Update:
Wednesday, January 30, 2008 Amerasia Journal has published a special "wartime
edition" that refocuses attention on the Heart Mountain Fair Play
Committee, through the lens of the ongoing case involving Lt. Ehren Watada.
The issue is titled "," and features letters
from Heart Mountain resister Mits Koshiyama and supporter Paul Tsuneishi,
both of whom are featured in our film. According to the :
Koshiyama, a Heart
Mountain World War II draft resister, ends his personal letter to
Lt. Ehren Watada, as follows: "Do what your conscience tells
you what to do. We got punished by a prejudiced court but in the
end, we prevailed."
Writer Frank
Chin contributes "A Call to Resist," his take on Watada and
the World II resisters, which also . Chin asks:
Lt. Ehren Watada,
a Hawaiian Japanese Chinese American, exercises the rights the resisters
defended, and brings the questions the Nisei heard tossed about in
the camp war years, back to the present day. Will Japanese Americans
react any differently than they did on their 9/11, Dec. 7, 1941?
There's
also an interview with fimmakaer Curtis Choy and the making of "," which is linked .
Thanks to editor Russell C. Leong for referencing our film in his introductory
editorial, "Is
Resistance Your Real Name?," and bringing some of you to this
site.
Update:
Thursday, April 24, 2008 Sad news from Mountain View, California tonight, from Kenji Taguma
of the . George
Nozawa was a quiet, thoughtful man who provided a number of the newspaper
clippings and primary documents that are seen in our film, including his
own draft card! The
photo from his collection shows George on the right with his good friend,
FPC leader Frank Emi:
I
am saddened to report that George Nozawa, said to be the unofficial
historian of the Heart Mountain Fair Play Committee, passed away on
Monday, April 21.
Details are still
somewhat sketchy, but he's been in failing health recently. I've learned
of his death through the Koshiyamas in San Jose, who were informed
by George's daughter (I believe that he also has one son).
George has played
a central role in the camaraderie between the Amache (Granada) / Tucsonian
resisters and Heart Mountain resisters over the years, during a time
when the story of the principled stand of the resisters was rapidly
coming to light in the 1990s. I remember inviting him to the two Tucsonian
(resisters) reunions in Sacramento that I organized, and his compilation
of articles of Amache resisters -- and their arrests and trials --
are still a fond piece of my collection. I am indebted to him for helping
to reclaim a piece of history.
Over the years,
he has meticulously clipped resister-related articles and has generously
shared them with others, myself included.
Last year, my brother
Mark and I visited George and his wife, taking along Professor Yukio
Morita of Kanazawa University -- whose comprehensive
book on Nisei resisters [pdf, 3MB] helped to document for eternity
the stories of George, my father and other resisters.
Since George lived
about a couple of blocks from my brother in Mountain View, my dad
would often visit George when at my brother's, and share some cherished
memories.
I will remember
George as someone who was straight and narrow. I will truly miss
George, another personal hero who may be gone, yet will not be forgotten.
We're unsure about
any services, but it might be good to check in the San Jose Mercury
News in the next couple of days. I hear that George was a member
of the Mountain View Buddhist Temple.
-- Kenji
Kenji
also sends this link to an article in the about the latest performance of "A
Community Divided" on April 23 by Frank Emi, Yosh Kuromiya,
Paul Tsuneishi and Momo Yashima, with a great of the event.