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Fred Korematsu, 1919-2005

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout' started by SoSoDef76, Mar 31, 2005.

  1. SoSoDef76

    SoSoDef76 Member

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    To this day, I still clearly remember reading and discussing the 1944 case against Korematsu in my immigration law class. The case, especially after learning more about the man himself, brought tears to my eyes.

    For those not in the know, Korematsu legally challenged the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II. In the 1944 case, Korematsu vs. United States, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the mass detention of Japanese Americans was justified by national security concerns. Korematsu was ultimately vindicated nearly 40 years later, when a federal judge overturned Korematsu's conviction, citing government misconduct through suppression, alteration and burning of evidence, race discrimination, lack of military necessity, and manifest injustice.

    RIP

    [​IMG]

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    http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/news/11271447.htm

    Fred Korematsu, at center of landmark internment case, dies

    By Jessie Mangaliman and L.A. Chung
    Mercury News

    Fred Korematsu, the unassuming Oakland draftsman who unsuccessfully challenged the detention of Japanese-Americans during World War II -- but was vindicated 40 years later -- died Wednesday of respiratory failure at the Marin County home of his daughter.

    Korematsu was 86.

    To many Japanese-Americans and other civil libertarians, Korematsu was a civil rights icon who risked not only the legal wrath of his own government, but the scorn of his own people when in 1944 he challenged the internment of 120,000 Japanese Americans.

    Korematsu's stirring legal saga was the subject of an Emmy-winning PBS documentary in 2002: He was one of four sons of Japanese immigrants who owned a flower nursery. When ordered to prepare to go to detention camp, Korematsu refused because he believed that Executive Order 9066, signed by President Roosevelt, violated his constitutional rights.

    Korematsu went into hiding briefly, his facial features altered by plastic surgery. He was arrested in San Leandro.

    In May 1942, he was convicted in federal court of violating the presidential order. He appealed.

    In the now infamous 1944 case, Korematsu vs. United States, cited in every constitutional law textbook, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the mass detention of Japanese-Americans was justified by national security concerns.

    It was a deep disappointment to young Korematsu, who was in his 20s at the time. But unexpectedly in 1982, three young Japanese-American lawyers in San Francisco approached the feisty Korematsu and convinced him to take his case back to court. -- Karen Kai, Don Tamaki and Dale Minami were energized by their own parents and grandparents who had been interned.

    The following year, Judge Marilyn Hall Patel of U.S. District Court in San Francisco, overturned Korematsu's conviction, citing government misconduct through suppression, alteration and burning of evidence, race discrimination, lack of military necessity, and manifest injustice. ``We were not only trying to reverse a very bad legal precedent,'' recalled Don Tamaki, ``but we were also trying to vindicate our our families.''

    To Tamaki, ``the case represented the trials that Japanese Americans never had.''

    ``Fred was a giant in our community and a man who fought not only for the civil rights for Japanese-Americans but for all Americans,'' Minami said. ``He took an unpopular stand at a time when the country was in crisis. And he withstood criticism and ostracism 40 years later.''

    Said Kai, ``There was truly an understanding that this case was a historic one,'' she said. ``It had tremendous meaning on a personal level, but also in a much larger sense in terms of constitutional law and civil rights.''

    Korematsu's case paved the way for the landmark 1988 Civil Liberties Act, when the U.S. government acknowledged that the detention of Japanese-Americans was wrong, and apologized.

    In 1998, President Clinton awarded Korematsu with the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the country's highest civil honor.

    Korematsu loomed large in the collective memory of young Japanese-Americans like Chris Hirano, director of community and corporate development for the Japanese Cultural and Community Center of Northern California.

    ``He's been incredibly inspiring for someone like me,'' said Hirano. ``He epitomized courage in the face of adversity.''

    Hirano said he's spent some time with the unassuming Korematsu. ``What I learned from him is a lesson in simple philosophy of doing what's right,'' Hirano said, ``and in in doing that, he changed the world.''
     
    #1 SoSoDef76, Mar 31, 2005
    Last edited: Mar 31, 2005
  2. wouldabeen23

    wouldabeen23 Member

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    might wanna move that to the D&D
     
  3. nyquil82

    nyquil82 Member

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    I read this in Con law two months ago. The modern fight going on was a recent case where an American was found in Afghanistan when we invaded, he was presumed to be an enemy combatant and was sent to Guantanamo without being given his due process rights.

    Not unlike Japan and their history textbooks, the US also sweeps stuff under the rug, only to repeat the same mistakes.
    (that should send this to D&D)
     
  4. Sishir Chang

    Sishir Chang Member

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    True this is thread is addressing the topics of racism and national security but why should the fight against unjust detention be considered controversial?






    Ah hell forget I asked.....:(
     
  5. Sishir Chang

    Sishir Chang Member

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    I remember studying about Fred Korematsu and he deserves to go into history with Rosa Parks and others who stood up to injustice and discrimination just based on ethnicity.

    Peace be with you Fred Korematsu.
     
  6. Invisible Fan

    Invisible Fan Member

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    Only the Supreme Court can overturn a former Supreme Court ruling. I don't believe Mr. Korematsu was fully vindicated by the decision. It seemed like the reparations were a messy compromise from the hard liners and the apologists.

    RIP
     
  7. Sishir Chang

    Sishir Chang Member

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    You're right Invisible but it was a positive step in the right direction.
     

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