Graduation Day
finally comes for alumnus torn away by World War II internment
May 17, 2012
Rev. Paul Nagano |
In 1941, Paul Nagano ’42 was a carefree student at
then-Chapman College, enjoying pranks with his fraternity brothers, studying
theology and playing basketball on the squad “too short to play varsity.”
That life quickly ended after Japan attacked Pearl Harbor,
and in 1942 Nagano was incarcerated in a relocation camp. It meant an early end
to his senior year — no grad week antics with friends, no place in the
traditional commencement procession. But deep in the Arizona desert where
Nagano and his family were interned (Poston block 327) , a package arrived – Nagano’s diploma from
Chapman.
“I received my bachelor of arts degree, sent to me in the
wilderness camp. It was a total surprise, but meant a great deal for me to be
remembered,” he recalls.
On Saturday, May 19, The Rev. Nagano, Ph.D., will be
remembered again by his alma mater when he is presented an honorary doctorate
at the commencement ceremony for Wilkinson College of Humanities and Social Sciences.
It will be his first visit to the Orange campus, having attended Chapman when
it was in Los Angeles. His wife (formerly Florence Wake of Poston 326-10-D) and three children, including two traveling
from Hawaii, will be in attendance.
“It’s very exciting,” Nagano said, speaking from Atherton
Baptist Homes in Alhambra, where he resides and serves as a chaplain. “It’s a
redemptive experience, because you know to have your education interrupted and
go into a concentration camp, it’s kind of disappointing.”
Disappointment is just about the harshest word Nagano, who
turns 92 next month, has for the internment experience that interrupted the
lives of nearly 120,000 Japanese and Japanese Americans. He recalled tense
moments in the days after Pearl Harbor, including a scuffle in a diner with an
angry man who called him “a damn Jap,” as well as detainment by police when he
was visiting two Baptist missions he served in Japanese neighborhoods near Los
Angeles Harbor and Terminal Island. By spring he was in Poston internment camp.
But he says his faith, work and even the process of writing his doctoral
dissertation helped him rebuild and mend his life.
“Because I was in service to God, I was able to handle it,”
he said.
Nagano was allowed to leave the camp to attend Bethel Baptist Seminary in Minnesota so he
could enlist in the Army as a chaplain, but the war ended before he completed
his degree. After completing the degree he went on to a successful career in
ministry, serving congregations in Los Angeles, Hawaii, Seattle, Oakland and
throughout Northern California.
He earned his doctorate at the Claremont
School of Theology. There Nagano says he spent a year of intense
study on the subject of race, ethnicity and identity. The process helped him
resolve the questions that “haunted” him after the war and internment, he says.
“In our world we have to learn to live with diversity. In
this diversity, life becomes much more interesting and exciting. Not only
interracial, but interfaith, too.”
Source: http://blogs.chapman.edu/happenings/2012/05/17/graduation-day-finally-comes-for-alumnus-torn-away-by-world-war-ii-internment/
1 comment:
What an inspiring man and story - thank you for sharing.
Post a Comment