During Sam Mihara’s first talk about the Japanese American incarceration to a group of Justice Department lawyers, only three had heard of Fred Korematsu, the civil rights icon who unsuccessfully challenged his incarceration to the Supreme Court in 1944.
That began a second career for Mihara, a former Boeing Co. rocket scientist who had been incarcerated as a child in the concentration camp for Japanese Americans at Heart Mountain, Wyo. He realized most Americans knew little about the Japanese American incarceration during World War II that imprisoned 125,000 people without trial.
Mihara detailed the story of his teaching of the history of the Japanese American incarceration in person to more than 100,000 people in an interview with Shelly C. Lowe, the chair of the National Endowment for the Humanities, in the latest issue of Humanities magazine.
“In my talks, I have found many people, many young people especially, are not being taught what happened,” Mihara told Lowe. “Once in a while, I’ll hear a response like ‘Oh, I remember hearing something about putting some Japanese into prisons,’ but that’s all they know. They don’t know why. They don’t know what the conditions were. And very few people know that it could happen again.”
Lowe interviewed Mihara about his upcoming appearance at the Japanese American National Museum in Los Angeles to give the Jefferson Lecture, an honor given by NEH to some of the nation’s leading figures in the humanities.
Previous Jefferson Lecturers include playwright Arthur Miller, novelist and social commentator Tom Wolfe, historian Barbara Tuchman, biographer David McCullough and documentarian Ken Burns.
The lecture was originally scheduled for Jan. 15 but has been postponed.
The Heart Mountain Wyoming Foundation, a Smithsonian affiliate, preserves the site where some 14,000 Japanese Americans were unjustly incarcerated in Wyoming from 1942 through 1945. Their stories are told within the foundation’s museum, Heart Mountain Interpretive Center, located between Cody and Powell. For more information, call the center at (307) 754-8000 or email info @heartmountain.org.
2022 Oscar winners: See the full listThe Lonely Island's 'Why Not Me?' is the best Oscar moment we'll never haveApple confirms virtual WWDC 2022 for June'Turning Red's portrayal of periods is a turning point for comingWhy people with disabilities need meditation to be more accessibleTesla is facing new racist workplace allegations from Black employeesApple class action lawsuit: Company to pay $14.8M to iCloud subscribers in settlement2022 Grammys: Here's how to watch live'Wordle' today: Here's the answer for April 2Will Smith has apologized to Chris Rock for slapping him at the Oscars Behind the moving pop songs of Apple TV+'s 'Trying': Interview Apple to launch new AirPods this year, AirPods Pro in 2022, report claims OnePlus accidentally leaks Nord 2 on its own website OkCupid launches 'I'm Vaccinated' badges in time for hot vaxxed summer Ford, not Tesla, is making the electric truck that will change the EV industry How to see the photos NASA's Hubble telescope took on your birthday Generous strangers on the internet paid to send a young talent to Berklee 'Gravity Falls' is the perfect show for the start of summer 3 signs the climate op Mutual masturbation can bring you closer to your partner, even over FaceTime
0.1697s , 10090.5078125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【phim heo tình d?c】Heart Mountain’s Sam Mihara Featured in Humanities Magazine Cover Story,Global Hot Topic Analysis