The California Council for the Humanities Press Room -
[Cached Version]
Published on: 8/2/2001
Last Visited: 12/1/2006
THE CAMPS: George Fujimoto wrote in his diaries about the World War II internment of Riverside-area Japanese families.
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Even the handwriting -- tight, methodical script etched in fountain pen -- speaks of George Fujimoto's quiet, his reserve, his sobermindedness.
At 21 years of age, he had the presence of mind to recognize history in the making.
For most of his life he had seen his father, Toranosuke Fujimoto, seated nightly at a desk penning Japanese characters into a diary.
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For six years, from 1942 to 1948, one volume per year, one page per day, George recorded his life, detailing the World War II evacuation and internment of Riverside-area Japanese families in remote camps.
The diaries remained silent for decades.George hasn't even read them since writing them. ears ago, he donated the stack of them to UCLA and forgot about them.
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Did any locals know George Fujimoto?Indeed.In fact, he had brothers and sisters residing in the Inland Empire.Best of all, he was alive and well in Ferndale, Wash.
In a matter of weeks, they were corresponding via e-mail.They arranged to meet.She found him both charming and possessing a rich memory for details.
Ideas percolated, and she dreamed up a project that would intersperse taped interviews with George and his diary entries.
Now she is hard at work collecting stories and writing "From Riverside to Poston: The Fujimoto Diaries."
She expects the book to be done this winter, and with luck to come out next year.
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George grew up helping out.He fed the chickens mash, weeded the row crops, picked strawberries.He drove the 1938 Dodge pickup loaded with harvest, stopping at markets to sell his produce.He drove to San Bernardino to sell eggs.
His father managed the business, George and his brother Charles, "Cha" for short, provided much of the labor.
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In addition to farm work, George went to school.He earned his associate of arts degree from Riverside Junior College (now Riverside Community College) in predentistry, then returned to college for self-development classes, studying music, art and photography.
George's life was unfolding in normalcy until the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor Dec. 7, 1941, and awakened the sleeping giant.
Overnight, it seemed, George and his family went from being friendly neighborhood farmers to subversives, enemies, sly members of the yellow peril.
The Fujimotos subscribed to a Japanese-language newspaper from Los Angeles and local newspapers to keep apprised of wartime evacuation and internment plans for people of Japanese ancestry.
"We heard that community leaders were going to be rounded up and incarcerated before the regular evacuation, so my father made preparations, he had a suitcase packed with the clothing he needed," George Fujimoto said.
His father had come to America in the 1900s, and built a shack near the city of Orange, where he leased land to raise strawberries.
He married in 1911, and in 1912 bought the Highgrove land.He dismantled the shack, brought it by horse and wagon and reconstructed it on his six acres.The Fujimotos tilled a life for themselves in the land.
Yet the FBI came and got Toranosuke Fujimoto.George, who rode his bike back and forth to junior college, pedaled home to find his mother sitting in the kitchen."She was so forlorn, in a state of shock, it looked like she had cried herself dry," George said.
The house was a shambles.In their zeal for contraband -- guns, shortwave radios, cameras -- the FBI emptied drawers, pulled knicknacks off the shelves.
Never wavering from duty, George asked his mother, "Have you done the chores, fed the chickens, gathered the eggs?"
She looked blank."I immediately did the chores," George said.
Breaking curfew
Only 21, George shouldered full responsibility as the man of the family.
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George had to ignore that rule.He had eggs and produce to deliver."But nobody ever stopped me," he said.
Just as his father was taken off to county jail, then to a work camp in Tujunga Canyon, the strawberries began to ripen.
George quit school.With his world falling apart, he picked strawberries, wet the mash and fed the chickens, gathered eggs and delivered them to market.
About a month after Pearl Harbor, before his father was picked up, George tells of riding his bike near Agua Mansa cemetery, a camera slung over his shoulder, looking for landscape shots for a school assignment.When he approached the cemetery, he noticed a parked car where several guys were having a drinking party.
He ignored them, scouting for good pictures.They drove off, and George thought no more about them.But they returned, leading a police car to George.
"Whoa, boy, I'm in trouble now," George said.
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But George had a permit for his twin-lens reflex camera, so he went back to San Bernardino to get it.No doubt about it, George said, things had changed.
Evacuation begins
With his father incarcerated, George did what he could to provide for the family.
He traveled to Tujunga to get his father to sign a power of attorney.But seeing his father with the other detained Japanese shook his confidence even more.
"I didn't know what to do.I didn't know what was going to happen.I didn't know if we were going to be deported, or lined up and machine-gunned down," George said.
John Kolb, head of the poultrymen's cooperative, stopped by to console George.
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George asked.
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George was rankled at being called a nonalien.
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I sure did appreciate their kindness," George said.
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George recalled the desolation.
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George worked as an assistant to his block's manager, working at a desk.
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The place kind of took on a homey atmosphere," George said.
Life in camp settled down.People took excursions to the Colorado River for picnics so the kids could swim or fish.
George was the only one in camp who had the foresight to bring his bicycle.So he rode where others walked.
People cut trimmings from willows and cottonwoods and planted them to provide shade in front of stoops.
"It was really hot.Almost unbearable.And when the camp was built they didn't compact the earth, so dust devils would roll in and send dust flying everywhere.People would stumble around closing windows, trying to take down their laundry, scrambling to get out of the dust," George said.
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But family life deteriorated that way," George said.
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"Maybe, she bowed," George said.
How prejudice works
After 13 months, George got out of camp.He got permission to drive his brother-in-law, Harrie, and his sister, Lily, and their 11-month-old daughter to Des Moines, Iowa.
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"Man, I just felt like turning tail and running back to camp," George said.
A gas station man in Phoenix wouldn't sell gas to Japs.They were scared to try to stay in motel rooms.They got hassled in Salina, Kan., when a tire blew and they tried to buy a replacement.But they made it.
After a long search, George got a job in the upstairs room, away from public view, at a film development company.
One couple almost quit when he was hired.They didn't want to work with a Jap.But the couple ended up being his best friends at work.
"That just goes to show you how prejudice works.After they got to know the individual, to know me, we became friends," George said.
George got drafted in Des Moines.He served basic training in Florida and was transferred to language school to work for Army Intelligence as a translator.
He lucked out.He never did have to see action.
But he did see the devastation of Tokyo."Oh, man, everything was just leveled," George said.
The war ended.His family went back to the farm.He went to school, earned a degree in poultry management and returned to form a farming partnership with his father.He married, had children and lived a good American life.He's retired now in Ferndale, Wash., and volunteers part time at the local senior center.
His ordeal is now almost 60 years past.
Still, the memories remain fresh.
"Those were days that would be impressed on your mind,"