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CAIR-LA Holds Forum on Japanese-American Internment |
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(ANAHEIM, CA, 3/25/08) – On March 21, the Greater Los Angeles Area
office of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR-LA), in
cooperation with the Orange County Islamic Foundation (OCIF), held the
first of five community forums on “Manzanar Revisited: Civil Rights and
Liberties in America.”
The community forum sought to educate and energize Southland Muslims in
preparation for the 39th Annual Manzanar Pilgrimage, a daylong visit to
a Japanese-American internment camp that held prisoner more than 10,000
innocent men, women and children during World War II.
Friday’s community forum involved viewing of filmmaker Taoashi
Nakamura’s “Pilgrimage.” The film was followed by a discussion that
featured CAIR-LA Executive Director Hussam Ayloush and two Nikkei for
Civil Rights & Redress (NCRR) representatives, whose parents had
been interned.
Ayloush said that as our nation continues to face challenges to civil
liberties, the Japanese-American internment period provides an
important lesson in history. “Our country acts at its best when good
people do not remain silent when it is time to speak and act,” said
Ayloush.
Mark Masaoka of NCRR talked about tension in the Japanese-American
community when internment orders were issued. Some felt succumbing to
their internment fate and suspending their civil rights was
appropriate. Others resisted the camps and risked going against the
government’s decree. Those experiences led the way, decades later, for
NCRR to create a committee to help build bridges with American Muslims
in the post-9/11 climate.
June Hibino, also of NCRR, told the audience that her parents were
interned in temporary locations in Stockton and the Bay Area until
permanent camps could be built. The horrific experience left camp
survivors scarred in many ways.
Her generation -- the Sansei – wished to explore its roots and thus, went on the Manzanar pilgrimage in the late 1960s.
“We were affected a lot by the times, by the civil rights movement,”
Hibino said. “We wanted to know about our history and our culture. We
wanted to understand who we were in America and what our identity was.
Those efforts led to visits to Manzanar, starting up Asian studies and
ethnic studies programs, etc.”
The presenters also emphasized forming alliances with other civil
rights and interfaith groups and not shying away from challenging civil
rights abuses.
Imam Yassir Fazaga, religious director of OCIF, thanked the speakers
and encouraged people to join the upcoming pilgrimage on April 26,
2008.
“This is probably one of the most important and provocative programs we
have had at this mosque,” Fazaga said. “In order for us to celebrate
our diversity, we must appreciate each other’s contributions and
acknowledge each other’s struggles.”
The next Community Forum will take place at the Islamic Institute of
Orange County on Saturday, March 29 at 5 p.m. at 1220 N. State College
Blvd., Anaheim, Calif.
CONTACT: CAIR-LA Communications Coordinator Munira Syeda, Tel: 714-776-1847, E-Mail:
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