Feb 27 2013
By JOHN MATSUDA
I was born in 1929 in Winslow, Arizona, in the concrete
apartment house built by the Santa Fe Railroad for the Japanese workers and
their families, about 30 to 40 families, who worked for Santa Fe Railroad from
the 1920s to the beginning of World War II on Dec. 7, 1941.
My father, Genkichi Joe Matsuda,(Poston 15-13-A) and mother, Terumi, with my
oldest sister, Emi, who was born in San Jose in 1921, came to Winslow in 1922.
My older brother, Matt Yutaka, deceased in 2005, older sister, Lily, and I were
born in the aforementioned apartment in Winslow. My father and other Japanese,
primarily from Kochi Prefecture in Shikoku, Japan, worked diligently for 20
years or more in the Santa Fe Railroad’s roundhouse located across the railroad
tracks from our apartment.
No sabotage, goofing off or taking sick leave for minor
reasons were ever committed by the hard-working Japanese machinists. Santa Fe
Railroad acknowledged the conscientious work by the Japanese Issei (first generation)
and even built a large “ofuro” or Japanese bathtub with ample washing space
similar to an “onsen” or hot spring in Japan where one washed himself/herself
before entering the tub.
After our mother died in October 1938 and after Emi
graduated from Winslow High School in 1939, our father took the four children
to Japan and placed us in elementary and high schools in Kochi and Kyoto.
Father returned to Winslow to continue working for Santa Fe Railroad. The four
Matsuda children, Emi Hazama, Yutaka, Lily Okamura and John, returned to
America in 1948 and 1949.
Winslow, a small town of about 9,600 people today, is
located in the northern part of Arizona, 55 miles east of Flagstaff and 128
miles northeast of Mesa on Route 66, which is now famous for the Eagles’ song
“Take It Easy” (“I’m standing on a corner in Winslow, Arizona”). Winslow was
not in the war zone area like the Pacific Coast states were when the war broke
out. Why, then, were the Japanese and their U.S. citizen Nisei children sent to
internment camps like Poston, Arizona and other camps in the U.S.?
Winslow Mail
newspapers of Dec. 12, 1941, Jan. 16, 1942 and April 3, 1942 (copies kindly
sent to me by Mrs. Tazuko Nomoto Akagi, former resident of Winslow) attribute
the removal of the Japanese out of Santa Fe Railroad and the apartment house
due to “possible risk that the Japanese were dangerous to have them work for
the railroad company.”
But in talking to people older than I, like my sister Emi,
before she suffered a stroke in the last two years and can no longer talk or
write, and other second-generation Nisei who are in their late 80s, I get a
different reason that probably caused the federal government to intern the
Winslow Santa Fe Railroad Japanese workers and their families, primarily to Poston.
The reason is as follows:
In the early 1920s, the Caucasian workers at Winslow Santa
Fe Railroad went on a strike. Japanese workers contacted their relatives and
friends to come to work at Winslow for the vacancies created by the strike.
Since then, the Caucasian workers in Winslow harbored a grudge against the
Japanese “strike-breakers.” The townspeople appealed to the federal authorities
to remove the Japanese from Santa Fe Railroad.
We were not permitted to swim in the city pool except on the
day before the dirty water was changed. Instead, we went to the nearby Clear
Creek, which was not so clear with the clay soil, to swim in the summer. There
was an attempt to segregate the Nisei students at the elementary school until
my father and Emi (as interpreter for my father) went to school to protest and
prevent the proposal for segregation from going into effect.
It is unfortunate that I can no longer talk to the deceased
older Nisei men, Tatehiko and Mitsugi Nomoto (Poston 15-9-B) , Ed Yamamoto, Namio Kitaoka, and
brothers Bill, Jim and Joe Kawasaki and Toshiye Nomachi (Poston 15-9-D) , who would have known
much more in detail about the forced internment of Japanese from Winslow. None
of the former Japanese workers were permitted to return to their Santa Fe
Railroad jobs after the war.
I often think of Reiko Nomoto, who was a few years younger
than I, and her father, Shigeji Nomoto, who with Mr. Tamanosuke Nomachi was
taken to Department of Justice jails immediately after the war started. Reiko,
who lived right across from our apartment unit in Winslow, was a cute little
girl that I was fond of. Sadly, she suffered a great deal during the absence of
her father who was in jail, far removed from Poston and away from Mrs.
Nomoto and Reiko until the end of the war.
Reiko Nomoto Akiyama died in her early 60s. I also lost my
good friends in my age bracket, i.e., Takako Nomoto Kaneko, Shoko Nomoto Fukuda
(Poston 15-9-B) and Eugene Yamamoto (Poston camp 1).
I still remember going to the American Indian village,
located next to the Japanese apartment compound, in the mid-1930s, with Toshiko
Kawasaki Tamura to watch the Native American young men and women do ballroom
dances in their recreation hall.
Toshiko Kawasaki, probably the oldest Nisei girl in Winslow,
was in high school then; I met Toshiko Tamura 50 years later at ballroom dances
in Los Angeles and Gardena. We both enjoyed dancing the waltz, tango, slow fox
trot, quick step, swing and other Latin dances. Today, Toshiko Tamura is in the
Keiro Nursing Home, and I wish her well and speedy recovery so she can dance
again.
My father was interned in Poston with other bachelors. After
the war he worked in the hot sun in Delano, picking grapes; became senile and
passed away in September 1963 at age 76, a lonely man who worked all his life
and never received the apology or $20,000 reparation from the U.S. government,
because he died before Aug. 10, 1988 when the Civil Liberties Act was signed by
President Reagan.
He is buried in Green Hills Memorial Park overlooking the
Pacific Ocean, where he can see his beloved “furusato” hometown, Takaoka in
Kochi, Japan.
May my father and all the other first-generation Issei and
deceased Nisei of Winslow rest in peace.
Source: http://www.rafu.com/2013/02/vox-populi-memories-of-winslow-ariz/
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