Tag Archives: Canada 150

Veterans interned: What Canada did to the Japanese-Canadian soldiers of the First World War

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There are some moments in Canadian history that are unforgettable. And then there are others Canada seems eager to forget.

This year marks the 100th anniversary of the Battle of Vimy Ridge, a triumph for Canadian troops in the Second World War. One of these troops was Zennosuke Inouye, who fought in the Canadian Over-Seas Expeditionary Force for the escarpment in Vimy.

Inouye served in the Canadian military despite the racism Japanese Canadians were subjected to. Archives Canada: RG 150, Accession 1992-93/166, Box 4703 – 5.

Originally, Inouye was not allowed to serve in the war. Linda Kawamoto Reid, an archivist for the Nikkei Place, says this stemmed from a distrust of Japanese Canadians.

“There was this ‘how could you trust a Jap working beside you?’ mentality,” she says in a phone interview.

Despite the conscription laws of the time, Inouye was rejected by the Dominion military authorities in British Columbia because he was of Japanese descent, according to an article in The Canadian Historical Review. Determined to serve his country, he and 222 other Japanese Canadians enlisted in Alberta.

In April 1917, Inouye had just fended off trench fever and was previously wounded in the Battle of the Somme. At Vimy, his upper arm was torn apart by shrapnel, and he spent almost two months in the war hospital in Bristol. When he arrived back home in Canada, he purchased land near Surrey, B.C. to start a fruit farm for him and his family.

Inouye’s casualty form shows when he arrived in France to serve. Archives Canada: RG 150, Accession 1992-93/166, Box 4703 – 5.
Page 2 of Inouye’s casualty form. Form that he was wounded once, and that he sustained a gun shot wound (GSW). Archives Canada: RG 150, Accession 1992-93/166, Box 4703 – 5.

History professor Peter Neary of the University of Western Ontario writes, “He was loyal to his family and to his adopted country. In the case of the second loyalty, he now had a scar on his arm to prove it. This was a badge of honour that gave him a new identity as a Canadian.”

On the third anniversary of Vimy Ridge, Japanese-Canadian veterans were honoured with the erection of a memorial in Stanley Park, Vancouver. Atop the monument, an eternal flame was lit.

Inouye may have thought he’d never have to fight for land again. But 25 years later, he did.

This year also marks the 75th anniversary of the internment of Japanese Canadians. In 1942, the Privy Council relocated over 12,000 Japanese Canadians in B.C. to internment camps. Among the thousands were 58 Japanese-Canadian veterans of the First World War. Inouye was given a number, 03243, and separated from his sons.

Inouye’s farm land, which he had rented to a neighbour before he was abruptly relocated in an attempt to protect it, was claimed by the secretary of state and resold to the incoming veterans of the Second World War. The custodian of the secretary of state deemed this land “enemy property.”

In a letter of protest to Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King, Inouye wrote, “Your petitioner believes that his loyalty to Canada has been well tested in the great war, and that it does not seem fair for the government to take away from one ex-service man a property so dear to him in order that it may be given to [a] soldier returning from the present war.”

Inouye wasn’t the only veteran who felt forgotten. “One veteran caught up in the government sweep threw his medals into the Skeena River in disgust,” writes Neary.

While the government sent these veterans to detention camps, the flame on the Japanese Canadian War Memorial was extinguished.

Eighty letters between Inouye and various recipients have been found and archived by the Nikkei Place as he fought to get his farm land back. Five years after the war, Inouye was the only Japanese-Canadian veteran to have his land returned to him. His home had burned down the year before he returned, and was only ensured for $300 by the custodian of the secretary of state. At age 64, Inouye had to rebuild.

Despite the racism that Inouye and bother Japanese Canadians faced, they continued to serve in Canada’s army. Mixed race Japanese Canadians, and those married to caucasians, were excluded from internment, and about 160 enlisted to serve in the Second World War as interpreters. Japanese Canadians deported to Japan after the war were later recruited to serve with the Canadian troops in the Korean War.

Reid says she recently interviewed a Japanese Canadian veteran of the Korean War and asked him why he agreed to serve a country where his people had faced so much discrimination. The man told her he feels Canadian and loves this country.

“I think they felt they could make a difference,” she says. “It was a statement.”

So why don’t most Canadians know about this?

“I don’t think it’s well-documented, talked about or illuminated,” Reid says. “I would encourage Canadians not to buy into that.”

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Notes about documentation for my professor:

There were other documents that I wanted to use from the Nikkei Place. On their website, it said “copyright: open access” so I assumed I could use that. When I did my interview with the archivist, she informed me that I could not use them without submitting a form, so I submitted one. I have not heard back yet (I’ve followed up, but haven’t gotten a response) , so I went in a different direction. Instead, I hyperlinked the Nikkei Place collection so readers could view it if they were so inclined.

1) Attestation Paper: the very first document a soldier signs in order to enlist in the expeditionary forces. I liked this because it clearly showed his name and the force he served on. This would have been a great personal victory for Inouye, who travelled all the way into Alberta in order to enlist. I found it on Archives Canada.

2) Casualty form: a form that records the relocations, injuries, and deaths of any individual soldier. Though this one is harder to read, you can see clearly on the first page when he was sent to France, and on the second page when he was wounded. I found it on Archives Canada, where I also found information on how to read it. 

50 years after Expo 67: what remains and what was lost?

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http://www.cbc.ca/archives/entry/expo-67-mayor-jean-drapeaus-welcome
The CBC Archives

On April 27th 1967, the whole world was watching Jean Drapeau’s inaugurative speech for the universal world fair. The Montreal mayor then said he maintained hope that it was possible to prevent the destruction of buildings and elements of the Expo’s site, so that the world fair should thus forever be imprinted in people’s memories on American soil. Drapeau’s dream of perenniality for the world fair has not quite come true.

Indeed, 50 years after the world fair that attracted 50 million people happened, few buildings or elements of Expo 67 subsist on Parc Jean-Drapeau. Out of 98 pavilions, only six subsist on the site to this day: the French, Québec, American, Tunisian, Jamaican and Korean pavilions. They are now respectively the Casino and its annex, the Biosphere, an office, a reception house and a bus stop.

Jean Drapeau’s grandson, Antoine Drapeau, says he thinks the city has done an okay job in preserving the site, but could have done more to preserve the glorious legacy of Expo ’67.

Julie Bélanger organizes extremely popular and free educational tours of the park to honour the legacy of the event. She is part of a handful of activists who really push the city and the Parc Jean-Drapeau Society to revitalize the site. She says that most of the big celebrations to come for the 50th anniversary of the Expo remain to be announced.

Bélanger says there are sadly many artefacts that aren’t preserved the way they should. For example: both sculptures Orbite Optique No 2 by Gerald Gladstone and Obélisque Oblique by Henri-Georges Adam do not have commemorative plaques that tells when they were made, who made them and why they are on the former Expo 67 site.  Gladstone’s statue stands in front of the Six Flags amusement park and Adam’s in front of the casino. Bélanger also deplores the fact that the Korea tower is now lying on its side, rotting behind the Gilles-Villeneuve F1 tracks since 2011.

https://artpublic.ville.montreal.qc.ca/oeuvre/obelisque-oblique/
Bureau d’art publique de la ville de Montréal

50 years later, those remains show a forgotten albeit glorious past. In his book “Montreal’s Expo 67”, Bill Cotter writes that Expo 67 hosted the largest art display of any world’s fair.

Historian Roger La Roche was thirteen years old when he started working at Expo 67. He has kept researching and working on the preservation of the site to this day. La Roche says he regrets that the city, the government of Québec, the government of Canada and the Parc Jean-Drapeau Society don’t do more to revive the site. He says the old pavilions lose their meaning if we cannot find a similar ambiance to that of the Expo at the park.

La Roche says that the only two things that really bring Montrealers on the islands are the Grand Prix and Evenko concerts in the summer– both events are private and do not give back to the Expo 67 legacy.

Of all people who attend the Grand Prix Formula 1 and Osheaga on Sainte-Hélène and Notre-Dame islands, how many of them know about the world class exhibition?

Antoine Drapeau says not that many. “The average citizen forgets that all of this site did not exist before the Expo.” He says people forget that a 100 years ago, all of this was only water and the site was built with man power, with soil dug from the entrails of Montreal.

The Parc Jean-Drapeau Society says its actions are constantly influenced by the spirit and the legacy of Expo ’67. The Society states that it has plans to build a site where one of the principal objectives is to recreate the spirit of Expo ’67. But that remains to be seen.

On the anniversary year of Expo 67, what is certain is that the universal fair is not being remembered the way mayor Drapeau envisioned it in his 1967 inaugural speech.