| Oral History S-T
SUSUMU SATOW
The Oral History of Sus Satow contains considerable
history of the 100/442 Regimental Combat Team in action in Livorno,
Bruyeres, Arno River, etc., and of Sadao Munemori, the Congressional
Medal of Honor recipient. Sus himself received the Bronze Star Medal for
"meritorious service in combat" Sus was born and has resided
in Sacramento except for the time in Poston Relocation Center, working
on Idaho and Colorado sugar beet harvests and with the highly decorated
442 RCT in Europe. He was an active committee member in the planning and
actual construction of the Poston Memorial Monument and Kiosk. He is
active in Nisei VFW Post 8985, CSUS Library Japanese American Archival
Collection Committee, and 100/442/MIS Memorial Foundation in Little
Tokyo, Los Angeles.
EADA SILVERTHORNE
Eighty-eight years old Caucasian woman supporting
work of lawyer husband which included working among the internees at
Tule Lake Camp. She worked there six months with Japanese Americans
about the Loyalty Questionnaire and she taught a year at the high
school. A child of Mormon missionaries with education at Brigham Young
University and Cal State Sacramento, she understood minorities and
related well. Tule Lake riots, breaking up of Families because of the
loyalty questions, the Kibei situation were stressful but she expresses
satisfaction with her teaching of English, Drama to the internee
children. She retired after 17 years at San Juan High School. Community
activities include officer positions with League of Women Voters and the
PTA.
NOBORU TAGUMA
An account of a 20-years-old Nisei who resisted the
Army draft because his family was unconstitutionally interned during WW
II. There are 3 pages of photos, 99 pages of text and 5 pages of
documents. With just a high school education and of a farm family,
Taguma resisted the draft and renounced American citizenship which was
restored by presidential pardon, Christmas, 1948, along with 281 other
resisters. All the resisters suffered years of ostracism and were
treated as outcasts, even by own Japanese American community, but his
own family stood by him. Passage of time lessens such
feelings--nourishing hope and understanding. In a mood of
reconciliation, the 1990 San Diego National JACL adopted a resolution
recognizing the stand of the draft resisters and "they too, deserve
a place of honor and respect in the history of Americans of Japanese
ancestry"
TSUNE TAHARA
An interview with very old (96) Japanese-speaking
Issei woman, 10th child of a samurai, assisted by son Shiro and friend
Kinya Noguchi. Two pages of photos are followed by 90 pages of English
text and then 74 pages in roma-ji (Japanese phrases in English). The
general drift seems for Mrs. Tahara that the two husbands she had were
not much help as she separated from first husband after a short marriage
and the second husband died early (1957) leaving her with the
responsibility of raising six children. All her life was spent in Florin
area except the WW II years were spent in Jerome-Rohwer camps. Four of
the sons served in the US Army. One died in France making her a Gold
Star Mother, and his life insurance as well as the Redress money were a
great help. Returning from internment camp she found the vineyard mostly
dead and house broken into having to start all over, again.
BENJI TAKAHASHI
A young English-speaking Methodist Sansei minister
interviews a very elderly (95) Japanese-speaking Methodist Issei.
Assisting with the interpreting is wife, Florence, and daughter Naomi.
There are 4 pages of photos, 25 pages of text with some of the responses
in roma-ji (Japanese phrases in English). Benji indicates he is happy to
be living in a small Christian town like Loomis where he and Florence (Takagishi)
were married in 1926. He came from Japan at age 20 and worked at his
uncleís Loomis general store all the time except for a couple of years
he was forced into Tule Lake-Amache Relocation Centers. And of necessity
working in the general store he became tri-lingual by speaking Japanese,
English and Spanish. His hobby was hiiku and fishing.
PAUL TAKEHARA
This Nisei (73) is a strictly Sacramento or Florin
resident except for the WW II period. He served in the military from
March 1941 - December 1945 and never spent any time in a Relocation
Center. He was at many military bases in several states and did a short
stint in Europe. Family was in Tule Lake camp and wife lived in Chicago.
They resettled in Florin where two sons and a daughter were born and
raised. He was active in the Florin JACL serving as president many times
and worked hard for Redress. Also, he is a charter member of Nisei Post
VFW 8985 and was Commander 1954-55 and member of the Mayhew Baptist
Church. He was in grocery business and sold insurance during his later
years before retirement.
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