Abstract
Joseph Kurihara was a son of immigrants, a Japanese American who did everything he could to become a bridge of understanding. Ultimately, however, he came to believe that the bridge that he had built was made of straw.How did he come to this conclusion? When Japan attacked Pearl Harbor, Kurihara immediately volunteered his services for the war effort. He volunteered a number of times but to no avail. Instead, he was rejected andâlike other Japanese Americans and their parentsâhe was forced to leave his home and job, and move to what the U.S. government first called âconcentration campsâ and later, euphemistically, ârelocation centers.â What Kurihara learned later, he said, was that his âJapanese featuresâ and his job as a fishing-boat navigator made him suspect in the eyes of the U. S. government, and as a result FBI agents had been tailing him since the Pearl Harbor attack. He could accept these actions as government mistakes.
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