A March 6, 1943 recruitment poster published in the Minidoka Irrigator, targeting Japanese Americans behind barbed wire for agricultural labor, states, “You don’t need to wait any longer to get out.”
The promised “rewards” included “adequate housing.”
Another featured reward was that fieldwork was “a stepping stone to permanent year-round employment in agriculture…”
Is this the 1943 version of “Learn new skills”?
As a seven year old, Jon Yatabe accompanied his mother to a labor camp in Provo, UT, where she worked picking apples. Read Jon’s story, “The Wizard of Provo,” on our website.
The Topaz Stories Team
Contact us if you have a Topaz Story to share.
Follow us on Instagram @topazstories
Media Coverage:
Read Internee’s story told with ‘Topaz Collages’ (Wheel of Dharma, Vol. 5, Issue 3, March 2023).
Watch Topaz survivors tell their stories (abc4 news, 4/22/2022)
Listen to the “In the Hive” podcast with interviews with Ann Dion, Jonathan Hirabayashi, and Topaz survivors Jeanie Kashima and Joseph Nishimura (KCPW, 4/28/2022)
Read How a Utah exhibit about Topaz Camp looks to find empathy in ‘an ugly stain on American history (ksl.com, 4/22/2022)
Read “Topaz Stories rise from the dust,” (Department of Culture & Community Engagement, 4/2022)
Listen to KQED Forum, Day of Remembrance interview with Ruth Sasaki, 2/15/2022
Listen to Max Chang and Ruth Sasaki interviewed (KRCL RadioActive, 2/9/2022
Read On Topaz Stories and ‘Authentic Voice’, the Discover Nikkei interview with Ruth Sasaki (10/14/2022)
Listen to Remembering the Japanese American Incarceration, the Topaz Stories podcast with Ruth Sasaki and Jonathan Hirabayashi (6/2/2021)