Discover Nikkei

https://www.discovernikkei.org/en/interviews/clips/619/

Waiting for the right time to start Redress Movement

There was no way we could do it (Redress Movement) before [the 1980s]. We didn’t have the facts to begin with. Other things, we were so busy trying to rebuild our lives, we were afraid, if they did [this] to us one time, what’s going to keep them from putting us away again if we starting doing something like this [suing the government]? If your constitutional rights are so flagrantly violated, what kind of assurance is there that they’re not going to do something like that again? There were people I know who still felt that way at that time in 1980, ‘81, ‘82.


Redress movement

Date: August 26, 1998

Location: Virginia, US

Interviewer: Darcie Iki, Mitchell Maki

Contributed by: Watase Media Arts Center, Japanese American National Museum

Interviewee Bio

Aiko Yoshinaga Herzig was born in Sacramento, California in 1924. Her family immigrated from Kumamoto, Japan in 1919. During the Depression, the Yoshinaga family moved to Los Angeles, California.

During World War II, Aiko was incarcerated first at Manzanar with her husband’s family. She transferred to Jerome, Arkansas with her newborn daughter to be with her family. In 1944, the Yoshinaga family left Jerome and resettled in New York. She divorced and remarried a Nisei soldier. She went with him to Japan where he worked during the Occupation period. One of her husband’s co-workers was her future husband, Jack Herzig.

After her return to the United States, Aiko became involved in Asian Americans for Action. Aiko and Jack played a pivotal role in the Redress Movement through their research at the National Archives in Washington D.C. The documents they found were instrumental in the coram nobis case that vacated the convictions against Fred Korematsu, Min Yasui, and Gordon Hirabayashi. Aiko was also hired as the primary researcher for the Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civilians, and then worked for the Department of Justice Office of Redress Administration to help identify individuals eligible for redress payments. 

She passed away on July 18, 2018 at age 93. (July 2018)

Uyeda,Clifford

Criteria for who gets redress

(1917 - 2004) Political activist

Uyeda,Clifford

Changing "reparations" to "redress"

(1917 - 2004) Political activist

Uyeda,Clifford

Appointing John Tateishi as National JACL Redress Chair

(1917 - 2004) Political activist

Uyeda,Clifford

Inouye’s strategy for educating the American public

(1917 - 2004) Political activist

Uyeda,Clifford

Recalling President Carter’s signing of the Commission bill

(1917 - 2004) Political activist

Uyeda,Clifford

John Tateishi plays a role in changing people's minds

(1917 - 2004) Political activist

Uyeda,Clifford

Legacy of redress

(1917 - 2004) Political activist

Emi,Frank

“No more shikataganai

(1916-2010) draft resister, helped form the Heart Mountain Fair Play Committee

Hohri,William

The lawsuit set the standard for restoring people’s rights

(1927-2010) Political Activist

Mineta,Norman Yoshio

Beginnings of CWRIC

(b. 1931) U.S. Former Secretary of Transportation

Mineta,Norman Yoshio

Bill 442

(b. 1931) U.S. Former Secretary of Transportation

Mineta,Norman Yoshio

The last hurdle – President Reagan

(b. 1931) U.S. Former Secretary of Transportation

Murakami,Jimmy

Reparations

(1933 – 2014) Japanese American animator

Naganuma,Kazumu

His sister secured reparations for the family

(b. 1942) Japanese Peruvian incarcerated in Crystal City