A glimpse into the intertwining issues of selective service requirements, civil rights, and loyalty as experienced by two Southern California Japanese Americans during
World War II.

By Martha Nakagawa

Martha Nakagawa is a freelance journalist, who has also worked as a staff reporter for Asian Week, the Rafu Shimpo and the Pacific Citizen since the early 1990s.

After graduating from high school, one youth went into the U.S. Army, the other went to prison. Both fought for their rightful place in the United States.

Stanley Hayami and Takashi Hoshizaki came of age during the early 1940s, in the midst of World War II. Like other teenagers of their time, the two youths were drafted into the U.S. Army, with one exception - Hayami and Hoshizaki were called to fight for democracy overseas while they and their families languished in American-style concentration camps.

Read All

Manzanar War Relocation Center, one of ten camps at which Japanese American citizens were interned during World War II. (California's Gold, 2002)
A firsthand look at the challenges facing today's Army recruiters.
(California Connected, 2005)

Related Podcast: Military Recruiting

Stanley Hayami

About Stanley Hayami

Excerpt from Hayami's Diary

Online Presentation of Stanley Hayami's Diary

Takashi Hoshizaki

About Takashi Hoshizaki

Excerpt from Hoshizaki's Diary

Heart Mountain, Wyoming Foundation

McNeil Island Corrections Center

Go For Broke Foundation

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