Kitsap Military Times, January 06, 2017

Page 1

LAPORA LINDSEY n Page 6 New Year, New Voice.

MEMORIAL WALL n Page 8 Fulfillment of a calling.

WORLD WAR II TIMELINE n Page 3 What was happening in Kitsap and the world from April 1 to July 31.

Kitsap

WORTH REPEATING n Page 6 1942 editorial has message for today.

MilitaryTimes The Voice for Kitsap County’s Active-Duty

Kitsap Military Times to be part of weekly papers and online By Terryl Asla Kitsap News Group

There’s just too much military news for a once-amonth publication. So after this edition, the stories, columns and features now produced by Kitsap Military Times will be published as part of your local Kitsap News Group newspaper — every Friday, instead of only once a month. KMT will also continue to be a section of KitsapDailyNews.com. “KMT content is currently only available in 8,500 copies distributed once a month to select sites,” Kitsap News Group Managing Editor Richard Walker said. “Now, KMT stories can be featured in the Bremerton Patriot and our other publications as well — a potential distribution of 65,000 copies. “We will also continue to produce our year-long ‘Kitsap Goes to War’ series, documenting what it was like to live in Kitsap County during world War II — our salute to the greatest generation. Terryl Asla is editor of the KMT. You may reach him at tasla@soundpublishing.com

January 2017

Personnel, Veterans and their Families

KITSAP GOES TO WAR!!! A 12-PART SERIES RECALLING THE 75TH ANNIVERSARY OF WORLD WAR II | Part Two: April 1 to July 20, 1942

Kitsap County Japanese Americans incarcerated American population of the continental United On April 1, 1942, after a three-day journey States. that began with riding a ferry from Bainbridge This chapter did not begin on April 1, 1942, Island to downtown Seattle and then boarding but on the morning of Dec. 7, 1941. a train with the window blinds shut The Imperial Japanese Navy Air tight, then-22-year old Kay Sakai Service had bombed Pearl Harbor, remembers that even after the train which was in Hawaii U.S. Territory, finally stopped at high noon in a hot destroying the majority of the U.S. desert. Everyone was herded onto Naval Pacific Fleet and claiming crowded buses. Sakai and all of the more than 2,400 American lives. The other 276 Japanese Americans from next day, President Franklin Delano her Puget Sound island home still Roosevelt addressed a joint session of had no clue of where they were the U.S. Congress and declared war on being taken by bayonet-armed U.S. Japan, famously stating “Dec. 7, 1941, a Army soldiers. By Clarence date which live in infamy.” As the bus droned on, after a Moriwaki “When I heard the news I didn’t even couple of hours Kay remembers Special Correspondent know what or even where Pearl Harbor that the air was getting hotter and was,” Sakai recalled. “My parents were dryer when, in the distance, she very, very shocked, and they thought that spotted a few makeshift buildings with more was a very bad move by Japan. In fact, my dad under construction. went and turned in his life insurance policy and “You could see the heat waves rising from bought liberty bonds. He wanted to help the the black tar paper that covered the buildings American cause...” and I thought to myself “Thank God we’re not Immediately after Pearl going to a place like Harbor, F.B.I. Director that,” Sakai recalled. J. Edgar Hoover com“Then suddenly, the menced a massive, nationbus turned towards the wide dragnet of elders buildings and my heart within the Japanese just sank. This was not American community. an April Fool’s joke; In two days, from New this was where we were York and Miami to San going to live.” Diego and Seattle, F.B.I. Sakai her family, and agents imprisoned 1,212 the entire Japanese Japanese American men American community from 21 cities and the from Bainbridge Island Hawaii territory without became the first playcharges, warrants or triers in a sad chapter in als. American history — the The F.B.I. was able to first community to be accomplish such a logistiforcibly removed and cal achievement because placed into Manzanar Troops take away the Mojis’ beloved dog the entire population of —which was the first “King.” Japanese Americans – of 10 major concentration camps that eventually incarcerated 120,000 down to 1/16 Japanese heritage – had already been under surveillance since the early 1930’s Japanese Americans from the west coast, following Imperial Japan’s 1931 invasion into or about 95 percent of the entire Japanese

PENINSULA SUBARU

Manchuria. It was not revealed until 2007 that the U.S. Census Bureau had provided U.S. government intelligence agencies, including the F.B.I., with individual identifiable information on all Japanese Americans. The F.B.I. dragnet of Bainbridge Island occurred on Feb. 4, 1942, when their agents — along with assistance from the Kitsap County Sheriff’s Office and the Washington State Patrol — simultaneously searched every Japanese American home. They arrested 34 men and one woman, with no charges, warrants or trial. Eventually, 19 men would be incarcerated in Department of Justice prison camps for nearly the entire war. The F.B.I.’s surveillance See INTERNED, Page2

Photo credits: Mr. Moriwaki by John Noltner Photography; others courtesy of the Bainbridge Island Japanese American Community.

SUBARU SALUTES YOUR SERVICE.

1-855-361-2622

3888 W St Hwy 16-Bremerton www.peninsulasubaru.com All vehicles subject to prior sale. All vehicles plus tax, license and up to $150 negotiable doc fees.

CLOSED SUNDAYS FOR FAMILY DAY

K I T S A P DA I LY N E W S .C O M | A S U P P L E M E N T T O T H E B R E M E R T O N PA T R I O T


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.