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I am Ruth Shigeko Ishizaki (formerly Hirose) and I was born and
raised on our family's eighty acres of orange groves in
Richgrove, California in the southern San Joaquin Valley,
northeast of Delano, at the base of the Sierra Mountains.
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Photo courtesy of Andy
Frazer |
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Since our
orange grove was east of the California Highway #99 dividing
line, called the “Free Zone” for Japanese Americans at that
time, my married oldest sister and her family voluntarily moved
in with us from Palo Alto, California. We all had the
understanding from the U.S. government that we were all
considered to be far enough inland and away from the West Coast
Defense Line, thus we felt that we did not need to move further
east for the duration of the war. |
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Without
decent notice, on May 12, 1942, our entire family, which
included my parents, myself, five siblings, and my oldest
sister’s family from Palo Alto, were uprooted from Richgrove and
bused to the Fresno County Fairgrounds (Fresno Assembly Center).
Some of us were housed in cobwebbed horse stables that were
whitewashed over without being cleaned. During the hot Fresno
summer, the smell of horse shi-shi (urine) came up from
the stable floor. It was hard to get use to it. |
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Approximately 500 of us, mostly California-born
Japanese, left the Fresno County Fairgrounds in late
October for a five-day train trip to Jerome, Arkansas.
Being prisoners during the war, we had the lowest
priority on the railroad tracks and thus we were
sidetracked in desolate places, sometimes for hours.
Since the train cars were so old, the cars didn’t have
toilet-holding tanks so the railroad company locked all
of the toilets during stops. The military police guards with
bayoneted rifles didn’t let the kids wander away from
the train, but it didn’t bother the younger boys because
they did their business directly onto the railroad
tracks between railroad cars. |
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Train passengers were kept under armed
guard as in this photograph of incarcerees arriving at
Santa Anita. |
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The Crusaders and Mary Nakahara |
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| The Crusaders, a
group of high school Nikkei girls, was a brainchild of Mary
Nakahara (later known as Yuri Kochiyama, a 2005 Nobel Prize
nominee) while she was interned in the Santa Anita Assembly
Center in Santa Anita, California. The camp was transformed from
the renowned Santa Anita Horse Race Track. Mary Nakahara taught
Sunday school at Santa Anita. While her twin brother was serving
in the United States Army Military Intelligence Language School,
Mary wanted to do something to help the Nisei servicemen who
were in the U.S. Army at that time. Some of the teenage girls in
Mary’s Sunday school class had brothers in the service also.
Mary thought it would be a good school project for all of her
teenage Sunday school students if they were to write to these
lonely Nisei serving our country. |
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From the Santa Anita Assembly
Center, Mary and her mother were shipped to Jerome,
Arkansas. I was also sent to Jerome from the Fresno
Fairgrounds and that is where I met Mary. She continued
the work of the Crusaders in Jerome. |
| Yuri Kochiyama later
became a human rights activist |
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| The high school
girls in camp had very little funds so the correspondence to the
Nisei servicemen started out with postcards to the known Nisei
servicemen. As the people in the camp caught on to what the
Crusaders were doing; many of the incarcerated started to donate
their scarce tiny sums of money for postage stamps and postcards
to help out. In time, the Crusaders
correspondence rose into the hundreds (credit must be given to
the nameless church secretaries and stenographers who cut the
stencils and ran them off on monograph machine). At its height,
the number of Crusaders increased by many folds and many
participants were not necessarily Sunday school students. We
were encouraged to use very thin onion sheet papers to keep the
so-called ‘Victory Mail’ to the servicemen as light as possible.
We are grateful to the hundreds of benefactors who supported us
by giving us various holiday greeting cards that were sent to
the Nisei servicemen.
Countless letters from the GIs were
particularly memorable. One said that he wanted to be buried
where he may fall because he didn’t want to be returned to a
land where he wasn’t wanted. |
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The Jerome USO |
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| Mary Nakahara
also started the Jerome Camp USO for the visiting Nisei GIs with
the help of the Crusaders. Both of the Hawaii and Mainland Nisei
who took their basic training at Camp Shelby, Mississippi would
take weekend bus trips into the Arkansas imprisonment camps to
be with Japanese to remind them of their family whom they
greatly missed. A majority of the infantry trainees were still
not 21 years old and it was their first time away from loved
ones. Dancing was something new to
some of the boys who grew up on a plantation and they enjoyed
dancing with us teenage Sunday school Nisei girls. The Camp
Shelby Nisei warned each other that most of the girls were of
high school ‘jail-bait’ age -- by that time the older Nisei
girls that already finished high school had left the camp for
college or employment in distant cities outside of the camp --
so they should not ruin it by bringing shame to their parents
back home in the Islands. |
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Mary Nakahara Leaves Jerome |
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| In due time Mary
Nakahara left the Jerome Camp to operate the Aloha USO in
Hattiesburg, Mississippi nearby Camp Shelby . The Hattiesburg
USO was in the center of the block on Main Street. No Blacks
were allowed to be seen on Main Street in Arkansas in those days
even if they were a serviceman, thus, the Black servicemen
didn’t have a USO Canteen to go to for entertainment.
Although
Mary was in Hattiesburg, she continued to write original holiday
greetings. Mary was quite a writer; in fact she wrote right
along a column for the camp news. Skilled in communication, Mary
briefs added touching warmth to the Crusaders’ out-going
birthday cards, Mother’s Day cards to sons, thank you notes and
many other sad or joyous occasions. The Crusaders who were still
in camp did the printing, addressing of the cards and the
thousands of letters to Nisei servicemen overseas. |
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Closing Jerome |
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| The U.S.
government needed to empty the Jerome camp to house German POWs.
Upon inspection by the Swiss government, Jerome was declared
unfit for war prisoners according to the Geneva Convention. It
cost the United States twice as much to bring the camp to Geneva
Convention standard than it was to build the original camp for
holding Japanese Americans. The Geneva Convention did not apply
to the United States holding its own American citizens. |
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The Crusader’s Scrapbook |
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| Mary Nakahara’s
mother moved to the Rohwer Camp, Block 38 and so did what was
left of our family. Upon finishing high school in 1945 I left
for a college in Chicago where my older brother found
employment. Mrs. Nakahara and I traveled to Chicago together
with she was responsible for me since I was still considered a
minor at the age of 17. Each of us traveled with only two
suitcases, creating a large problem with what to do with all the
Crusaders correspondence. Not
wanting to throw out all the Crusader material, my pal, Rinko (Shimasaki)
Enosaki; and I put everything into two scrapbooks purchased at
the Rower Camp canteen. Rinko took one scrapbook with her when
she left camp and I wound up with the other scrapbook and
everything else that didn’t fit into either scrapbook.
After the war, I was able to return some
of the photographs and correspondence to the families of those
who were killed during the war. I also kept in touch with many
of these pen pals long after the war. There were about dozen
Nisei GIs that became my lifelong friends and I have kept in
constant touch with them and their new families throughout these
many years. Unfortunately too many of them have now passed on.
It is important that future generations
know that there were many of us in the camps that were very
actively concerned for the lives of the youngsters who were in
danger of losing their life. We were just trying our best to
give what little comfort that we could.
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Ruth Ishizaki at the 2008 Tule
Lake Pilgrimage. JAMsj Curator Jimi Yamaichi
is to her right. Photo courtesy of Will Kaku. |
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