A 17-year-old Japanese-American boy in Hood River, Ore., wrote a poem shortly before committing suicide on Feb. 27, 1931. The youth, Kay Yasui, son of Japanese immigrants Masuo and Shidzuyo Yasui, had faced racial harassment at a time Asian discrimination was especially high in the United States. Much of his family would later spend World War II in Northern California’s Tule Lake Japanese confinement camp.
The poem’s timeless message goes like this:
You call me “Jap,”
And boast, saying you yourself are American.
My hair is black,
My nose, you say, is flat.
You insult and torment;
You say you are my superior
Because you are
American.
American,
If such a thing be true,
By what rights do you designate yourself
American?
In your blue eyes, I see the Swede,
You have the red hair of the Irish,
Your mother’s mother was of Spain,
Your father is from Britain’s soil.
Trace your ancestry;
Were they Indians of America?
By what rights then,
American,
Are you American?
Because you were born in this land
Are you American?
I, too, claim this land as my birthplace.
As much American as you,
I, too,
Am American.
Source: Kessler, Lauren. Stubborn Twig. Corvallis, Ore.: Oregon State University Press, 2008. Print.
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Harassed Japanese-American Youth Asserts His Citizenship
Episode
2750
Date