2011-02-28/630p: Pasadena adopts Fred Korematsu 
day honoring WW2 Internee Resister

To: [email protected]
From: "kris" <[email protected]>
Date: Sun, 27 Feb 2011 22:08:01 -0000
Subject: [ACLU_Pasadena-Foothill] See "History in 
the Making", Monday, Feb 28  Pasadena

"History in the Making" – February 28th, Pasadena City Hall, 6:30
Pasadena to Be First So. California City to 
Adopt  FRED KOREMATSU DAY OF CIVIL LIBERTIES AND  THE CONSTITUTION

On January 31st, a presentation to the Pasadena 
City Council was made by Connie Rey Castro of the 
ACLU-SC/Pasadena-Foothills Chapter,  Mark Furuya 
of the Japanese American Bar Association, Mikey 
Hirano Culross of The Rafu Shimpo, Wendy Anderson 
of the Cherry Blossom Festival SoCal and Yukio 
Kawaratani who presented a heartful story of his 
experience as a 14 year old internee during WWII, 
for a Resolution to make January 30th Fred 
Korematsu Day of Civil Liberties and the 
Constitution.  Pasadena will be the first 
Southern California city to adopt this 
Resolution, so we are "history in the making" and 
hope that other Southern California cities come on board.

The Resolution is co-sponsored by Councilmembers 
Steve Madison & Jacque Robinson.  According to 
Mayor Bill Bogaard, there will be a modest 
ceremony on MONDAY, FEBRUARY 28th at Pasadena 
City Hall Council Chambers at 6:30 pm – to move 
that February 28, 2011 as Fred Korematsu Day  and 
henceforward Fred Korematsu Day will be 
recognized in the City of Pasadena on January 
30th (Birthday of Korematsu) along with the State 
of California 's resolution.  The Fred Korematsu 
Day Resolution AB 1775 was co-sponsored by 
Assemblymembers Warren Furutani (55th District 
Los Angeles) and Marty Block (78th District San Diego).

Join us at City Hall, 100 N. Garfield, City 
Council Chambers (SE corner of City Hall, 2nd 
floor)l for this short ceremony, or watch it on 
television ( Pasadena area Charter Channel 3 or 
AT&T Channel 99 – find City of Pasadena and click 
on KPAS) or watch it live on the internet – go to 
www.PasadenaCommunityNetwork.com and click on KPAS.

Taking some of the words that Yukio Kawaratani 
said on Jan 31st – "Fred Korematsu challenged the 
Government, all the way to the Supreme 
Court.  The Supreme Court's decision held that 
military necessity outweighed Korematsu's 
individual rights and the rights of all Americans 
of Japanese descent.  Fred Korematsu is a hero 
and a symbol for all Americans to honor.  He 
alerted us to be vigilant to the continuing legal 
concept that the government can suspend civil 
liberties guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution and 
discriminate and take action against any group or 
organization of people on the basis of military necessity."

SHORT BIO ON FRED T. KOREMATSU:

Fred T. Korematsu was a national civil rights 
hero. In 1942, at the age of 23, he refused to go 
to the government's incarceration camps for 
Japanese Americans. After he was arrested and 
convicted of defying the government's order, he 
appealed his case all the way to the Supreme 
Court. In 1944, the Supreme Court ruled against 
him, arguing that the incarceration was justified due to military necessity.

In 1983, Prof. Peter Irons, a legal historian, 
discovered key documents that government 
intelligence agencies had hidden from the Supreme 
Court in 1944. The documents consistently showed 
that Japanese Americans had committed no acts of 
treason to justify mass incarceration. With this 
new evidence, a legal team of mostly Japanese 
American attorneys re-opened Korematsu's 40 
year-old case on the basis of government 
misconduct. On November 10, 1983, Korematsu's 
conviction was overturned in a federal court in 
San Francisco . It was a pivotal moment in civil rights history.

Korematsu remained an activist throughout his 
life. In 1998, he received the Presidential Medal 
of Freedom, the nation's highest civilian honor, 
from President Bill Clinton. In 2010, the state 
of California passed the Fred Korematsu Day bill, 
making January 30 the first day in the US named 
after an Asian American. Korematsu's growing 
legacy continues to inspire activists of all 
backgrounds and demonstrates the importance of speaking up to fight injustice.

More information:  www.KorematsuInstitute.org

###

Wendy Fujihara Anderson
WOW! Event Productions
[email protected]
Ph: 626-683-8243   Fax: 626-405-8809

Cherry Blossom Festival SoCal
April 2nd & 3rd
www.CherryBlossomFestivalSoCal.org

###



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