8NoFish wrote:fflutterffly wrote:It sickens me. I will never visit manzanar nor any of the concentration camps of WWII. My soul can not take the inhumanity so called righteous people do to one another. You can think me insensitive and naive. My own family has numbers upon their forearms. I can't even make a cohesive idea at this moment. I am just sickened by our people and government at that time.
fflutterffly - If you ever get the chance, please try to visit Manzanar. The interpretive center there does a great job in telling the story.
Although visiting a concentration camp such as Manzanar can be disheartening, it can also be uplifting. The people there did triumph over adversity - they made the best of an unjust situation. Just how tough was it? Most of us will probably never know. My relatives who were interned never talked about it. My mother was a college student attending UC Berkeley when she was sent to the Poston Relocation Center - she, like many others, never returned to school. Last year she was given an honorary degree from the University of California - if she were still alive, she would have been so thrilled. Very few of the internees ever criticized the government for imprisoning them...after all they went through they were still proud to be Americans.
beachbum wrote:It's not one our good moments in history as a country. Let's hope we learned a lesson. I have been to Dachau, and thank God we did not go that far. I think about it every time I drive up the hwy.
8NoFish wrote:....Manzanar can be disheartening, it can also be uplifting. The people there did triumph over adversity ......."
johnnhoj wrote:As horrible as being interned was, let's not go overboard and refer to these places as "concentration camps". The concentration camps were on a totally different level than what the Japanese had to endure. Our country did not torture and murder these people. I don't believe anything like that would have ever happened. Yes the Japanese were treated unjustly and in no way am I condoning it, but I don't want to see history revised either.
Bernard wrote:8NoFish wrote:....Manzanar can be disheartening, it can also be uplifting. The people there did triumph over adversity ......."
I agree big time. It is a totally fascinating place despite how one can also feel shame.
Seeing and visiting Manzanar definitely gives a slightly better flavor (for me at least) than, say, visiting Anne Frank's house not to mention a true WWII German "camp". I am afraid to visit one of those too. It may seem apples and oranges and perhaps it is but I guess what I am trying to say is that the Japanese at Manzanar really seemed to keep a chin up. That's what the emotional charge feels like when you see the museum. I forget the exact details but some of the sons even fought in the 42nd infantry. Talk about ironies. Anyway, being on the Owens Valley floor in winter with dust and wind blowing through the floorboards and losing my home certainly does not sound like a bed of roses. I can only speak via my distanced and much more comfortable life experience.
I was doing an Ansel Adams search recently and by pure coincidence ran into some images he took of Manzanar.
This is pretty stunning: http://www.shorpy.com/node/2620?size=_original. Crazy to think Ansel documented this.
B.
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