• en
Five Views of Redress: Celebrating the 20th Anniversary

editor
Licensing

Guest curator: Cynthia Kadohata (1)

Cynthia Kadohata (1)

Novelist; John Newberry Medal recipient for the most distinguished children’s book of 2005

Seattle Post/Intelligencer photograph of the forced removal of Japanese Americans from Bainbridge Island, Washington, 1942.

Courtesy of the Museum of History & Industry, Seattle, Washington (P1-28046) Seattle Post/Intelligencer Collection; Gift of Manzanar Reunion Committee - 1987 (87.34.11)

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

“Dogs make us human.”

Old aboriginal saying

Some researchers believe that humans’ special relationship with dogs changed both of our fates. We would be different if dogs had not evolved by our side, and they would be different as well. What to make, then, of people who are not allowed their dogs?

I am very moved by the photograph of the dog in the back of a truck. Obviously, the worried family will not be allowed to relocate with their family pet. I’ve read that the animal shelters grew full at the time of the evacuation. It’s just another way that our ancestors – our grandfathers and grandmothers, our aunts and uncles – were stripped of their humanity. It’s another way that their hearts were torn out.

Then, in the drawing of a child with a dog, you see someone restoring the natural order, restoring a facet of a child’s humanity. That was the struggle one had in the camps – the struggle to maintain your humanity. This young child is winning that struggle.

Nothing can ever change what happened – it is what it is. But redress restored my faith that humanity triumphs in the end.

Based on this original

Photo of removal from Bainbridge Island
uploaded by editor
Seattle Post/Intelligencer photograph of the forced removal of Japanese Americans from Bainbridge Island, Washington, 1942. Photo of couple with dog Gift of Manzanar Reunion Committee-1987. Courtesy of the Museum of … More »


Get updates

Sign up for email updates

Journal feed
Events feed
Comments feed

Support this project

Discover Nikkei

Discover Nikkei is a place to connect with others and share the Nikkei experience. To continue to sustain and grow this project, we need your help!

Ways to help >>

A project of the Japanese American National Museum


The Nippon Foundation