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bigtree

(86,013 posts)
Wed Feb 8, 2017, 10:22 AM Feb 2017

During World War II, the U.S. Saw Italian-Americans as a Threat to Homeland Security






The executive order that forced Japanese-Americans from their homes also put immigrants from Italy under the watchful eye of the government

____ Rumors began right after the Pearl Harbor attack. The government was going to pass a law taking away the property of all Italians who didn’t have citizenship papers; Italians living near defense factories would be forced to move; Italian homes would be searched and cameras, shortwave radios and guns would be confiscated. In fact, government officials considered all three of those options.

(Young postgraduate sociology student at the University of Chicago) Paul Campisi’s surveys found a contrast between how the older, Italian-born generation and second-generation Italian-Americans viewed the threat. The older generation felt a deep inner conflict. “It was hard for the Italians to believe that their homeland was actually at war with America. It was incredible, unbelievable,” he wrote. But even though all Italian-Americans ages 14 and older had to register as aliens following the 1940 Alien Registration Act, a process that filled them with anxiety, nobody believed it would go any further.

“Italians weren’t expecting the shock which awaited them on December 8,” Campisi wrote. “It was a dual reaction. First, anger, amazement, and incredible shock at the news of Pearl Harbor, and then sorrow and pain at the realization that Italy definitely would now be an enemy nation.” Now Italian-Americans faced even greater suspicion from their co-workers and friends...

The same chill settled in Connecticut. One morning in spring 1942, federal officers knocked on the door of a New Haven home. The man who opened the door, Pasquale DeCicco, was a pillar of his community and had been a U.S. citizen for more than 30 years. He was taken to a federal detention center in Boston, where he was fingerprinted, photographed and held for three months. Then he was sent to another detention facility on Ellis Island.

Still with no hearing scheduled, he was moved again to an immigration facility at Fort Meade, Maryland. On July 31, he was formally declared an enemy alien of the United States. He remained at Fort Meade until December 1943, months after Italy’s surrender. He was never shown any evidence against him, nor charged with any crime.

EO 9066 not only allowed the government to arrest and imprison “enemy aliens” without charges or trial—it meant their homes and businesses could be summarily seized. On the West Coast, California’s attorney general Earl Warren (later the Chief Justice of the United States) was relentless in registering enemy aliens for detention...


read more: http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/italian-americans-were-considered-enemy-aliens-world-war-ii-180962021/?utm_source=twitter.com&utm_medium=socialmedia


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During World War II, the U.S. Saw Italian-Americans as a Threat to Homeland Security (Original Post) bigtree Feb 2017 OP
Germans also Motley13 Feb 2017 #1
Thanks for posting Sherman A1 Feb 2017 #2
my grandfather was born here. during ww1 there were parts of milw he could not go dembotoz Feb 2017 #3
Almost no DUers, if any, are old enough to actually remember these things. MineralMan Feb 2017 #4

MineralMan

(146,341 posts)
4. Almost no DUers, if any, are old enough to actually remember these things.
Wed Feb 8, 2017, 10:48 AM
Feb 2017

We know about the internment of Japanese Americans, more or less. I was born in 1945. When I first went to college, one of my friends was a young woman of Japanese ancestry. I was pretty clueless about the Japanese internment ordered by FDR until she talked about it. It turned out that she was born in the Manzanar internment camp. She told me about her family, which owned a grocery store in Los Angeles when they were sent to Manzanar. They lost everything. In 1963, they were still impoverished by what happened. One family member committed suicide because of it.

Now, we have another President who would dearly love to intern Muslim Americans. If he can get away with it, he will do just that, the next time a terrorist attack is made on U.S. soil. We no longer remember the internments of WWII at first hand. We only have stories. Even our WWII veterans, what few are still living, may not have known the extent of what happened.

Now, people are becoming aware of Americans of German and Italian descent who were also interned. That information has always been available, but it is no longer relevant to most people, who were not alive at the time.

We need to be aware that there is precedent for what Trump would like to do. We must be watchful and ready to protest any such moves by Trump.

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