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National Japanese American Historical Society

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National Japanese American Historical Society – NJAHS
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    • Director’s Report
    • News
    • Contact Us
  • For Educators
    • Curriculum
      • Detention Camp Class Kit
      • DOJ Internment
      • Farm Labor While Confined Curriculum
      • LIFE’S ANGLES: Camp Art Boxes Curriculum
      • Musicmakers Curriculum
      • Through Our Eyes Curriculum
      • Tule Lake Curriculum
      • We Are All Americans Curriculum
      • Western Region Confinement Sites Curriculum
    • Teacher Institutes
    • Walking Tours
    • Teacher’s Blog
  • Programs
    • Calendar
    • Exhibitions
      • I Am An AmericanThe Nisei Soldier Experience -Traveling Exhibit
      • JAM 50
      • Enemy Alien Files Exhibition
    • Events
  • Research
    • NJAHS Digital Archives
    • Nikkei Heritage
    • 100th / 442nd Regimental Combat Team
      • AJA War Veterans Tribute
    • Military Intelligence Service
      • Military Intelligence Service Awards Project
      • Military Intelligence Service Research Center
    • Community Resources Links
    • Japanese American Baseball History Project
    • Japanese American Women — Three Generations 1890 – Present
    • Tule Lake Oral History Project
  • VISIT
    • Military Intelligence Service Historic Learning Center/Building 640
      • History of the MIS
      • Rent the MIS
    • Japantown Peace Gallery
  • Support
    • Become a Member
      • Apply or Renew
    • Donate
      • Donations
      • Donor Legacy Wall
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DAY OF REMEMBRANCE Feb 19 2017

February 19, 2017 at 6:00 am - 8:00 am
  • « CAMP 101: A Teach-In
  • Gen. Shinseki Visit – Sat, March 18, 2017 »

FRAGILE FREEDOMS
75th Anniversary of Executive Order 9066
Sunday, February 19, 2017
Program: 2 -4PM
Followed by a Candlelighting procession to the JCCCNC

AMC Kabuki 8 Theatres
1881 Post Street
San Francisco, Japantown
On February 19, 1942, President Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066, setting into motion the wartime mass incarceration of 120,000 Japanese Americans from the west coast. Two-thirds of them, American citizens by birth, and most of them long-term residents of the US. After the bombing of Pearl Harbor and under the guise of military necessity, these civilians were rounded up and forcibly removed from their homes without due process and incarcerated in concentration camps for the duration of the war. There were no cases of espionage or sabotage committed by Japanese Americans on the continental US. It was found that there was no military necessity for their treatment, instead, there was falsification of evidence, suppression of such evidence and fraud upon the Supreme Court. On the 75th Anniversary of the Order, the Bay Area Day of Remembrance Consortium commemorates the fragility of the Bill of Rights and the US Constitution and unites with our most marginalized communities in these current times. Speaker Don Tamaki, coram nobis legal team, EO 9066 performance by Lenora Lee.  Funded in part by a grant from the San Francisco Japantown Foundation, San Francisco Grants for the Arts.

Suggested Donation: $10.

Click here for Eventbrite: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/bay-area-day-or-remembrance-presents-tickets-31369380662

 

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Details

  • Date: February 19, 2017
  • Time:
    6:00 am - 8:00 am
  • Event Category: Events
  • « CAMP 101: A Teach-In
  • Gen. Shinseki Visit – Sat, March 18, 2017 »
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