Discovering: A Personal and Community Recovery Project -- The Fate of the "Wingless Birds" I: Issei Immigration, Prewar Lives, Seizure and Arrest -- The Fate of the "Wingless Birds" II: Issei Hearings, Internment, Exile -- In Exile I: The Journey, a Captive Life, and Issei Resistance -- In Exile II: Battling "Barbed Wire Disease": Strategies for Survival and Resistance -- In Exile III: Literacy and Surviving Captivity -- Compounded Ironies I: "Alien Enemy" Fathers, American Patriot Sons -- Compounded Ironies II: Advocacy in Death and Life -- Return from Exile and Rebundling
Summary:
"Remembering Our Grandfathers' Exile: US Imprisonment of Hawaiʻi's Japanese in World War II is a composite chronicling of the Hawaiʻi Japanese immigrant experience in mainland exile and internment during WWII--from pre-war climate to arrest to exile to return. Told through the eyes of a granddaughter and researcher born during that war, it is also a research narrative that reveals parallels between pre-WWII conditions and current 21st century anti-immigrant attitudes and heightened racism. It includes an introduction of Okawa's grandfather, Reverend Tamasaku Watanabe, a Protestant minister, and other Issei prisoners-all legal immigrants excluded by law from citizenship--in a collective biographical narrative that depicts their suffering, challenges, and survival as highly literate men faced with captivity in the little-known prison camps run by the U.S. Justice and War Departments"-- Provided by publisher.
This resource is supported by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by State Library of Iowa.