Unlikely Liberators is the action-filled story of the men of the 100th Battalion and the 442nd Regimental Combat Team. Not trusted to fight in the Pacific, these sons of Japanese immigrants were sent instead to the European theater. In the eyes of their own government and the Europeans they liberated, they were an unlikely group of fighting men. They nevertheless engaged the enemy with astonishing heroism, winning battle after battle at Anzio, Salerno, Cassino, and in the Vosges Mountains. At the end of the war, the 100th and the 442nd emerged as America’s most decorated units. They provided ample evidence of their patriotism to a country that had questioned their loyalty. Masayo Duus begins her story with the formation of the Japanese American units, which were an outgrowth of America’s ambivalent attitude toward the entire Japanese American community at the outbreak of the war. She recounts their experiences in training and during the early battles in Italy, including the conflicts between Japanese American and Caucasian troops. The final part of the story focuses on the battle in the Vosges forest, where the 442nd fought fiercely to rescue the "lost battalion" of Texans hopelessly cut off by the enemy. Based on extensive research in War Department archives and nearly three hundred interviews with veterans of the 100th and 442nd, Unlikely Liberators first appeared in serialized form in Japan, where it won the Bungeishunjusha Reader’s Prize. It is an absorbing and personalized account of young men suddenly separated from their families and friends, often confused and sometimes suspicious about what the army wanted from them. It portrays them as individuals confronting the multiple crises of war and social rejection and it shows that their greatest achievement was not their victory over a foreign enemy, but over prejudice at home. This book is a tribute to those men, who by their heroism reestablished for all Japanese Americans their personal dignity as full citizens in the country of their birth.
4 George A. Spiegelberg, letter to Hakuban Nozawa, September 23, 1949, Minerich Collection; Drew Pearson, letter to Nozawa, July 13, 1950, Sumoge files; Nozawa, letter to Pearson, July 14, June 15, 1950, Minerich Collection; ...
Bunker Hill to Bastogne is a unique and timely chronicle of the birth and evolution of elite forces and the American public's reactions to them.
The letters from Florida businessmen usually included copies of statements from their counterparts in Hawaiʻi deploring the ILWU's tactics and its Communist connection.24 Neither Truman nor the Congress responded with a Taft - Hartley ...
... Unlikely Liberators, 120; Treanor, One Damn Thing, 244. 128 Duus, Unlikely Liberators, 120. 129 Kim, Keynote address at 40th Anniversary reunion; 34th G-3 Journal, 26 January 1944 (0225 entry). 130 756th Unit Journal, 26 January 1944 ...
... Japanese Immigrants , 1885–1924 . New York : Free Press , 1988 . Inouye , Karen M. The Long Afterlife of Nikkei Wartime Incarceration . Palo Alto , CA : Stan- ford University Press , 2016 . Ishii , Yoneo . Trans . Peter Hawkes . Sangha ...
... The Chicana Feminist ( Austin , TX : Information Systems Development , 1977 ) ; Davis , Women , Race and Class ... On the redress movement , see Mitchell T. Maki , Harry H. L. Kitano , and S. Megan Berthold , Achieving the ...
Winston, Keith. V. . . -Mail: Letters of a World War II Combat Medic. Chapel Hill, NC: Algonquin, 1985. Woods, Imogene, and Twelve WWII ... Marston, O. F., and W.J. Egan. “Two Replacement Centers.” The Field Artillery Journal 31, no.
In this pathbreaking account, Duncan Ryūken Williams reveals how, even as they were stripped of their homes and imprisoned in camps, Japanese-American Buddhists launched one of the most inspiring defenses of religious freedom in our nation ...
Washington's many patrons, bachelor Jess Stebler, a Riverside blacksmith, was remembered as the family's favorite. Born in Minden, Iowa, in 1876 and forced to wear a cumbersome hearing aid in later years after going nearly deaf from ...
Victoria Sherrow, Encyclopedia ofHair:A Cultural History (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2006), p. 177. 83. ... 43. 130. Ibid. 131. Sullivan, Mississippi GulfCoast, p. 58. 132. Ibid., p. 54. 133. Ibid., p. 63. 134. Ibid. 135.