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The Akune brothers: Siblings on opposite sides of war - Wendell Oshiro

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    There are many stories
    that can be told about World War II,
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    from the tragic to the inspring.
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    But perhaps one
    of the most heartrending experiences
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    was that of the Akune family,
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    divided by the war against each other
    and against their own identities.
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    Ichiro Akune and his wife Yukiye
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    immigrated to America
    from Japan in 1918
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    in search of opportunity,
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    opening a small grocery store
    in central California
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    and raising nine children.
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    But when Mrs. Akune died in 1933,
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    the children were sent to live
    with relatives in Japan,
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    their father following soon after.
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    Though the move was a difficult adjustment
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    after having been born
    and raised in America,
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    the oldest son, Harry, formed a close bond
    with his grand uncle,
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    who taught him the Japanese language,
    culture and values.
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    Nevertheless, as soon as Harry
    and his brother Ken
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    were old enough to work,
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    they returned to the country
    they considered home,
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    settling near Los Angeles.
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    But then, December 7, 1941,
    the attack on Pearl Harbor.
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    Now at war with Japan,
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    the United States government
    did not trust the loyalty
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    of those citizens who had family
    or ancestral ties to the enemy country.
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    In 1942, about 120,000 Japanese Americans
    living on the West Coast
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    were stripped of their civil rights
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    and forcibly relocated
    to internment camps,
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    even though most of them,
    like Harry and Ken, were Nisei,
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    American or dual citizens
    who had been born in the US
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    to Japanese immigrant parents.
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    The brothers not only had very limited
    contact with their family in Japan,
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    but found themselves confined
    to a camp in a remote part of Colorado.
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    But their story took another twist
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    when recruiters from the US Army's
    military intelligence service
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    arrived at the camp looking for
    Japanese-speaking volunteers.
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    Despite their treatment by the government,
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    Harry and Ken jumped
    at the chance to leave the camp
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    and prove their loyalty
    as American citizens.
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    Having been schooled in Japan,
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    they soon began their service,
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    translating captured documents,
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    interrogating Japanese soldiers,
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    and producing Japanese
    language propaganda
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    aimed at persuading
    enemy forces to surrender.
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    The brothers' work was invaluable
    to the war effort,
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    providing vital strategic information
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    about the size
    and location of Japanese forces.
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    But they still faced discrimination
    and mistrust from their fellow soldiers.
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    Harry recalled an instance
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    where his combat gear
    was mysteriously misplaced
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    just prior to parachuting
    into enemy territory,
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    with the white officer reluctant
    to give him a weapon.
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    Nevertheless, both brothers
    continued to serve loyally
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    through the end of the war.
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    But Harry and Ken were not the only Akune
    brothers fighting in the Pacific.
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    Unbeknownst to them, two younger brothers,
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    the third and fourth
    of the five Akune boys,
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    were serving dutifully
    in the Imperial Japanese Navy,
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    Saburo in the Naval Airforce,
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    and 15-year-old Shiro as
    an orientation trainer for new recruits.
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    When the war ended, Harry and Ken
    served in the allied occupational forces
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    and were seen as traitors by the locals.
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    When all the Akune brothers
    gathered at a family reunion
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    in Kagoshima for
    the first time in a decade,
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    it was revealed that the two pairs
    had fought on opposing sides.
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    Tempers flared
    and a fight almost broke out
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    until their father stepped in.
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    The brothers managed to make peace
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    and Saburo and Shiro joined
    Harry and Ken in California,
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    and later fought for the US Army in Korea.
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    It took until 1988 for the US government
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    to acknowledge the injustice
    of its internment camps
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    and approve reparations payments
    to survivors.
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    For Harry, though, his greatest regret
    was not having the courage
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    to thank his Japanese grand uncle
    who had taught him so much.
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    The story of the Akune brothers
    is many things:
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    a family divided by circumstance,
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    the unjust treatment
    of Japanese Americans,
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    and the personal struggle of reconciling
    two national identities.
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    But it also reveals a larger story
    about American history:
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    the oppression faced by immigrant groups
    and their perseverance in overcoming it.
Title:
The Akune brothers: Siblings on opposite sides of war - Wendell Oshiro
Description:

View full lesson: http://ed.ted.com/lessons/the-akune-brothers-siblings-on-opposite-sides-of-war-wendell-oshiro

There are many stories that can be told about World War II, from the tragic to the inspiring. But perhaps one of the most heart-rending experiences was that of the Akune family, divided by the war against each other, and against their own identities. Wendell Oshiro tells the surprising story of this family split apart by war.

Lesson by Wendell Oshiro, animation by Brandon Denmark.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
04:54

English subtitles

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