48. Coming out of camp, people were humiliated, rejected, and not served because of so much racism.

  • K – Kayoko Wakita
K
yes, you are humiliated when you come out. You’re spit upon, my parents and I both were spit upon. They were struck, as well, on the transportation, you know, the P Car line. “You’re a Jap! (makes a jab motion)”, and then the guy would leave. And things happened like that, but yet you know you have to live, and how to survive. And, you know, in high school, we would go to a soda bar in a drug store, and they wouldn’t serve us. There were many places that would not serve us. And, I think, that’s why I say it was even harder after we came out of camp because we were rejected so many times. When I first got my pay check when I went to work, I made a reservation, and called, and they asked me what my name was, of course. And then, they called me back and they said, “Oh we just realized that we have another reservation that day.” And you know, very well, that it wasn’t because, you know, they did. It was your name. They figured it out, although my name wouldn’t be that common. But these things happened, and I think that was the worse time because people were coming back from war, people weren’t coming back from the war either. And all of this… you know, it’s…it’s still present.

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