About this Event
Los Angeles, CA 90089
While the WWII War Relocation Authority (WRA) camps and the Army/Department of Justice camps that incarcerated nearly 120,0000 persons of Japanese ancestry have rightly garnered attention as examples of violations of civil liberties in the U.S., the story of citizen isolation centers for those considered troublemakers is still little known. With a focus on confinement sites in Leupp, Arizona and Moab, Utah, researcher Diana Emiko Tsuchida and filmmaker Claudia Katayanagi will speak about these high-security camps, now considered precursors to Guantanamo Bay prison, following the screening of A Bitter Legacy.
"An Incorrible Troublemaker"
A Talk by Diana Emiko Tsuchida
An incorrigible troublemaker.” That’s what Topaz camp authorities called Diana Emiko Tsuchida’s grandfather, Tamotsu (Tom). Born in Loomis, CA, and educated in Japan, Tom caught the attention of the WRA employees by encouraging fellow incarcerated Japanese Americans to protest their treatment and to speak up about their lack of food, the selling of camp medicine, and safe working conditions. Though he mainly wrote op-eds and attended Kibei-led political meetings, his anger spurred him to intimidate fellow Japanese Americans, demanding that they come clean about what he perceived as their deceitful and treacherous behavior against their own community. After two incidents in Topaz put Tom on the FBI’s radar, he was transferred to Leupp, Arizona without any warning or due process, leaving his young son and wife behind to be transferred to Tule Lake. At the end of the war, he nearly took the family back to Japan but they eventually resettled in Oakland, where Tom would stay in touch with his fellow prisoners from Leupp for years.
The experience of the incarceration haunted Tom for the rest of his life and though he had stacks of his own writing and a framework of a memoir, all of it was lost years after he passed away, leaving murky details behind. Now twenty-five years after his death, his granddaughter is re-shifting the government’s permanent narrative about him and piecing together the family legacy that her grandfather, a complicated and proud man, left behind.
Bios
Claudia Katayanagi, a Yonsei born in San Francisco has been involved in the film industry for many years now. Many of Claudia’s family members were imprisoned in Topaz and Tule Lake, but few wanted to talk about their experiences in depth, part of the “social amnesia” phenomenon that Professor Tetsuden Kashima mentions in her film. She decided to explore the World War II Nikkei incarceration history. During her research into this history, she came across these “Citizen Isolation Centers” in Camp Tulelake, California, Moab, Utah and Leupp, Arizona. Only men were sent to these prisons. They were labeled “troublemakers” for simply asking questions, or refusing to sign the “loyalty oath” until their families were freed from these prisons. With the guidance of the top historians in the field, many stories were revealed about these previously little-known prisons. Claudia has personally traveled to 8 of the 10 main incarceration camps, and all of the Citizen Isolation Center sites as well as Tule Lake Segregation Center. She has been on and filmed a number of pilgrimages over the last few years, including Manzanar, Topaz and Tule Lake Segregation Center. Her film, A Bitter Legacy is now an award-winning feature documentary. Go to her website: http://www.abitterlegacy.com/ for more information.
Diana Emiko Tsuchida is an independent writer and the creator of Tessaku, an oral history project and podcast dedicated to preserving and sharing stories about the Japanese American incarceration and the Japanese American WWII experience. Her work has been featured on NPR's Code Switch, NBC's Asian Pacific America, the Rafu Shimpo, and a TEDxPeacePlaza talk. Her grandparents and father were incarcerated in Santa Anita, Topaz, and Tule Lake. Her grandfather, who was a Kibei born in Loomis, was a vocal resister against the incarceration and was sent to the Citizen Isolation Center in Leupp and later the Department of Justice camp in Crystal City, Texas. He nearly took the family back to Japan from Tule Lake, but they ended up resettling in Berkeley, CA after the war ended. You can read the oral histories she's collected here: https://tessaku.com/
This program is open to all eligible individuals. USC operates all of its programs and activities consistent with the university’s Notice of Non-Discrimination. Eligibility is not determined based on race, sex, ethnicity, sexual orientation or any other prohibited factor.
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