Life Interrupted - Center for Arkansas History and Culture - 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock /cahc/tag/life-interrupted/ 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock Wed, 09 Oct 2024 17:19:37 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Permanent Home for “Against Their Will” Exhibit /cahc/2013/04/17/permanent-home-for-against-their-will-exhibit/ Wed, 17 Apr 2013 17:34:14 +0000 https://ualrprd.wpengine.com/cahc/?p=622 The original Life Interrupted exhibit, 鈥淎gainst Their Will:  The Japanese American Experience in World War II Arkansas,鈥 is now on permanent display at the new World War II Japanese American ... Permanent Home for “Against Their Will” Exhibit

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The original Life Interrupted exhibit, 鈥淎gainst Their Will:  The Japanese American Experience in World War II Arkansas,鈥 is now on permanent display at the new in McGehee, Arkansas.

The exhibit was produced by the Life Interrupted Project, and originally premiered in 2004 as part of a joint effort by the University of Arkansas at Little Rock鈥檚 Master鈥檚 in Public History Program and the Japanese American National Museum in Los Angeles, California.

The project鈥檚 mission was to gather documents and artifacts related to internment, pursue conservation efforts at the two internment camps in Arkansas 鈥 Rohwer and Jerome 鈥 and to create and distribute curriculum materials. The project also hosted a national conference in Little Rock, Camp Connections, which attracted over 1,200 people, along with eight coordinated exhibitions around the city, including 鈥淎gainst Their Will.鈥 Additionally, the documentary Time of Fear was produced as a result of this project, which aired on PBS.

Yesterday, the World War II Japanese American Internment Museum held its grand opening. , actor and social media activist, spoke about his personal experience with Japanese American internment at the dedication ceremony.

Takei was among the 110,000 Japanese and Japanese Americans from the West Coast who were sent to internment camps.  He and his family were forced to leave their home and move to Santa Anita Assembly Center, where they would eventually be transferred to the Rohwer Relocation Center.

The internment of Japanese Americans was a result of Executive Order 9066. Signed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt, on Feb. 19, 1942, the order granted the U. S. government authority to relocate both citizens and non-citizens based on the fear that anyone with Japanese ancestry was a potential spy or saboteur.  In all, ten relocation centers were constructed across the country. Arkansas was the site of two internment camps, the Rohwer Relocation Center (Desha County) and the Jerome Relocation Center (Drew and Chicot Counties).

The collection gathered by the Life Interrupted Project is currently being processed by archivist Shannon Lausch of the 糖心Vlog传媒LR Center for Arkansas History and Culture (CAHC), and is set to open later this year.

Each month, CAHC is releasing a new clip from 35 hours of interview footage, leading up to the opening of an exhibit on Japanese American internment in Arkansas. The interviews include accounts from Japanese Americans who were incarcerated at the Jerome and Rohwer internment camps, narratives from Arkansans who lived near or worked at the camps, and perspectives from scholars on this period in history.

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Late Senator’s Interview on Arkansas Internment Camps Digitized /cahc/2013/01/02/late-senators-interview-on-arkansas-internment-camps-digitized/ Wed, 02 Jan 2013 15:04:22 +0000 https://ualrprd.wpengine.com/cahc/?p=499 An extensive interview with Sen. Daniel Inouye on the Japanese-American internment camps will be released 2013, the Center for Arkansas History and Culture recently announced. Inouye, Congress鈥 most senior member, died ... Late Senator’s Interview on Arkansas Internment Camps Digitized

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An extensive interview with Sen. Daniel Inouye on the Japanese-American internment camps will be released 2013, the Center for Arkansas History and Culture recently announced.

Inouye, Congress鈥 most senior member, died Dec. 18 from a respiratory illness. He was 88.

The center was already in the process of digitizing Inouye鈥檚 talk. In 2004, he was interviewed for the documentary Time of Fear, which shared the stories of Japanese-Americans who were interned in Arkansas during World War II. In the hour-long interview, Inouye describes his shock at seeing the Rohwer internment camp during a visit there as a soldier of the 442nd Regimental Combat Team.

His interview is a part of the Center for Arkansas History and Culture鈥檚 collection Life Interrupted: The Japanese American Experience in WWII Arkansas.

The Life Interrupted project originally premiered in 2004 as part of a joint effort by the University of Arkansas at Little Rock Public History Program and the Japanese American National Museum in Los Angeles.  Their mission was to build up the archives of documents and artifacts related to internment, raise money for conservation efforts at the two internment camps in Arkansas 鈥 Rohwer and Jerome 鈥 and to create and distribute curriculum materials.

The collection is currently being processed by center archivist Shannon Lausch and is set to open in 2013.

 

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