Largest Online Collection of World War II Japanese American
Internment Camp Records Sheds New Light on Lives Under Arrest
PROVO, UTAH (February 16, 2012) - In remembrance of the
70thanniversary of President Franklin D. Roosevelt's
Executive Order 9066 placing more than 120,000 Japanese
Americans in internment camps, Ancestry.com, the
world's largest online family
history resource, is offering free access from
February 16-23 to its extensive Japanese internment camp
record collections.
The more than 180,000 records, spanning 1942-45 when the
Executive Order was in place, allow all Americans a chance
to better understand the nation's wartime mindset and the
effect it had on Japanese Americans. For those with
Japanese heritage, these databases offer a glimpse into
their families' removal from their homes and businesses and
insights into how they were forever affected by their
internment. To begin searching, users can visit
www.ancestry.com/japanese.
Fearing espionage and sabotage following the December 7,
1941 Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, the U.S. government
viewed the attack as justification to relocate people of
Japanese descent living on the West Coast and place them in
internment camps throughout the interior of the country. As
the Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment of
Civilians (CRWIC) report stated, the forced removal and
mass incarceration was the result of racism, opportunism
and a failure of political leadership. Nevertheless, within
months, entire families were displaced from their homes,
and in many cases, family members were separated.
Two-thirds of those imprisoned were American citizens and
half of them were children. The camps began closing
in 1944, although at least one government-run camp remained
open until 1946. Finally, in 1988, Congress passed a bill
that provided for an official apology and reparations to
Japanese Americans still living, over 40 years after the
camps were closed.
Married to a man who was named after the director of
his camp, Ancestry.com user Pearl Ito was able to learn
about her husband and sister-in-law's Tule Lake camp
experience in Northern California, information she had
struggled to find previously.
"Japanese family history is difficult to research because
it's protected by the Japanese government. Despite this, I
was able to search Ancestry.com's records and found out
that my husband's family, including his parents and
siblings, were interned at Tule Lake," said Pearl Ito,
Ancestry.com user. "What's more, it was ironic to also
uncover a World
War II Draft Registrationfor my husband's father, even
though he was not allowed to become a citizen at that
time. This was a very sad time in America's history
and we've shared the findings with our sons so they better
understand how far our family has come in this country."
The Japanese American National Museum is marking the 70th
Anniversary of Executive Order 9066 with a new endeavor,
the Remembrance Project. Phase I of the Project will
be publically unveiled at the National Museum on Saturday,
February 18, 2012 with the premier of a PSA featuring actor
and activist George Takei, and with remarks by the
Honorable Norman Y. Mineta, Former U.S. Secretary of
Transportation; both of whom can be found in the records on
Ancestry.com. The web site intends to collect tributes to
those who lived this experience, and make them more
accessible for others who seek to learn about and become
inspired by these remarkable first-person stories.
Collaborating with the National Museum to shed light on
this time period, Ancestry.com's collection includes
extensive records that help to further explain the American
mindset at the time the Executive Order was signed.
"I was only a small child when the government sent soldiers
to remove my family from our home in Los Angeles," Takei
recalled. "We could only take what we could carry. First we
were sent to the horse stalls of Santa Anita racetrack and
then to government-run prison camps in both Arkansas and
California. My hope is that all Americans will learn about
the unfair treatment visited upon Japanese Americans like
my family and will ensure it never happens again to any
other group."
The key records that tell this story, made available in
partnership with the National Archives and Records
Administration include:
"Ancestry.com offers the largest collection of Japanese
internment records available online, from which you can
paint a detailed picture of what it was like to be held in
these camps," said Daniel Jones, VP of Global Content
Strategy, Ancestry.com. "By opening access to these records
free of charge, we hope to better educate the public on
this unfortunate moment in our nation's history."
About Ancestry.com
Ancestry.com Inc. (Nasdaq: ACOM) is the world's largest
online family history resource, with more than 1.7 million
paying subscribers. More than 8 billion records have been
added to the site in the past 15 years. Ancestry users have
created more than 30 million family trees containing over 3
billion profiles. In addition to its flagship site www.ancestry.com,
Ancestry.com offers several localized Web sites designed to
empower people to discover, preserve and share their family
history.
About the Japanese American National Museum
The Japanese American National Museum is dedicated to
fostering greater understanding and appreciation for
America's ethnic and cultural diversity by preserving and
telling the stories of Americans of Japanese ancestry.
Since its incorporation in 1985, the National Museum has
grown into an internationally recognized institution,
presenting award-winning exhibitions, groundbreaking
traveling exhibits, educational public programs, innovative
video documentaries and cutting-edge curriculum guides. For
more information, call the Japanese American National
Museum at (213) 625-0414, or go to www.janm.org.
Forward Looking Statements
This press release contains forward-looking statements that
involve risks and uncertainties that could cause actual
results to differ materially from those anticipated by
these forward-looking statements. Such risks and
uncertainties include the ability of users of our website
to satisfactorily and conveniently access desired
information from specific collections. Information
concerning additional factors that could cause events or
results to differ materially from those projected in the
forward-looking statements is contained under the caption
"Risk Factors" in our Quarterly Report on Form
10-Q for the quarter ended September 30, 2011, and in
discussions in other of our SEC filings. These
forward-looking statements should not be relied upon as
representing our views as of any subsequent date and we
assume no obligation to publicly update or revise these
forward-looking statements.