PLAY PODCASTS
Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston - Revisiting Manzanar
Episode 258

Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston - Revisiting Manzanar

A 1981 interview with Jeanne Wakatsuki, author of Farewell to Manzanar, about growing up in a Japanese Concentration Camp in the Mojave desert during World War II, and how her experiences resonate with what is going on in our country today.

The Kitchen Sisters Present

March 18, 202544m 49s

Audio is streamed directly from the publisher (dts.podtrac.com) as published in their RSS feed. Play Podcasts does not host this file. Rights-holders can request removal through the copyright & takedown page.

Show Notes

In 1981 The Kitchen Sisters interviewed Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston for a story about life on the homefront during World War II. Jeanne told stories of her childhood growing up in Manzanar, a hastily built detention camp surrounded by barbed wire and armed guard towers in the midst of the Owens Valley in the Mojave desert, where Japanese Americans were incarcerated for 3 years during World War II. 

Jeanne was 7 years old when her father, a commercial fisherman, was taken away with no explanation by the FBI and imprisoned in Bismarck, North Dakota. The family had no idea where he had been taken or why.

Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston's book, Farewell to Manzanar, written in collaboration with her husband James D. Houston, has become a curriculum staple in classrooms across the nation and is one of the first ways many are introduced to this dark period of American history. 

In listening to this interview recorded 44 years ago we are struck by how Jeanne's memories of those years — the sense of fear, of families being separated, of innocent people being terrorized, hunted — resonate with what is happening in our country today. 

Jeanne died last year at the age of 90.