Heroes
on the Homefront: Japanese Americans in
World War II
May
is Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month. It celebrates the culture, traditions, and
history of Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders in the United States. One tragic part of that history is the
Japanese-American internment camps of World War II, and the Ball State
University Libraries’ GIS Research and Map Collection (GRMC) has created a map
commemorating some of the heroes who fought for civil rights and freedom during
that time.
The
map (above, click to enlarge) depicts the locations of the Japanese-American internment camps of World
War II. President Roosevelt issued
Executive Order 9066 in February of 1942:
This order authorized the military to prescribe certain areas “from
which any or all persons may be excluded.”
The order cleared the way for the deportation of Japanese Americans in
what was considered a military area that stretched along the Pacific Coast from
Washington down through western Arizona to internment camps located throughout
the United States.
The
map is based on the youth book, The
Japanese American Internment: Civil
Liberties Denied, by Michael Burgan.
(The book is available from the Educational Technology and Resources Collection in the lower level of Bracken Library). The book details the circumstances
surrounding the internment of the nearly 120,000 Japanese Americans who were
forced to abandon their property and homes, including internees like Fred
Korematsu and others who fought for their civil rights and thousands of Japanese-American
soldiers who fought in the European Theater of the War.
The
map identifies the locations of the ten internment
camps scattered across the southwestern United States. It also includes the two military bases
in Minnesota where Japanese-American soldiers were trained to interpret enemy
papers and messages written in Japanese.
Camp Shelby is also shown on the map—this is where the U.S. Army 442nd
Infantry Regiment (composed mostly of Japanese Americans) trained before
fighting in Europe. This was the most
decorated Army unit for its size in U.S. history, with over 9,000 Purple Hearts
and thousands of other citations for bravery.
This
map is being included in a social studies project for the summer semester. Dr. Dorshell Stewart, Assistant Professor in
the Department of History, teaches social studies teaching methods classes and is
working with the GRMC to create unique lesson plans that incorporate the use of
maps. The staff of the GRMC will
collaborate with these student-teachers to create maps related to children’s
books—biographies or books about historical events. The maps will be incorporated into multidisciplinary
lesson plans and exhibits for use in their future classrooms. The student-teachers completing this project can
also choose to donate a print copy of their maps to the GRMC as a resource for
other teachers.
Other
children’s books with related maps from the GRMC include A Whole New Ballgame: The Story of the All-American Girls ProfessionalBaseball League by Sue Macy, BecomingBabe Ruth by Matt Tavares, and AmeliaLost by Candace Fleming.
A
copy of the map is available for download from Cardinal Scholar. For more information about using maps related
to literature in the classroom, please contact the GRMC at 765-285-1097.
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