Japanese Manitoban urges Canada not to repeat racist history with Russian Canadians
CBC
This First Person column is the experience of Art Miki, the former president of the National Japanese Canadian Association. For more information about CBC's First Person stories, please see the FAQ. For more information about CBC's First Person stories, please see the FAQ.
My parents and grandparents were among the 22,000 Japanese Canadians who were forcibly removed from their homes and interned because of their race.
I was five years old when our family was placed on a sugar beet farm near Ste. Agathe, Man., to fill the labour shortage because of the war. Why did this happen?
Canada had declared war on Japan on Dec. 7, 1942, shortly after the bombing of Pearl Harbor. As a result, all Japanese people living along the coast of British Columbia were labelled "enemy aliens" and became victims of racist actions perpetrated under the War Measures Act by the Canadian government.
Government declared that depriving the Japanese people of their basic rights was justified because they posed a threat to national security.
The government documents found in the archives became accessible to the public after the restrictions on censored files were lifted.
These documents confirmed that the Japanese people did not pose a threat to national security. Both the RCMP and the Canadian military recommended that removal of Japanese people from the West Coast was unnecessary.
However, the British Columbia politicians, motivated by racism and economy — mainly because of the success of the Japanese in the fishing and farming industries — lobbied the Canadian government for their removal from British Columbia. The war became a legitimate excuse.
After the war ended in 1945, the government's policy to repatriate Japanese to Japan became an issue with Canadian civil rights organizations, because the majority of Japanese were Canadian-born or naturalized Canadians.
In 1947, then-Prime Minister Mackenzie King called off the deportation orders. But by that time, some 4,000 Japanese people, half of them born in Canada, had already been sent to Japan. The Japanese people who remained in Canada had to move east of the Rockies and were not allowed to return to British Columbia until 1949, four years after the war ended.
As Japanese Canadians moved into other provinces, they faced resentment, discrimination and racist attacks. Initially, Calgary and Winnipeg would not allow Japanese citizens to live in the city.
By 1948 Japanese people were permitted to live in Winnipeg, but faced resistance and hostility. Some restaurants refused to serve them. They had difficulty finding accommodations and employment. They were harassed by Hong Kong veterans and looked upon suspiciously by others who had never encountered a Japanese person.
In time, as the Japanese became known for their hard work and perseverance, Manitobans finally accepted them as people. It is interesting to note that it was Jewish and German companies that hired most of the Japanese workers. Perhaps they had empathy for the plight of the Japanese.
Today, as I watch the Russian invasion of Ukraine on television, I think back to the experiences of my family and the Japanese community and wonder how Russia's aggression will impact upon Canadians of Russian descent.