- SEQ CHAPTER \h \r 1From Columbia Reviews[i]
- Edited by Robert C. Carriker.
-
- The Colonel and the Pacifist
- Karl Bendetsen, Perry Saito
- and the Incarceration of Japanese Americans during
World War II
-
- by Klancy Clark de Nevers. Salt Lake City: University
of Utah Press,2004; 380 pp.,$21.95 paper.
-
- Reviewed by John C. Hughes
When Perry Saito
was operating the elevator in Aberdeen’s Finch Building in 1938,
Karl Bendetsen was on his way up– to his law office in the Finch
Building and way beyond. Neither had any inkling that in a few short
years, they both would be figurative prisoners of war. One was the
architect of the “military necessity” rationale behind FDR’s
executive order mandating the evacuation and internment of 117,000
West Coast Americans of Japanese ancestry during World War II; the
other, a fledgling pacifist, was an internee. Both were
exceptionally bright young men of immigrant stock. But Bendetsen’s
ambition prompted him to hide his Jewish faith and blinded him to
racism. He gained membership in a WASPish Stanford fraternity,
earned a law degree, changed the spelling of his last name, invented
gentile ancestors, worked 20-hour days, and at 34 became the
youngest full colonel in the U.S. Army. Perry Saito couldn’t have
hidden his Japanese ancestry even if he had wanted to. Because of
the color of his skin and the shape of his eyes, he was yanked out
of Aberdeen and sent to the windswept relocation camp at Tule Lake,
California, together with his brother, sister and their widowed
mother. Mrs. Saito had been arrested at the family’s Heron Street
Oriental curio shop two days after Pearl Harbor. For weeks, no one
knew where she had been taken.
Decades later,
Perry Saito, who became a Methodist minister, would find himself in
a historic confrontation with a thoroughly unrepentant Bendetsen as
Americans took stock of how wartime hysteria had subverted their
Constitution. This disquieting, altogether remarkable story is
compellingly told by native Aberdonian Klancy Clark de Nevers.
The Colonel and
The Pacifist is a major contribution to American history. It has
special relevance to the present in light of the ongoing debate over
civil liberties, domestic and foreign, in the wake of the 9/11
terrorist attacks and the war in Iraq.
Franklin Delano
Roosevelt, champion of the downtrodden, comes out with his halo
tarnished, having given Col. Bendetsen and his “a Jap is a Jap”
commanding general, John L. DeWitt, “carte blanche” to cook up a
reason to round up Japanese Americans, without any evidence of
planned sabotage or imminent attack. The notorious columnist,
Westbrook Pegler, appealing as usual to the worst instincts of his
audience, declared, “… to hell with habeas corpus until the danger
is over.”
Political
cartoonist Theodor Seuss Geisel, who went on to become the benignly
beloved Dr. Seuss, joined the chorus. The assistant secretary of
war, John J. McCloy, stated, “ … If it is a question of safety of
the country, [or] the Constitution of the United States, why the
Constitution is just a scrap of paper to me.” Earl Warren, future
chief justice of a United States Supreme Court that struck the
landmark blow for school desegregation, played the Jap card for all
it was worth as he campaigned for governor of California. He came to
regret the error of his ways but never said so publicly. Meantime,
FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover — despite his reputation as a
red-baiter and keeper of political dossiers — is revealed as a
moderate on the Japanese question, deeply troubled by the subversion
of due process.
In the weeks
following Pearl Harbor, the Aberdeen Daily World, happily,
was one of many newspapers that tried to exert a calming influence.
Editor & Publisher W.A. Rupp cautioned readers, “The FBI can take
care of the fifth columnists; is doing so already, in fact ... If
you believe you have reason for suspicion, tell it to the police; do
not whisper it ... They can be used, these whispers, against any
American — regardless of his forebears — used to ruin a competitor
or to serve a private grudge. They are part and parcel of the Hitler
method and do not belong in this country.”
But the specter of
fear was powerful, especially when the craven enemy didn’t look
“American.” Bendetsen parroted General DeWitt’s unsubstantiated
claims “that every seagoing vessel that left a Pacific Coast port
was met by an enemy submarine, and that unlawful radio transmitters
were not being shut down.”
On the West Coast
— Grays Harbor, in particular — many feared a Japanese attack was
imminent, with yellow hordes storming the beaches here and on
Willapa Harbor, then moving inland to set up an invasion hub at
Centralia and Chehalis. A West Coast attack, hard on the heels of
knock-out blows on Manila and Hawaii “was predicted 30 years earlier
by Homer Lea. As the smoke cleared over Pearl Harbor, copies of his
prophetic 1909 book, ‘The Valor of Ignorance,’ were unearthed from
many a Harborite’s dusty bookshelves.”
After the FBI
ransacked the Saitos’ store and apartment and hauled Mrs. Saito, 42,
off to jail, “Rumors ran rampant on Heron Street. Mr. Saito was
supposed to have had a searchlight in his chimney, pointing to the
sky — it would direct ‘Jap’ planes to town, they said.” Mr. Saito,
for the record, had been dead for five years. Proud of his adopted
country, he had made his children memorize all four stanzas of “The
Star Spangled Banner” as well as the Preamble to the Declaration of
Independence. There were also heartwarming examples of Harborites
standing up to defend the Saitos.
Klancy Clark de
Nevers, a 1951 graduate of Aberdeen’s Weatherwax High School, is a
retired software engineer who lives in Salt Lake City. She was
co-editor of Cohassett Beach Chronicles: World War II in the
Pacific Northwest, a collection of Kathy Hogan’s remarkable
wartime columns in the Grays Harbor Post, the weekly
newspaper published by de Nevers’ family.
A painstaking
researcher and talented storyteller, de Nevers carefully weaves the
contrasting stories of two men on a collision course with history.
The outcome is not flattering to Karl Bendetsen, a brilliant man who
became an assistant secretary of the Army and chairman, president
and CEO of Champion International.
As the movement
for redress of Japanese Americans got under way in 1980, Bendetsen
seethed at “arrogant militants” like Perry Saito, and flatly denied
that he had devised the “military necessity” strategy that led to
the mass internment. He died in 1989 at the age of 81. The Rev.
Saito had succumbed to heart failure in 1985. He was only 64.
de Nevers pulls no
punches, but anyone who accuses her of exercising politically
correct hindsight will have ignored the facts she has documented so
well. The Colonel and The Pacifist is a breakthrough in World
War II scholarship — a tale of two star-crossed lives rooted on the
Harbor, told with the added advantage of someone who grew up in
Aberdeen during World War II.
John C. Hughes is editor and
publisher of The Daily World
-----------------------------
A version of this review
appeared on the front page of The Daily World, Thursday, June
3, 2004 and was picked up by the AP Western Wire. John C. Hughes
can be reached at 360-532-4000, ext.145, or
pub@thedailyworld.com.
[i].Columbia: The Magazine of Northwest
History, Summer 2004, page 44-45. Published by the
Washington State Historical Society, Tacoma, WA.
[1].Columbia: The Magazine of Northwest History,
Summer 2004, page 44-45. Published by the Washington State
Historical Society, Tacoma, WA.