

For no other reason, but their racial descent. Our executive, legislative and judicial branches were all in agreement that it was lawful, just and legal to round up an entire race of people, regardless of their citizenship, loyalty or lack of any criminal or subversive intent. What does this historical decision mean for today’s immigrant?Īs a result of this decision, for a brief, but painful time in our history, the “land of the free” became more like the land of the Japanese and Nazi powers we were fighting against. The Court held that this was a proper war time power. The United States Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of the curfew and the delegation of power to a military commander to implement it. Hirabayashi appealed the judgment contending that the curfew violated the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution because it was applied based on race and violated due process. A federal jury found him guilty and he was incarcerated for three months. Hirabayashi violated a curfew set in place by the military commander, he was charged with two federal crimes of violating the curfew and failure to report to the Civil Control Station as directed by the military commander under the authority of the executive order. Hirabayashi was stripped from his home and placed in an internment camp. After Japan bombed Pearl Harbor and after the President’s executive order, Mr. He went to public school, graduated high school and went to college at the University of Washington, all within his native United States. He had never stepped foot in Japan in his entire life.
#Hopefully in japanese full
Hirabayashi was born a full blooded United States citizen in Seattle, Washington in 1918. The United States Supreme Court took the issue up in Hirabayashi v.

Many of those who were placed in the internment camps joined the United States military and fought and died bravely for the country they loved. Illogically, the executive order did not apply to Italian-Americans or German-Americans.

Loyal Japanese-Americans willing to die for the United States were treated as potential saboteurs and potential traitors, based on nothing but their race. This executive order applied to United States citizens, born and raised in the United States, who had never stepped foot in Japan and had never stepped foot off of U.S.

An entire population of our country (anyone of Japanese descent) was rounded up from an entire section of our country (the eastern United States) and removed. This executive order led to the promulgation of federal regulations that authorized the creation of internment camps and removal of all Japanese-Americans from their homes on the west coast of the United States. On February 19th, 1942, President Roosevelt signed the, now infamous, Executive Order 9066, which authorized a military commander to determine who could live, enter or remain where within the United States. For Japanese-American citizens and immigrants, and their families, December 7th, 1941 began a long saga of paranoia, discrimination, degradations and hardship. But, what President Roosevelt probably didn’t consider was how that date would be infamous to different people for different reasons. December 7th, 1941 is a date which has lived in infamy for more than three quarters of a century. President Roosevelt could not have been more right when he began his speech with that famous line 76 years ago. But by the highest court in the land, the United States Supreme Court. Yet, on December 7th, 1941, that national identity was sacrificed for “the greater good.” Not only by the president and the legislature. No matter the cost, we have always held fast to the ideal that we will defend our individual freedoms to the last. The United States has never been a country of “the good of the many outweigh the needs of the few.” We have always been a nation that values, above all else, individualism. Not only anti-illegal immigration sentiment, but also anti-immigrant sentiment, in general. Immigration attorneys throughout the country are passionately trying to hold back a surging tide of anti-immigrant sentiment, specifically toward the Muslim community. Excerpt of a speech given by President Roosevelt after the December 7th, 1941 Japanese attack on Pearl HarborĪ dark stain on our nation’s history resonates profoundly in today’s immigration discussion.
