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REPUBLICAN PRESS
RELEASE
May 30, 2007
SEN. CRAIG HONORS FALLEN JAPANESE AMERICAN HERO
WHO WAS HELD AT IDAHO RELOCATION CAMP
Private Setsuro Yamashita died from in action
in Italy – was a member of the famed 442nd
Media contact: Jeff Schrade (202)224-9093
(Florence, Italy) As part of his ongoing effort to honor the American
servicemen and women who gave their lives during World War II, U.S.
Senator Larry Craig paid his respects Wednesday to the more than 5,800
Americans buried and memorialized near the Italian city of Florence.
While at the American Battle Monuments Commission’s cemetery in
north-central Italy, Craig highlighted the story of Setsuro Yamashita.
He was a Japanese American who was forced from his home in Seattle at
the start of World War II and relocated to a barbed-wire enclosed
detention camp near Burley, Idaho.
"Setsuro Yamashita and his family and friends had done nothing wrong.
They were not criminals but they were treated as such. Despite that
wrong-doing by his government, Setsuro Yamashita did a remarkable thing.
He volunteered to fight for his country. He could have remained unjustly
confined at the Minidoka Internment Camp and no one would have thought
less of him. But today he is a hero," said Craig, the top Republican on
the Senate Committee on Veterans' Affairs.
"His buddies called him ‘Sets’ and he became a member of one of the
greatest fighting forces the U.S. Army ever had – the famed 442nd Combat
Unit, which was composed entirely of Americans of Japanese ancestry. He
landed on the battlefields of Italy and died after volunteering to take
the point, leading a 300 man unit into action against entrenched German
forces. Today, on behalf of his sergeant, Tommy Tamagawa, I did what
Tommy asked and stopped by Sets’ grave and told him that Tommy says
hello," said Craig, the top Republican on the Senate Committee on
Veterans’ Affairs.
Tamagawa is retired now and lives in Hawaii.
The internment camp in Idaho that Setsuro lived at was one of ten such
facilities built in the United States after Japan attacked Pearl Harbor
in 1941. An estimated 110,000 people of Japanese ancestry – of whom
70,000 were American citizens by birth – were sent to such camps.
Of the Japanese interned in Idaho, nearly 800 joined the U.S. military
during the second world war.
Sen. Craig has recently introduced legislation – the Minidoka National
Historic Site Act of 2007 – which will include the Nidoto Nai Yoni (Let
it not happen again) memorial. It commemorates the courageous Japanese
Americans of Bainbridge Island, Washington, who were the first to be
forcibly removed from their homes and relocated to internment camps
during World War II.
"The fact that great men like Seturo Yamashita rest forever on-guard in
Europe reminds us of the great battle for freedom that occurred on the
battlefields of Italy. His sacrifice also reminds us of the important
healing which is still taking place in the great state of Idaho," Craig
said.
---------------
Larry Scott
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