|
|
 |
Fred Korematsu, a Civil Rights Pioneer
By Paul Igasaki, IMDiversity
Featured Columnist
April 6, 2005 - This week, Fred Korematsu,
Japanese American and civil rights hero, passed away. Fred was a role
model for all who care about civil rights and I considered him a valued
and inspirational friend.
I became acquainted with Fred when I was working for redress for the
survivors of America’s World War II incarceration of Japanese Americans.
He was impressive then, someone in our supposedly quiet and
non-confrontational community who stood up to the United States
government when our community’s freedom and existence as Americans were
at risk. This was before Thurgood Marshall took the Brown case to the
Supreme Court, before Martin Luther King and the Montgomery bus boycott,
and before the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The civil rights movement had
few victories at that time and the courts were not a promising place to
vindicate claims of racism, especially with national security at its
root. Initially, even the ACLU, shied away from fighting the relocation.
I got to know Fred better when I was director of the Asian Law Caucus. A
Civil Rights Fund was started by him and his family as part of the
Caucus’ commitment to ongoing civil rights work. It became clear that
Fred was the kind of down to earth, working-class
American that is not routinely connected to civil rights actions. Many
things he said were very non-PC, reflecting his honest reactions to
situations and problems. The other two Japanese Americans who protested
the relocation were Min Yasui and Gordon Hirabayashi, both impressive
men in their own right. Min was a lawyer looking to challenge the law;
he marched into a police station and turned himself in. Gordon was a
Quaker who objected to war. Fred wanted to stay near his Caucasian
girlfriend. Both of the other two plaintiffs also challenged their
criminal convictions under the theory of coram nobis in the
1980’s. Both did important work for the community. But no
one has done as much to fight for civil rights for all, and not
just Japanese or even Asian Americans as Fred has. He is one person who
definitely learned, and indeed practiced, the lessons of what our
community went through during World War II: when the rights of any
person, especially the least popular among us at any point in time, are
violated, then the rights of all of us are in jeopardy.
In many ways, Fred is most like Rosa Parks, an African American who
decided that she just wasn’t going to go to the back of the bus on a
given day. One of my favorite photos of Fred was taken when he and Rosa
met. It hung in the lobby of the Asian Law Caucus. When I mentioned the
picture to Fred, he said, “You know, I don’t think she knew who I was.
She was very nice anyway.”
Fred’s voice was even and calming. He seemed professorial with the pipe
that he loved. But while the sound of his voice was quiet, his actions
were something else entirely. As a law student, I remember reading about
Fred in my Constitutional law class. It is interesting how much of
Japanese American history made that casebook. At that time in my life, I
knew Fred only as a historical figure. His efforts, along with a
dedicated group of attorneys, including Peter Irons, Dale Minami and the
Asian Law Caucus, couldn’t reverse Korematsu vs. the United States.
But using the seldom used writ of coram nobis, they vacated his
original criminal conviction for violating the relocation order based on
the government knowingly withholding information that it had
demonstrating that Japanese Americans were indeed not the security
threat that the government claimed. Aiko and Jack Herzig helped unearth
the proof of this poring over documents at the National Archives and the
Library of Congress.
In recent years, Fred toured the nation speaking to all that would
listen about his concern for Arab and Muslim Americans, and those like
South Asians that were perceived to be Muslim, facing the same sort of
scapegoating that Japanese Americans faced many years ago. His fight for
coram nobis was the subject of an award-winning
documentary a few years back. More recently, his story was told in a
powerful movie that his son helped put together. I smiled the other day
as Fred’s words from that film, “Of Civil Rights and Civil Wrongs,” were
used on National Public Radio to explain the importance of his life.
President Bill Clinton awarded Fred the Presidential Medal of Freedom.
Fred was honored, but he didn’t lose track of the fact that the very
government that considered him a racial enemy was finally recognizing
what he did for the principles that we have been told our nation is
built upon. More than most Americans, he was well aware of the truth of
the words of our founders, that our rights are only real if we act to
defend them. And more than just a handful of Americans through our
history, Fred lived those words throughout his life.
|
|
|
Paul Igasaki
is a consultant in diversity, equal opportunity, government
and community affairs. Recently, he edited A Call to Action,
a historic policy platform for a coalition of national Asian Pacific
American organizations. Appointed by President Bill Clinton, he
served as Vice Chair or acting Chair of the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission from 1994 to 2002, gaining recognition for restructuring
the agency to eliminate a crippling case backlog and for building credibility
in protecting the rights of immigrant Americans and victims of sexual
harassment. He previously served as Executive Director of the
Asian Law Caucus in San Francisco and as Washington, D.C. Representative
of the Japanese American Citizens League. He also worked for the City
of Chicago, his hometown, as a liaison to Asian American communities
and as a Mayoral advisor on human relations and affirmative action.
His career also included efforts to provide civil legal services to
the poor, both at the national level for the American Bar Association
supporting collaborations between legal aid and private attorneys and
at the local level as a legal services attorney in Sacramento, California.
He is an attorney in California and Illinois, and was a graduate of
Northwestern University and the University of California, Davis.
IMDiversity.com is committed to presenting diverse points of view.
However, the viewpoint expressed in this article is the opinion of
the author and is not necessarily the viewpoint of the owners or
employees at IMD.
|
|