Fort Bliss, TX: What WWII Incarceration Can Teach Us About Civil Liberties and Civil Rights Today

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By Bill Staples, Jr., President, JACL-AZ, and Donna Cheung, Civil Rights Committee Chair, JACL-AZ ** Important: There’s a difference between civil liberties and civil rights. Civil liberties are the basic […] The post Fort Bliss, TX: What WWII Incarceration Can Teach Us About Civil Liberties and Civil Rights Today appeared first on Japanese American Citizens League - Arizona Chapter.

By Bill Staples, Jr., President, JACL-AZ, and Donna Cheung, Civil Rights Committee Chair, JACL-AZ

**

Important: There’s a difference between civil liberties and civil rights. Civil liberties are the basic freedoms guaranteed to everyone by the Constitution. They protect individuals from government or other groups interfering in their lives. Civil rights are different — they’re the promises that the government will step in to make sure those freedoms are protected, especially for people in groups whose rights have been denied or ignored.

**

In the middle of World War II, a little-known chapter of American history unfolded in Texas. At Fort Bliss, just outside El Paso, 113 Japanese American men were incarcerated under suspicion of being “enemy aliens.” Most of them were Issei—first-generation immigrants from Japan who, by law (due to the Immigration Act of 1924), had been denied the right to become U.S. citizens. Many of these men were long-time residents of Arizona, small business owners, farmers, and community leaders who had built lives and families in the desert Southwest. Their only “crime” was being of Japanese ancestry during a time of fear and hysteria.

The government classified these men as potential threats and sent them to Fort Bliss under the custody of the U.S. Army. Some faced hearings before the Department of Justice’s Alien Enemy Control program, but due process was limited at best. Takeo Frank Tadano, a grocer from Arizona, was among those caught in this dragnet. Despite having no evidence of espionage or disloyalty against him, Tadano was detained, transferred through multiple camps, and eventually sent to the Crystal City, Texas, concentration camp, where he remained incarcerated for the duration of the war. His story, like that of so many others, illustrates how fragile civil liberties and civil rights can become in times of national crisis.

Fast forward to today, and Fort Bliss once again holds people in confinement—this time through ICE detention facilities that house migrants and asylum seekers. The parallels between these two moments in history are striking. Then, as now, people are held behind barbed wire under the weight of suspicion and politics rather than proven wrongdoing.

The lesson from Fort Bliss is not just about remembering the past—it’s about recognizing the warning signs in the present. During WWII, fear of sabotage and disloyalty fueled decisions that devastated Japanese American families, stripping them of homes, businesses, and dignity. Today, rhetoric around immigration and border security risks repeating some of those same mistakes, where human beings are reduced to categories—“illegal,” “enemy,” “other”—instead of being recognized as individuals with rights.

Arizona has a direct connection to this history. Many of the men incarcerated at Fort Bliss were fathers, brothers, and community leaders from towns across the state. Their absence was felt deeply in Japanese American communities in Phoenix, Tucson, and farming towns along the Salt River Valley. When we acknowledge their stories—like that of Frank Takeo Tadano—we are reminded that the costs of civil liberties violations are not abstract. They are borne by real families, neighbors, and communities.

The role of history, then, is to shed light on the present. Fort Bliss stands as both a historic site of injustice and a living reminder of the choices we face today. Will we allow fear to override fairness again? Or will we insist that America lives up to its promise of justice and equality for all?

The stories of the Issei men at Fort Bliss, and of people like Tadano who endured incarceration despite their innocence, challenge us to look critically at current detention practices. History does not repeat itself in identical ways, but it often rhymes. If we fail to remember, we risk hearing the same refrain again, played at the expense of another generation’s civil rights.

**

TABLE 1: Incarceration at Fort Bliss, TX – Comparison between Incarceration of Japanese Americans during WWII and ICE Detention Today

Issue WWII – Japanese American Incarceration at Fort Bliss Today – ICE Detention at Fort Bliss
Who was detained 113 Issei men (first-generation Japanese immigrants), roughly 1-in-5 from Arizona Migrants and asylum seekers, primarily from Latin America
Legal status Many were long-time U.S. residents, some arrested without evidence of disloyalty Many are asylum seekers or migrants with pending legal cases
Due process Arrested under suspicion, often without trial; cases heard by special boards, not regular courts Held while awaiting immigration hearings; often face long delays and limited legal representation
Conditions of confinement Military base barracks, constant surveillance, uncertainty about length of detention Similar conditions of confinement, reports of overcrowding, limited access to healthcare, and mental strain
Public perception Fueled by wartime hysteria, racism, and fear of espionage Polarized views: some see detention as necessary for border control, others view it as a humanitarian crisis
Example case Glendale, AZ, resident Takeo Frank Tadano: arrested, sent to Fort Bliss, then transferred to Crystal City camp for remainder of WWII Individual asylum seekers today may remain detained for months or years, sometimes separated from family
Civil rights implications Demonstrated how fear and prejudice can override constitutional rights Raises ongoing concerns about human rights, due process, and America’s treatment of vulnerable populations
Historical lesson Later recognized as unjust; U.S. government issued an apology and reparations in 1988 Debate continues: will future generations look back at today’s policies with similar regret?


TABLE 2: Issei Incarcerated at Fort Bliss, TX, during WWII

Year of Birth Name Approx.
Age in
1942
AZ Ties
1872 Rihei Egawa 70
1875 Sugizo Fujioka 67
1875 Giichi Aoki 67
1876 Takeshi Tadano 66 AZ
1876 Saroku Chikaraishi 66
1878 Toichi Baishiki 64
1878 Tatsuzo Kai 64
1879 Isekichi Joe Hayashida 63
1879 Saima Yokote 63
1879 Hiroji Hirokawa 63
1880 Naomasa Tanita 62 AZ
1880 Toyoji Abe 62
1880 Morishige Furuya 62
1880 Sekisaburo Hattori 62
1881 Yajiro Hikida 61 AZ
1881 Yasuro Takiguchi 61 AZ
1881 Sancho Kamesaka 61
1881 Masaichi Ota 61
1881 Sanjiro Uyesaka 61
1881 Frank Utaka Kuzuoka 61
1882 Tsunakichi Hamano 60
1882 Yoshimatsu Tom Kishi 60
1882 Mitsuji Charles Furuta 60
1882 Eiji Furukawa 60
1882 Ikutaro Komoto 60
1883 Jitsuma Yoshi Murata 59 AZ
1883 Chiohichi Kosuga 59 AZ
1883 Bunji Iwaya 59
1883 Tokuichi Shindo 59
1883 Ichikuro Kondo 59
1883 Wakazo Hayashi 59
1883 Kikutaro Nakashima 59
1884 Kinjiro Shiraishi 58
1884 Mosaku Hirata 58
1884 Shinkichi Hirose 58
1884 Manki Abe 58
1884 Ayao Frank Tahara 58
1885 Tamanosuke Nomachi 57 AZ
1885 Tamori Shimo 57
1885 Tadaichi Doida 57
1885 Sohei Fujisaka 57
1886 Tsunenori Okabayashi 56 AZ
1886 Yuuki Fujii 56
1886 Kuichi Muramoto 56
1886 Kametaro Inatomi 56
1886 Hidesaku Ito 56
1887 Kiichi Fred Sagawa 55 AZ
1887 Hitsubun Morita 55
1887 Jisanta Ishida 55
1887 Sadakazu Furugochi 55
1887 George Rikiharu Shima 55
1887 Tetsushi Kato 55
1887 Shinkuro Ishida 55
1888 Kojiro Iwahashi 54 AZ
1888 Hitoshi Yamamoto 54 AZ
1888 Torazo Noguchi 54
1888 Masayoshi Ohmura 54
1888 Kamekichi Chakuno 54
1889 Soji Furutani 53
1889 Ichiji Kariyama 53
1890 Sanzo Leslie Kamiyama 52 AZ
1890 Shigeto Amano 52
1890 Ryoichi Okubo 52
1890 Kurata Otsuki 52
1891 Genzaburo Narazaki 51 AZ
1891 Yohei Sakai 51
1891 Masui Sunagawa 51
1891 Junichi Iwakami 51
1892 Shigegi Nomoto 50 AZ
1892 Naokichi George Kobayashi 50 AZ
1892 Samonji Takeda 50
1893 Setsuji Oda 49
1893 Shigeaki Harry Hayashino 49
1894 Kaheiji Yokomizo 48
1894 Shuji Suzuki 48
1895 George Masamitsu Iwaoka 47
1896 Jinjiro Inuzuka 46
1896 Hachiro Harada 46
1897 Ichiji Eto 45
1898 Tokushiro Kawamoto 44
1899 Yoshie Yoshikawa 43 AZ
1899 Tadakatsu Chuichi Sato 43
1899 Susumu Sakamoto 43
1899 Tadasu Iida 43
1900 Soichi Itoh 42
1900 Denkei Gushiken 42
1901 Katsuji Kushida 41
1901 Takahide Arimasa 41
1901 Junzo Ideno 41
1902 Kazuo Frank Okamoto 40 AZ
1902 Kazuo Kimura 40
1902 Uichiriyo Itakura 40
1902 Masaru Kanda 40
1902 Nozomu Paul Otera 40
1902 Hajime John Kajiwara 40
1903 Kazumasa Hayakawa 39
1903 Katsumi Honma 39
1903 Kokichi Alfred Hirotsu 39
1904 Wataru Katow 38 AZ
1904 Yuzo Susagano 38
1905 Seiichi Yasuda 37 AZ
1905 Frank Kuniyoshi Inouye 37
1906 Takashi Kamae 36
1906 Takeo Kitazaki 36
1906 Shingetsu Akahoshi 36
1907 Zenshiro Tachibana 35 AZ
1909 Frank Takeo Tadano 33 AZ
1909 Bunpo Kuwatsuki 33 AZ
1909 Giko Abiko 33
1910 Tomoyuki Yamane 32
1911 Tomonao Iino 31
1913 Isamu Samuel Masumoto 29 AZ
1913 Shozo George Yasukochi 29
Source: https://ireizo.org > Search by Camp > Fort Bliss (TX)


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The post Fort Bliss, TX: What WWII Incarceration Can Teach Us About Civil Liberties and Civil Rights Today appeared first on Japanese American Citizens League - Arizona Chapter.


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