Kibei

Kibei kibei (帰米, literally "go home to America") was a term often used in the 1940s to describe Japanese Americans born in the United States who returned to America after receiving their education in Japan. Some Japanese Americans sent their children, many of whom had dual citizenship, back to Japan, so the children were educated in Japanese school systems and maintained the Japanese language as well as Japanese cultural traditions. Another reason was the strong anti-Japanese sentiment in the United States and these parents worried that they might be deported back to Japan. As a result, they sent their children to Japan, so they could survive either in the United States or Japan.[1] The exact number is not known—perhaps about 11,000.[2] It is said there were about 10,000 Kibei among Nisei (second-generation) Japanese Americans.[1]

Those men who were in school in Japan in late 1941 typically entered the Japanese army. Those on the West coast of the United States were interned. Many volunteered for service with the U.S., especially as translators.[3]

Another case was Minoru Wada, an American citizen educated in Japan who served as a Japanese Army junior officer. He was taken prisoner in the Philippines in 1945. He provided U.S. bomber crews with vital intelligence, and led the aircraft in a highly successful attack on the headquarters of the Japanese 100th Division. He was motivated by a desire to minimize the loss of life through aiding to effect a swift end to the Pacific War.[4]

Notes

  1. Danico, Mary Yu. Asian American Society: An Encyclopedia. SAGE Publication, Inc.
  2. Roger Daniels (1988). Asian America: Chinese and Japanese in the United States Since 1850. U. of Washington Press. p. 1.
  3. Wendy L. Ng (2002). Japanese American Internment During World War II: A History and Reference Guide. Greenwood. p. 6.
  4. Merriam Press, "Japanese Officer Led a U.S. Air Strike Against His Own Troops" (retrieved on August 30th, 2011).

Sources

gollark: ~~I'm just waiting for Kepler to activate the secret Opus backdoors.~~
gollark: No, and it wouldn't work.
gollark: I have a bunch of virtualized installs of it for Milo and whatnot.
gollark: Opus is now as far as I'm aware the most... widely-installed OS. Probably because it has a lot of very useful programs, but using any of them requires pulling down the whole thing from kernel to random GUI libraries.
gollark: Which got shut down because of some sort of corruption bug.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.