BOOK TITLE: They Called Us Enemy
AUTHOR: George Takei
YEAR: 2019
GENRE: Graphic Novel
SUBGENRE: Political Memoir
GRADE: Extra Credit
In 1942, over 120,000 Japanese-Americans were taken away
from their homes and placed into dingy prison camps all over the US. They did
nothing wrong, but had none of the legal means to prove it to the racist
authorities. They were paying for the sins of their home country after the Pearl Harbor bombing. Classic ignorant thinking at its
worst: because a small minority of the group committed the crime, the entire
group is guilty. George Takei spent most of his tender childhood living under
this kind of oppression as he and his family were among the Japanese-American
families locked up in internment camps. Reading
about this shameful experience through his eyes makes everything that much more
heartbreaking. His young mind couldn’t comprehend the ignorance of those in
charge. He tried to make sense of the barbed wire enclosures, deplorable
conditions, and abusive army guards. Fast forward into adulthood and George
Takei does everything in his power as an equal rights activist and Hollywood actor to make sure this terrifying history
doesn’t happen again.
This graphic novel is nothing short of a brutally honest
look into the politics of fear. Powerful politicians will use their influence
and charisma to rile up their supporters into believing that the less fortunate
are what’s wrong with this country. We saw it with the Japanese internment in
George Takei’s book and we’re seeing it today with the Muslim ban, the family
separation policy at the Mexican border, and black people getting harsher
treatment from law enforcement than whites. The one thing we learn from history
is that we learn nothing from history. But it doesn’t have to be this way. This
book has the power to educate its readers. When you familiarize yourself with
your fellow world citizens, you’re less likely to judge them. That’s what “They
Called Us Enemy” means to me and that’s one of the reasons it’s getting a
perfect five out of five stars. The more educated we are, the better off we’ll
be. That means leaving behind comfortable bigotry and thinking about what it’s
like to be the other guy, which is often a horrifying reality.
But of course, there will always be those contrarians out
there who say, “It wasn’t all that bad!” These same people say it about black
slavery, they call Mexican border detention centers “Summer Camp”, and they’ll
no doubt say it about Japanese internment camps. Having guaranteed living
conditions doesn’t mean those conditions are necessarily good. Did I mention
the barbed wire fencing around the camps? Did I mention the abusive treatment
from the soldiers? What about the fact that George Takei’s family had to live
in a horse stall that smelled like rancid feces? What about the infighting
among Japanese prisoners who joined the military to prove their patriotism and
the prisoners who stayed in the camps to protest? Had enough harsh reality? But
wait, there’s one more juicy detail: institutionalization. Some prisoners were
so familiar with the routine life of the camps that they couldn’t imagine
getting back on their feet in a normal society. Now imagine a child as young as
George Takei feeling that way upon leaving the camp. You get to see all of this
through the author’s eyes whether you want to or not. It won’t be pleasant, but
it’ll be a necessary kick in the butt for the apathetic and fearful.
Despite the shortness and quick pacing of the book, you will
feel as though you’ve taken an entire US history course in one sitting. Let
this be a message to you all. Treat your neighbors with kindness and respect.
Treat your inferiors with the same level of understanding and love. If you see
an injustice happening, don’t stay quiet. Be the activist you were meant to
become. Be a passionate enough voice in this battle for equality that those in
power will have no choice but to listen. Let your words haunt them like
schizophrenic ghosts. Will this change anything? Let me put it this way: we
don’t have a choice but to activate our activism. The world can’t survive
without making progressive leaps and bounds. That is the nature of time. Any
questions?
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