A Bold Act of Solidarity: When the U.S. forced tens of thousands of Japanese Americans into prison camps during World War II, 17-year-old Ralph Lazo volunteered to go with them.

AuthorMajerol, Veronica

When Ralph Lazo, a high school student in Los Angeles, saw his Japanese American friends being forced from their homes and into internment camps during World War II, he did something unexpected: He went with them.

The United States government had set up the camps under President Franklin D. Roosevelt's executive order to imprison Japanese Americans following Japan's surprise attack on Pearl Harbor in Hawaii a few months earlier. From 1942 to 1946, more than 115,000 people of Japanese ancestry living in the western U.S.--two-thirds of them American citizens and the rest legal immigrants--would be held in 10 camps, located in barren areas of the country.

In the spring of 1942, after seeing his classmates get sent away, 17-year-old Ralph boarded a train and headed to the Manzanar Relocation Center, an internment camp in eastern California. Unlike the other inmates, Ralph didn't have to be there. A Mexican American, he was the only known person to pretend to be Japanese so he could be willingly incarcerated.

What compelled Ralph to give up his freedom for two and a half years--sleeping in tar-paper-covered barracks, using open latrines and showers, and waiting on long lines for meals in mess halls, on grounds surrounded by barbed-wire fencing and watched by guards in towers? He wanted to be with his friends.

"My Japanese American friends at high school were ordered to evacuate the West Coast," Ralph told the Los Angeles Times in 1944, "so I decided to go along with them."

Mass Hysteria

Today the imprisonment of Japanese Americans during World War II is remembered as one of our nation's gravest injustices. Loyal Americans, many of whom had been active in their communities, churches, and schools, were locked up not because of any crimes they'd committed, but simply because of their ethnicity. Yet at the time, not many people were willing to stand up for Japanese Americans. Ralph Lazo was one of the few who did.

"There were very small numbers of active allies," says Eric Muller, a professor at the University of North Carolina School of Law and a scholar of Japanese internment. "There were almost no groups nationally in 1942 that stood up for and alongside Japanese Americans."

The nation turned on its Japanese American citizens after the bombing of Pearl Harbor on December 7,1941, which thrust the U.S. into World War II against Japan and its Axis allies, Germany and Italy (see timeline, p. 18). Just hours after the attack, F.B.I. agents raided the homes of Japanese American community and religious leaders, imprisoning anyone suspected of secretly working for the enemy. These suspicions were based on scant evidence. Simply owning books that contained Japanese characters could be cause for arrest.

The Los Angeles Police Department shut down businesses in the Little Tokyo area, and teachers barred Japanese American students from reciting the Pledge of Allegiance.

Asian immigrants in the U.S. had long faced discrimination, dating back to the 19th century, when tens of thousands of immigrants from China arrived to work in gold mines, and later, build railroads. The Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 barred immigrants from China for 60 years. And in 1917, out of a fear that Asians would take jobs away from whites, the U.S. suspended immigration of most East Asians. Then, in 1924, it barred all ethnic Japanese except those born in the U.S. from gaining citizenship.

But this anti-Japanese sentiment peaked after the attack on Pearl Harbor. Many politicians, the press, and military officials propagated rumors that people of Japanese ancestry, even those born in the U.S., might secretly aid Japan should it invade the West Coast.

In reality, not one person of Japanese ancestry in the U.S. was ever charged with espionage or sabotage during the war. And the State Department's own report had concluded that Japanese Americans didn't pose a national security threat. But that didn't stop the hysteria from spreading.

Some Californians in the agricultural business were eager to perpetuate these myths too. More than 40 percent of the state's crops came from farms owned by Japanese Americans, so they stood to gain from less competition if Japanese Americans could no longer operate their farms.

On February 19,1942, at the urging of every member of Congress from California, Oregon, and Washington, as well as from military advisers, President Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066, which authorized the military to designate zones in which certain citizens couldn't live.

Behind Barbed Wire

By May, all people of Japanese ancestry in California, the western halves of Washington and Oregon, and southern Arizona were forced to abandon their homes, businesses, and schools. Orphans and foster children of Japanese ancestry who were living with white parents were rounded up too. They were all sent to 10 watchtower-guarded camps run by the Army in remote areas around the U.S. (see map).

Unlike most Americans, Ralph Lazo wasn't swept up by the anti-Japanese sentiment. His family lived near the Little Tokyo area of Los Angeles, and at the ethnically diverse Belmont High School, he counted Japanese Americans among his closest friends. As many were distancing themselves from their Japanese neighbors--or worse, attacking them verbally or physically--his identification with his friends grew deeper.

"Who can say I haven't got Japanese blood in me?" he said in 1944. "Who knows what kind of blood runs in my veins?"

Before he left for internment, he told his father he was "going to camp," creating the impression that he was going to summer camp. His father didn't press him, and neither did government officials, whose system for entry into the camps relied largely on self-reporting, Muller...

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