Manzanar Citizens Federation
Short-lived patriotic organization formed at Manzanar in the summer of 1942 that represented a coalition between Los Angeles area Nisei aligned with the Japanese American Citizens League (JACL) and Nisei leftists committed to the war against fascism.
The roots of the Manzanar Citizens Federation (MCF) stemmed from informal weekly meetings of Los Angeles area JACL leaders led by Fred Tayama , the chairman of the JACL's Southern District Council. While the group considered formally organizing in Manzanar, they also knew that many held negative views of the JACL and decided to wait until community sentiment turned more favorable. But as this group began to see more of what they saw as "pro-Japan" sentiment among fellow incarcerees—including harassment of incarcerees who espoused support for the Allied war effort and inaction by the camp administration—they decided they couldn't wait any longer and began to organize. The MCF officially formed at a meeting on July 21, 1942, at the quarters of Togo Tanaka . The group selected Koji Ariyoshi to be the temporary chairman. In addition to JACL members, the planning group also included Nisei leftists who were committed to the war against fascism and who had clashed with the more conservative JACL prior to the war. Some of the latter group were Kibei and/or from Hawai`i. Recognizing that the JACL name would be polarizing, the group decided on the "Manzanar Citizens Federation" name. All of the attendees at this meeting were men, something Karl Yoneda later attributed to "our male chauvinism." A first public meeting was scheduled for July 28 in Block 15 mess hall. [1]
An overflow crowd of some five hundred attended the first meeting, spilling out of the mess hall in one hundred degree plus weather. Chaired by Koji Ariyoshi, the meeting included four official speakers who outlined the MCF's general aims: Hiroshi Neeno on "Improving Camp Conditions," Joe Grant Masaoka on "Educating Citizens for Leadership," Yoneda on "Participation in the War Effort," and Tanaka on "Preparations for the Post-War Conditions." But the frequent heckling of the speakers and subsequent discussion that was as heated as the weather overshadowed the prepared remarks. Nisei dissident Joe Kurihara questioned the stance of the organization and stated his desire to "become 100 percent pro-Japanese" given the treatment he, as a WWI veteran, was receiving. The equally passionate super-patriot Tokutaro Slocum —like Kurihara a World War I veteran—engaged with Kurihara in what Tanaka later called "a debate and name-calling session." Tanaka concluded that the "meeting ended in an atmosphere of tension, animosity, mutterings." [2]
In the aftermath of the meeting, the MCF sent a petition to President Roosevelt advocating a second front in Europe (e.g. an invasion from the west that would divert German resources from the war with the Soviet Union) and to allow Nisei to serve in the U.S. armed forces that drew further opposition from much of the Manzanar population. A second general meeting, held on August 6, was similarly contentious, with Yoneda describing it as "a bloodless battle of words and ideas between the pro-Japan elements and the pro-democracy advocates." [3]
Though the MCF continued to meet through August, several factors led to its ultimate demise. Opposition to the MCF's efforts grew and members Joe Blamey and James Oda were physically attacked. Members who ran in block leader elections on August 21 lost badly, with Yoneda in particular drawing only thirteen votes to his opponent's 150. MCF members also complained of a lack of support from the camp administration. Many key members of the MCF also left Manzanar, whether on short term agricultural leave or to join the Military Intelligence Service . Many MCF members were among those targeted in the Manzanar uprising in December and were among those removed from Manzanar to a facility in Death Valley —from which they were allowed to resettle in areas outside the exclusion zone—for their own protection. In a January 1943 letter, Tanaka wrote that the MCF "lived briefly through August, September; ailing in October, it died fitfully in November, deserted, unmourned, forgotten." [4]
For More Information
Ariyoshi, Koji. From Kona to Yenan: The Political Memoir of Koji Ariyoshi . Ed. Alice M. Beechert and Edward D. Beechert. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 2000.
Cates, Rita Takahashi. "Comparative Administration and Management of Five War Relocation Authority Camps: America's Incarceration of Persons of Japanese Descent during World War II." Ph.D. dissertation, University of Pittsburgh, 1980.
Hansen, Arthur A., and David A. Hacker. "The Manzanar Riot: An Ethnic Perspective." Amerasia Journal 2.2 (1974): 112-57. Published in slightly different form in Voices Long Silent: An Oral Inquiry into the Japanese American Evacuation . Edited by Arthur A. Hansen and Betty E. Mitson. Fullerton: Japanese American Project, California State University, Fullerton, Oral History Program, 1974. 41-79.
Oda, James. Heroic Struggles of Japanese Americans: Partisan Fighters from America's Concentration Camps . Los Angeles: Privately printed, 1980.
Tamura, Eileen. In Defense of Justice: Joseph Kurihara and the Japanese American Struggle for Equality . Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2013.
Yoneda, Karl G. Ganbatte: Sixty-Year Struggle of a Kibei Worker . Los Angeles: Asian American Studies Center, University of California, Los Angeles, 1983.
Footnotes
- ↑ Togo Tanaka, addenda to Jan. 21, 1943 letter to Morton Grodzins, Jan. 30, 1943, pp. 19–20, Japanese American Evacuation and Resettlement Records (JAERR), Bancroft Library, University of California at Berkeley, BANC MSS 67/14 c, folder W 1.38:1 http://digitalassets.lib.berkeley.edu/jarda/ucb/text/cubanc6714_b298w01_0038_1.pdf ; Karl G. Yoneda, Ganbatte: Sixty-Year Struggle of a Kibei Worker (Los Angeles: Asian American Studies Center, University of California, Los Angeles, 1983), 133–35; James Oda, Heroic Struggles of Japanese Americans: Partisan Fighters from America's Concentration Camps (Los Angeles: Privately printed, 1980), 46–48; Togo Tanaka, Documentary Report Number 31, July 21, 1942, JAERR BANC MSS 67/14 c, folder O10.06 (2/4) http://digitalassets.lib.berkeley.edu/jarda/ucb/text/cubanc6714_b210o10_0006_2.pdf ; Tad Uyeno, "Point of No Return" Parts 39 and 40, Rafu Shimpo , Oct. 6 and 9, 1973.
- ↑ Togo Tanaka, Documentary Report Number 36, July 29, 1942, JAERR BANC MSS 67/14 c, folder O10.06 (3/4), http://digitalassets.lib.berkeley.edu/jarda/ucb/text/cubanc6714_b210o10_0006_3.pdf ; Manzanar Free Press , July 31, 1942, 1; Tanaka, addenda to Jan. 21, 1943 letter to Morton Grodzins, Jan. 30, 1943, 20–26; Yoneda, Ganbatte , 135–36; Koji Ariyoshi, From Kona to Yenan: The Political Memoir of Koji Ariyoshi (Ed. Alice M. Beechert and Edward D. Beechert, Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 2000), 70; Eileen Tamura, "Value Messages Collide with Reality: Joseph Kurihara and the Power of Informal Education," Discover Nikkei, Apr. 7, 2011, accessed on May 28, 2025 at https://discovernikkei.org/en/journal/2011/4/7/joseph-kurihara-power-informal-education/ .
- ↑ Rita Takahashi Cates, "Comparative Administration and Management of Five War Relocation Authority Camps: America's Incarceration of Persons of Japanese Descent during World War II" (Ph.D. dissertation, University of Pittsburgh, 1980), 512; Morris Edward Opler, "A History of Internal Government at Manzanar, March 1942 to December 6, 1942," pp. 25–26, Manzanar Relocation Center Community Analysis Section, July 15, 1944, JAERR BANC MSS 67/14 c, folder O3.02, https://oac.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/k6js9xkh/?brand=oac4 ; Yoneda, Ganbatte , 137–38.
- ↑ Yoneda, Ganbatte , 139–40; Opler, "A History of Internal Government at Manzanar," 25–29; Oda, Heroic Struggles of Japanese Americans , 49–50; Tanaka, addenda to Jan. 21, 1943 letter to Morton Grodzins, Jan. 30, 1943, 19.
Last updated June 16, 2025, 7:46 p.m..