By John R. Puri
Monday, August 25, 2025
Marion Takehara, born in Los Angeles in 1925, was a
student in high school when Japanese airplanes bombed Pearl Harbor on December
7, 1941. “That’s when everything changed,” she said more than 80 years later.
On February 19, 1942, President Franklin Roosevelt signed
Executive Order 9066. The legalistic text of his order is almost indecipherable: “I hereby
authorize and direct the Secretary of War . . . to prescribe military areas in
such places and of such extent as he or the appropriate Military Commander may
determine, from which any or all persons may be excluded, and with respect to
which, the right of any person to enter, remain in, or leave shall be subject
to whatever restrictions the Secretary of War or the appropriate Military
Commander may impose in his discretion.” Roosevelt had to torture the language
to obfuscate what he was really doing: ordering the mass imprisonment of
innocent Americans.
They were innocent, those 110,000 Japanese Americans that
the federal government herded into internment camps throughout the western
states. Takehara certainly was. She and her family, who had lived in California
since her parents were young, were given 48 hours’ notice to leave everything
behind. “We had to put our dog to sleep because we didn’t know what to do with
it,” she remembered painfully at age 96, in a 2022 interview
with a San Antonio news station. They could not bring more than they could
carry into the internment camp, so neighbors flooded Takehara’s home to
purchase furniture and belongings that would otherwise be abandoned.
She ended up in the Granada War Relocation Center in
Colorado, known to internees as Camp Amache, joining thousands of fellow
Japanese Americans. Takehara recalled that the showers in the bathrooms had no
doors. “Can you imagine what it’s like for an older person to have to go to the
bathroom without doors in the showers? And, when I read over my notes, it made
me sad again, too. But we got over it. We got over it. We got over it.”
About two-thirds of the interned Japanese Americans were born in the United States. Over a third were 19 and under,
below the legal voting age. Many had to sell their homes and businesses at
fire-sale prices before entering the camps. The majority remained incarcerated
for the next three years as America prosecuted the world war against Japan and
its allies. Internment camps began closing in 1945. This year marks the 80th
anniversary of when America’s federal government allowed tens of thousands of
its people to return to whatever lives they had left.
Over the past few years, the nation has commemorated the
80th anniversaries of some profoundly costly yet entirely necessary decisions
made during World War II: America’s joining the war a day after Pearl
Harbor, December 8, 1941. The Normandy landings, June 6, 1944. Hiroshima, August 6, 1945. Nagasaki, three days later.
Internment, though, is the one most of us wish we could
take back. Some still insist that it was necessary, to thwart espionage and
sabotage by Japanese Americans along the Pacific Coast, but it wasn’t. In 1941,
Roosevelt commissioned businessman Curtis Munson to investigate the sympathies
of Japanese Americans in the war. Munson concluded in his 25-page report, “As
interview after interview piled up, those bringing in results began to call it
the same old tune. The story was all the same. There is no Japanese ‘problem’
on the Coast. There will be no armed uprising of Japanese.” Roosevelt may have
read just a one-page summary of the report. Either way, he ignored it.
The president declined to intern German and Italian
Americans, not because they didn’t pose an espionage threat, but because there were simply too many of them, and
they were considered better integrated than the Japanese. Meanwhile, he
permitted 33,000 Japanese Americans to serve in the U.S. military during World War II. Thousands
performed intelligence roles on Pacific islands that Japan had occupied. The
Army held recruitment drives inside internment camps — the camps that existed
because Japanese Americans were said not to be trusted. More than 800 of the
recruits died fighting for their country — the United States — in the
European theater.
In Hawaii — home of the critical naval base that Japan
had bombed — 150,000 Japanese Americans constituted a third of the territory’s
population. Large-scale internment on the islands was impractical, so the
government allowed them to live unincarcerated throughout the war. Yet no
Japanese American was ever convicted
of espionage or sabotage in Hawaii — or anywhere else, for that matter.
Why did Roosevelt decide on internment, then? He was
certainly prejudiced against the Japanese, once criticizing Japanese-Caucasian
intermarriage for its “mingling of Asiatic blood with European or American
blood.” But that wasn’t the overriding reason he did it. After Pearl Harbor,
large majorities supported the removal of Japanese-American citizens and
noncitizens from their communities. Internment was a democratic demand.
In the spring of 1942, the National Opinion Research
Center polled Americans on their opinions of the internment
policy. “Do you think we are doing the right thing, in moving Japanese aliens
(those who aren’t citizens) away from the Pacific coast?” Ninety-three percent
of respondents agreed that Japanese noncitizens should be “moved.” One percent
was opposed. A second question was asked: “How about the Japanese who were born
in this country and are United States citizens — do you think they should be
moved?” Fifty-nine percent said yes. Twenty-five percent said no.
Roosevelt was fulfilling the American people’s wishes. In
fact, by releasing Japanese Americans back into the country’s interior as the
war ended, the president administered a more moderate policy than most citizens
originally wanted. Gallup asked Americans in December 1942 whether those interned
“should be allowed to return to the Pacific coast when the war is over?” Just
35 percent said they should, while 48 percent said they should not.
The most intense pressure for Roosevelt to implement
internment came from the West Coast, where Japanese Americans were
concentrated. If they hadn’t been removed from their homes, they likely would
have faced sustained, violent harassment.
America’s constitutional order is set up to control
public passions. But passions are never more popular or fierce than when a
proud nation is ambushed and thrust into war. Acting on their passions in 1942,
Americans ignored the right to due process before denying their countrymen
liberty, in open defiance of the Fifth and 14th Amendments. The resulting
policy denied tens of thousands the equal protection of the law.
In such moments, courts are supposed to be the bulwark.
One Japanese-American man, Fred Korematsu, was arrested for refusing to comply
with the internment order, eventually taking his case to
the Supreme Court. He argued that internment of an ethnic group without a trial
was unconstitutional. He was right. But in a 6–3 decision, led by Justice Hugo
Black, the Court abdicated its duty to uphold constitutional protections in the
hardest of times. Internment was justified by the “martial necessity arising
from the danger of espionage and sabotage.” Black believed that there was
danger in not deferring to the president. He had told his fellow justices, essentially, “Somebody must run
this war. It is either Roosevelt or us. And we cannot.”
What the three dissenters recognized, however, was that
there was grave danger in deference as well. Allowing Roosevelt to do what he
wanted — what the American people demanded he do — was a legitimization of
tyranny. The unifying fervor of war had diminished constitutional protections
into little more than parchment
barriers.
There is never a more inconvenient time to keep
constitutional rights secure than wartime. Which is why there is never a more
important time to insist that they are.
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