â€å“america Was Made Up Again of Immigrants Eleanor Roosevelt

portrait of First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt
Portrait of First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt plant at the National Park Service's Presidents Park

The White House

In 1943 Eleanor Roosevelt visited the internment camp at Gila River and immediately started campaigning to help confined Japanese Americans. In her syndicated daily paper column, she lauded the efforts of the inmates to grow their ain food, ameliorate the harsh desert climate and the ugliness of the hastily constructed camps, and police and educate themselves. In an interview published in theLos Angeles Times 3 days after her visit, she was more frank in her comments. She described the inmates as living in conditions that were not indecent, but "certainly not luxurious," and added, "I wouldn't like to live that way." She strongly recommended that the camps be airtight as soon as possible. "[T]he sooner we get the young [native-built-in] Japanese out of the camps the better. Otherwise if we don't look out nosotros will create another Indian trouble." It was her most open public expression of opposition during the state of war.

Eleanor Roosevelt visiting the Gila River Internment Camp
Eleanor Roosevelt visiting the Gila River Internment Army camp

U.S. National Athenaeum and Records Administration

I can well understand the bitterness of people who have lost loved ones at the hands of the Japanese armed services authorities, and nosotros know that the totalitarian philosophy, whether it is in Nazi Frg or Fascist Italy or in Japan, is one of cruelty and brutality. It is not difficult to understand why people living here in hourly anxiety for those they honey have difficulty in viewing this problem considerately, simply for the honor of our country the residue of u.s. must exercise then. These understandable feelings are aggravated by the old time economic fright on the Due west Coast and the unreasoning racial feeling which sure people, through ignorance, have ever had wherever they came in contact with people who are unlike from themselves. This is one reason why many people believe that nosotros should take directed our original immigration more intelligently. Nosotros needed people to develop our country, but we should never take immune any groups to settle as groups where they created a piffling German language or Japanese or Scandinavian isle and did not melt into our general community design. Some of the South American countries take learned from our mistakes and are now planning to scatter their needed immigration.

To undo a error is always harder than not to create ane originally just we seldom have the foresight. Therefore we take no choice but to try to correct our by mistakes and I promise that the recommendations of the staff of the War Relocation Authority, who have come to know individually well-nigh of the Japanese Americans in these diverse camps, will be accepted. Little by niggling equally they are checked, Japanese Americans are being allowed on request to leave the camps and start independent and productive lives over again. Whether you are a taxpayer in California or in Maine, it is to your advantage, if you detect i or two Japanese American families settled in your neighborhood, to endeavor to regard them every bit individuals and not to condemn them before they are given a off-white chance to bear witness themselves in the community.

"A Japanese is always a Japanese" is an hands accepted phrase and it has taken concord quite naturally on the West Coast because of fear, simply it leads nowhere and solves aught. A Japanese American may be no more than Japanese than a German-American is German language, or an Italian-American is Italian, or of whatsoever other national groundwork. All of these people, including the Japanese Americans, have men who are fighting today for the preservation of the democratic fashion of life and the ideas around which our nation was built.

We have no common race in this country, but we have an ideal to which all of us are loyal: we cannot progress if we expect down upon any group of people amongst us because of race or religion. Every citizen in this state has a right to our basic freedoms, to justice and to equality of opportunity. Nosotros retain the right to lead our individual lives equally we please, but we can only practice and so if we grant to others the freedoms that we wish for ourselves.

Introduction from Greg Robinson, Université du Québec À Montréal

Speech from: Solitude and Ethnicity: An Overview of Earth War Two Japanese American Relocation Sites by J. Burton, Chiliad. Farrell, F. Lord, and R. Lord

smithangroys1964.blogspot.com

Source: https://www.nps.gov/articles/erooseveltinternment.htm

0 Response to "â€å“america Was Made Up Again of Immigrants Eleanor Roosevelt"

Post a Comment

Iklan Atas Artikel

Iklan Tengah Artikel 1

Iklan Tengah Artikel 2

Iklan Bawah Artikel