By Mari Hayman, HuffPost USHomer Yasui holds a placard with the name of the camp where he was incarcerated during World War II, part of a protest Sunday in Tacoma, Washington, at a present-day immigrant detention center.
“Imagine putting immigrant children in a prison because their parents brought them to the United States perhaps illegally,” he said. “Throw ’em in jail? This is supposed to be a country of refuge and salvation and asylum, and here we’re treating them like criminals and putting people in jail!” Despite the unpromising weather, a crowd of about 400 people would soon show up for one of the first big actions organized by the Seattle chapter of Tsuru for Solidarity, a project led by Japanese Americans calling for an end to immigrant detention and incarceration. On June 6, Tsuru delegations from around the country will converge in Washington, D.C., with 126,000 paper cranes — representing the number of people of Japanese ancestry incarcerated in the U.S.
It took the family two days to learn that Masuo and other immigrant leaders had been taken to the Multnomah County Jail in Portland, Oregon, an hour away. “We knew the ax was gonna fall,” Grandpa explained — Japanese men had already been rounded up in the days following Pearl Harbor, and his father was a well-known businessman. “I wouldn’t say we panicked, we weren’t even shocked, really; we were just really disheartened. That’s what it was.
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