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Minori Yasui Case Analysis

Decent Essays

Many people tried to stand up for the transgressions that were being made against the Japanese Americans. Most of the Japanese-Americans that were interned were too fearful to stand up to the government, but there were some courageous people who "stepped up to the plate". These people went to court to protest the relocation order. Their argument was that it wasn't constitutional, but in the end, nothing was done in favor of these cases. Some of those people who stood up were Fred T. Korematsu, Mitsuye Endo, Minoru Yasui, and Gordon K. Hirabayashi (Hay 19-20). Minori Yasui was the first Japanese American to have his case brought before the court. Yasui began his fight after he repeatedly tried to report for duty in the army. After multiple attempts, …show more content…

Just because the country wasn't at peace, rights were taken away from citizens. It took 5 months to reach a final verdict. Yasui was sentenced to one year in prison and was placed into solitary confinement for nine months. Minori Yasui sent for an appeal right after the verdict was made, but it didn't reach the Supreme Court until May 1943. It took time and thought, but the Supreme Court reversed Judge Fee's decision. They restored his U.S. citizenship and sent him to a relocation center in Idaho. This case proves how unjust the United States Government was at the time of World War II (Minori Yasui). Gordon Kiyoshi Hirabayashi another one of the Japanese Americans to stand up to the United States government when the internment order was put in place. By doing so, he put his freedom and life at risk. At first, the FBI gave him the opportunity to sign up for the exclusion order, but he quickly denied. Hirabayashi was taken to jail and had multiple charges put against him. One was for violating the curfew order. The FBI and the court were very unjust towards him. The judge present in Hirabayashi's trial told the jury to find him guilty on both …show more content…

In the end, August 10th, President Ronald Reagan signed the Civil Rights Act of 1988, which compensated the Japanese internees for what had occurred almost 40 years earlier. This act provided a payment of $20,000 to anyone who was placed in a camp by the United States government during World War II. By creating this act, the government hoped to heal over any grudges held against them. Since all the Nisei and Issei were stripped of their belongings before being placed in internment camps, this act also acted as a formal apology for all the suffering and loss that they were put through (Starks). In a speech he also made, he hoped to ensure that the internment was all a mistake and that they were utterly apologetic. “This action was taken without trial, without jury. It was based solely on race. Yet we must recognize that the internment of Japanese-Americans was just that: a mistake. Yet no payment can make up for those lost

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