Race and Internment: World War II from an Alaskan Perspective
Alaska was, of course, designated as a military zone at this time, since the threat to it from Japanese forces was deemed very high. Governor Ernest Gruening, then the territorial governor of Alaska, was in the states during much of the removal of Japanese-Americans. Bob Bartlett, who was acting in his stead, communicated about the internment process with Gruening and others in Alaska through telegrams. These telegrams have since been collected, and they provide a uniquely Alaskan perspective on what internment meant for Japanese living in the territory.
One particular telegram, which I analyzed for this project, was sent by Bob Bartlett to Governor Gruening to plead the case of a young half Native Alaskan and half Japanese man, Henry Hope, about to be sent to the internment camps. When quoting from Alice Stuart, who had contacted Bartlett about the issue, the telegram states that “...QUOTE HE HAS NEVER EVEN SEEN A JAP NOR DOES HE WISH TO UNQUOTE...” (Governor Ernest Gruening’s file...) This attempts to emphasize Hope’s lack of contact with his Japanese heritage by using the popular derogatory racial slur, “Jap.” The telegram vividly demonstrates some of the personal anguish and the social consequences that resulted from Japanese internment. At the same time it is revealing of how racial discrimination was functioning during WWII.
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Hannah Cox is a junior pursuing a Baccalaureate in English with a minor in French.