American businesswoman Tomio Moriguchi born 1936 an American businessman and civil rights activist Tomoko Moriguchi Matsuno nee Moriguchi born 1945 an American businesswoman Pat Morita 1932 2005 became an actor best known for his role in the Karate Kid films interned as a child nissei with whole family Later interned at Gila River Jimmy Murakami 1933 2014 an animator and director George Nakano born 1935 a former California State Assemblyman Also interned at Jerome Alan Nakanishi born 1940 a California politician James K Okubo 1920 1967 a United States Army soldier and a recipient of the Medal of Honor Also interned at Heart Mountain James Otsuka 1921 1984 a conscientious objector during World War II and a war tax resister Otokichi Ozaki 1904 1983 a poet Also interned at Jerome James Sakoda 1916 2005 a psychologist and pioneer in computational modeling Also interned at Minidoka Toshiyuki Seino born 1938 an American competitive judo athlete Yuki Shimoda 1921 1981 an actor Sab Shimono born 1937 an actor Also interned at Granada Hana Shimozumi 1893 1978 an American singer Noboru Shirai author of Tule Lake An Issei Memoir Born in Hiroshima Japan he emigrated to the U S in 1934 married Akiko May Taketa a UC Berkeley graduate born and raised in Sacramento and was a graduate student at Stanford University in 1942 After his release from Tule Lake Shirai became a successful California businessman Robert Mitsuhiro Takasugi 1930 2009 first Japanese American appointed to the federal bench George Takei born 1937 an American actor best known for his role in Star Trek Also interned at Rohwer George T Tamura 1927 2010 an artist Kazue Togasaki 1897 1992 one of the first two women of Japanese ancestry to earn a medical degree in the United States Also interned at Topaz and Manzanar Teiko Tomita 1896 1990 a tanka poet Also interned at Heart Mountain Taitetsu Unno 1930 2014 a Buddhist scholar lecturer and author Also interned at Rohwer Harry Urata 1917 2009 a music teacher Jimi Yamaichi member of the 27 draft resisters of conscience 26 a Tule Lake survivor who shares his memories at the biennial pilgrimages and promotes preservation of the site Koho Yamamoto born 1922 an American artist Also interned at Topaz Takuji Yamashita 1874 1959 an early 20th century civil rights pioneer Also interned at Manzanar and Minidoka Kenneth Yasuda 1914 2002 scholar and translator Also interned at Jerome Terminology editFurther information Japanese American internment Terminology debate Since the end of World War II there has been debate over the terminology used to refer to Tule Lake and the other camps in which Japanese Americans were imprisoned by the United States Government during the war 27 28 29 Tule Lake has been referred to as a relocation camp relocation center internment camp concentration camp and segregation center and the controversy over which term is the most accurate and appropriate continues into the early 21st century 30 31 Activists and scholars believe the government terms relocation and internment are euphemisms for forced deportation and concentration camps In 1998 use of the term concentration camps gained greater credibility prior to the opening of an exhibit at Ellis Island about the World War II incarceration of Japanese Americans Initially the American Jewish Committee AJC and the National Park Service which manages Ellis Island objected to the use of the term in the exhibit 32 But during a subsequent meeting held at the offices of the AJC in New York City leaders representing Japanese Americans and Jewish Americans reached an understanding about the use of the term 33 After the meeting the Japanese American National Museum and the AJC issued a joint statement which was included in the exhibit that read in part A concentration camp is a place where people are imprisoned not because of any crimes they have committed but simply because of who they are Although many groups have been singled out for such persecution throughout history the term concentration camp was first used at the turn of the century in the Spanish American and Boer Wars During World War II America s concentration camps were clearly distinguishable from Nazi Germany s Nazi camps were places of torture barbarous medical experiments and summary executions some were extermination centers with gas chambers Six million Jews were slaughtered in the Holocaust Many others including Gypsies Poles homosexuals and political dissidents were also victims of the Nazi concentration camps In recent years concentration camps have existed in the former Soviet Union Cambodia and Bosnia Despite differences all had one thing in common the people in power removed a minority group from the general population and the rest of society let it happen 34 35 The New York Times published an unsigned editorial supporting the use of the term concentration camp in the exhibit 36 An article quoted Jonathan Mark a columnist for The Jewish Week who wrote Can no one else speak of slavery gas trains camps It s Jewish malpractice to monopolize pain and minimize victims 37 AJC Executive Director David A Harris stated during the controversy We have not claimed Jewish exclusivity for the term concentration camps 38 On July 7 2012 at their annual convention the National Council of the Japanese American Citizens League unanimously ratified the Power of Words Handbook calling for the use of truthful and accurate terms and retiring the misleading euphemisms created by the government to cover up the denial of Constitutional and human rights the force oppressive conditions and racism against 120 000 innocent people of Japanese ancestry locked up in America s World War II concentration camps 39 See also editList of national monuments of the United States Ansel Adams California Water Wars Densho The Japanese American Legacy Project Dorothea Lange Other camps Gila River War Relocation Center Granada War Relocation Center Heart Mountain War Relocation Center Jerome War Relocation CenterMinidoka National Historic Site Poston War Relocation Center Rohwer War Relocation Center Topaz War Relocation CenterCalifornia during World War II Portals nbsp California nbsp Greater Los Angeles nbsp History nbsp United StatesReferences edit National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service January 23 2007 a b California Historical Landmarks Modoc County Office of Historical Preservation California State Parks Archived from the original on October 14 2012 Retrieved October 10 2012 a b c d National Historic Landmarks Program Tule Lake Segregation Center National Park Service February 17 2006 Archived from the original on October 8 2012 Retrieved October 6 2012 a b Tule Lake Unit National Park Service Archived from the original on October 13 2012 Retrieved October 6 2012 Tule Lake U S National Park Service www nps gov Retrieved March 18 2019 Text S 47 John D Dingell Jr Conservation Management and Recreation Act United States Congress March 12 2019 Archived from the original on March 18 2019 Retrieved March 12 2019 a b c d Barbara Takei Tule Lake Archived 2013 05 11 at the Wayback Machine Densho Encyclopedia accessed 18 Mar 2014 Tulean Dispatch newspaper encyclopedia densho org Retrieved February 14 2021 Cherstin M Lyon Loyalty questionnaire Archived 2018 02 09 at the Wayback Machine Densho Encyclopedia accessed 18 Mar 2014 Hatamiya Leslie 1993 Righting A Wrong Japanese Americans and the Passage of the Civil Liberties Act of 1988 Stanford University Press p 20 Memorandum of Agreement Between the War Department and the War Relocation Authority webpage image of dept authority document JAvadc org August 5 1943 archived from the original on May 3 2020 retrieved May 26 2014 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b c d e Tule Lake Committee Archived 2006 04 14 at the Wayback Machine History accessed 17 Mar 2014 a b Yamato Sharon October 21 2014 Carrying the Torch Wayne Collins Jr on His Father s Defense of the Renunciants Discover Nikkei Wollenberg Charles 2018 Rebel Lawyer Wayne Collins and the Defense of Japanese American Rights Heyday pp 49 51 ISBN 9781597144360 Turnbull Lornett June 30 2004 WWII brought hard choice for some Japanese Americans internees The Seattle Times Archived from the original on July 24 2008 Retrieved April 12 2009 Japanese Americans the Civil Rights Movement and Beyond PDF Archived PDF from the original on July 14 2011 Retrieved April 10 2009 a b Chersin M Lyon Segregation Archived 2014 03 13 at the Wayback Machine Densho Encyclopedia accessed 18 Mar 2014 Christgau John February 1985 Collins versus the World The Fight to Restore Citizenship to Japanese American Renunciants of World War II Pacific Historical Review University of California Press 54 1 1 31 doi 10 2307 3638863 JSTOR 3638863 Kennedy Ellen Clare October 2006 The Japanese American Renunciants Due Process and the Danger of Making Laws During Times of Fear Archived from the original on August 15 2009 Retrieved April 11 2009 56 F Supp 716 N D Cal 1944 H R 1492 georgewbush whitehouse archives gov Archived from the original on September 26 2017 Retrieved September 17 2017 Proclamation 8327 of December 5 2008 Establishment of the World War II Valor in the Pacific National Monument Archived 2019 05 05 at the Wayback Machine 73 FR 75293 2008 12 10 Management Tule Lake National Monument U S National Park Service National Park Service Archived from the original on May 17 2019 Retrieved May 17 2019 Statistical Data Tables for Fish amp Wildlife Service Lands as of 9 30 2017 PDF U S Fish amp Wildlife Service September 30 2017 Archived PDF from the original on February 17 2018 Retrieved February 3 2018 Table 10 National Monuments United States v Masaaki Kuwabara 56 Federal Supplement 716 Northern District California July 22 1944 United States v Masaaki Kuwabara 56 F Supp 716 N D Cal 1944 The Manzanar Controversy Public Broadcasting System Archived from the original on November 8 2012 Retrieved July 18 2007 Daniels Roger May 2002 Incarceration of the Japanese Americans A Sixty Year Perspective The History Teacher 35 3 4 6 doi 10 2307 3054440 JSTOR 3054440 Archived from the original on December 29 2002 Retrieved July 18 2007 Ito Robert September 15 1998 Concentration Camp Or Summer Camp Mother Jones Archived from the original on January 4 2011 Retrieved November 18 2010 CLPEF Resolution Regarding Terminology Civil Liberties Public Education Fund 1996 Archived from the original on July 3 2007 Retrieved July 20 2007 Densho Terminology amp Glossary A Note On Terminology Densho 1997 Archived from the original on June 24 2007 Retrieved July 15 2007 Sengupta Somini March 8 1998 What Is a Concentration Camp Ellis Island Exhibit Prompts a Debate New York Times Archived from the original on November 7 2012 Retrieved July 11 2011 McCarthy Sheryl July August 1999 Suffering Isn t One Group s Exclusive Privilege HumanQuest American Jewish Committee Japanese American National Museum Issue Joint Statement About Ellis Island Exhibit Set To Open April 3 Press release Japanese American National Museum and American Jewish Committee March 13 1998 Archived from the original on June 17 2010 Retrieved December 30 2007 Sengupta Somini March 10 1998 Accord On Term Concentration Camp New York Times Archived from the original on November 7 2012 Retrieved June 13 2010 Words for Suffering New York Times March 10 1998 Retrieved December 31 2007 Haberman Clyde March 13 1998 NYC Defending Jews Lexicon Of Anguish New York Times Archived from the original on November 7 2012 Retrieved July 11 2011 Harris David A March 13 1998 Exhibition on Camps New York Times Archived from the original on February 9 2011 Retrieved July 11 2011 Noguchi Andy July 15 2012 JACL Ratifies Power Of Words Handbook What Are The Next Steps Japanese American Citizens League via the Manzanar Committee Archived from the original on May 17 2013 Retrieved July 22 2012 Further reading editArticles edit A request to be honored as patriots World War II internees vote for recognition by Lee Juillerat H amp N Regional Editor Herald and News July 3 2012 At Internment Camp Exploring Choices of the Past Tulelake Journal by Norimitsu Onishi New York Times July 8 2012 Former Tule Lake segregation camp prisoners make pilgrimage recall lost years by Alex Powers Herald and News July 4 2012 Interest in Tule Lake Unit goes beyond Basin Concerned public seeks monument s conservation by Lee Juillerat H amp N Regional Editor Herald and News 8 19 2012 Photographer finds dignity in a dark time by Ayako Mie Staff writer for The Japan Times 8 16 2012 Books edit Nisei Draft Resisters edit Free to Die for their Country The Story of the Japanese American Draft Resisters in World War II 2001 by Eric Muller Renunciants edit Native American Aliens Disloyalty and the Renunciation of Citizenship by Japanese Americans during World War II 1985 Donald E Collins Tule Lake edit Fiction edit Tule Lake 2006 a novel by Edward T Miyakawa Non Fiction edit Kinenhi Reflections on Tule Lake by the Tule Lake Committee 1980 Tule Lake Revisited A Brief History and Guide to the Tule Lake Concentration Camp Site Second edition 2012 by Barbara Takei and Judy Tachibana Tule Lake An Issei Memoir by Noboru Shirai an autobiographical account published in English in 2001 by Muteki Press ISBN 0971610800 ISBN 978 0971610804 Originally published in Tokyo Japan in 1981 by Kawade Shobo Shinsha under the title Kariforunia nikkeijin kyōsei shuyōjo U S concentration camps edit Concentration Camps U S A The Japanese Americans and World War II 1971 by Roger Daniels Keeper of Concentration Camps Dillon S Myer and American Racism 1987 by Richard T Drinnon Years of Infamy The Untold Story of America s Concentration Camps 1976 by Michi Weglyn Dissertations edit Bitter Sweet Home 2005 dissertation by Junko Kobayashi on the Japanese language literature of the wartime incarcerationFilm edit From a Silk Cocoon a film about Itaru and Shizuko Ina and segregation at Tule Lake 2004 produced and directed by Satsuki Ina Resistance at Tule Lake directed by Konrad Aderer 2017 Journals edit A Question of Loyalty Internment at Tule Lake Journal of the Shaw Historical Library Vol 19 2005 Klamath Falls ORExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tule Lake National Monument Official NPS Website Tule Lake National Monument Tule Lake Unit General Management Plan Takei Barbara Densho Encyclopedia Tule Lake encyclopedia densho org Densho Retrieved July 13 2016 Tule Lake Relocation Center for Japanese Americans photographed by Raymond Okamura The Bancroft Library Views of Tule Lake Relocation Center The Bancroft Library June letter Tule Lake Relocation Center to Satoka 1943 Mar 8 The Bancroft Library Rosalie H Wax Papers The Bancroft Library Tule Lake Relocation Center views Calif graphic The Bancroft Library Tule Lake Committee History photos and VR panoramas 1944 Aquila Tri State High School Yearbook The yearbook for the camp high school Tulean Dispatch Densho Encyclopedia article on the camp newspaper Japanese Internment Tule Lake 1935 1988 Collection guide California State Library California History Room Japanese Relocation Center Tule Lake Collection 1943 1943 Collection guide California State Library California History Room Tulean Dispatch Collection available at Holt Atherton Special Collections Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tule Lake National Monument amp oldid 1173275576, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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