The
Japanese American Citizens League is the oldest and largest Asian American
civil rights organisation in the United States, having been founded in 1929.
Their current aims are to uphold the civil rights of those of Japanese
ancestry, preserve their culture heritage and fight against any discrimination
or social injustice against them or other minority groups. There are several factors
to be found amongst the information given by the organisation that suggest
reasons why Americans of Japanese ancestry feel that it is important to be able
to identify themselves by their ethnic background rather than simply claiming
to be “American”. For example, whilst they admit that an increase in
multi-ethnic and multi-racial Japanese-Americans provides evidence of the
assimilation of such people into the American mainstream, they also claim that
these people more often than not continue to belong to Japanese-American
communities and organizations such as the JACL, suggesting that their cultural
heritage is still a very important feature of their identity. This is backed up
by data that shows that people of the third generation (sansei) and fourth generation
(yonsei) make up the majority of the JACL members, which shows that
assimilation is as yet far from complete.
The
statistics provided also show that nearly a third of all Japanese Americans of
the fourth generation still continue to marry other Japanese Americans. This
confirms how a significant proportion prefer to identify themselves as
belonging to a particular ethnic group which goes beyond a simple, generic
American identity. In addition, the claim that Japanese Americans are only
second to African Americans in feeling aggrieved about their treatment in the
United States, something which the JACL believe is strongly linked to the
experience of the internment camps, is also provided as evidence as to why Japanese
Americans perceive their identity as important and why they still continue to maintain
strong bonds within their ethnic community. They obviously believe that those
who come from the same background, with the same historical experience and
culture, are easier to understand and form key relationships with.
In conclusion, we can see that to Japanese
Americans their ancestry clearly plays an important role in constructing their
identity. This is not all that surprising given the size of the United States
and the multitude of different ethnicities that live within the country.
‘American’ identity is a contemporary thing, it means being an American citizen
today. But people also have an important historical identity, and in the case
of Japanese Americans this means having been at one time treated as enemies of
the country in which they now live.
No comments:
Post a Comment