Ina Sugihara

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Born7 September 1919 Edit this on Wikidata
Died16 September 2004 Edit this on Wikidata (aged 85)
Almamater
OccupationActivist, secretary (1941) Edit this on Wikidata
Ina Sugihara
Born7 September 1919 Edit this on Wikidata
Died16 September 2004 Edit this on Wikidata (aged 85)
Alma mater
OccupationActivist, secretary (1941) Edit this on Wikidata
Political partySocialist Party USA Edit this on Wikidata

Ina Sugihara (Japanese: 杉原 イナ, September 7, 1919 – September 16, 2004) was a second-generation Japanese American civil rights activist who co-founded the Congress of Racial Equality's (CORE) New York chapter. She also co-founded the Japanese American Citizens League's (JACL) first multiracial chapter, its New York branch.[1]

Ina Sugihara was born on September 7, 1919 in Las Animas, Colorado. Her parents were William Bonsaku and Takeyo Sugihara, Japanese farmers who had immigrated from Yamanashi in the early 1900s.[2][3] She spent her early childhood in Colorado, but when the Great Depression forced her parents to quit melon farming in the 1930s, Sugihara moved with her family to Long Beach, California, where her parents ran a produce market.[1][2][3]

Sugihara was originally scouted for a scholarship to the University of California, Los Angeles. However, she was rejected because she wanted to be a lawyer, while the interviewer believed that nursing was a "more suitable" career choice for an Asian woman.[2] Sugihara instead attended Long Beach Community College before enrolling at University of California, Berkeley, where her brother James studied. At Berkeley, Sugihara attended the meetings of local organizations Oakland Nisei Democrats and Pacific Coast Labor School.[1] However, she struggled with the school's employment office, which encouraged her to become a maid, while she found jobs for herself as a secretary and writer.[2] After graduation, Sugihara became a secretary for attorney Ernest Besig, director of the Northern California branch of the American Civil Liberties Union.[1]

Japanese American internment

In February 1942, following Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor and subsequent U.S. declaration of war against Japan, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066. The order became grounds for the removal of over 120,000 Japanese Americans from the West Coast to internment camps further inland.[4]

Sugihara received help from Besig and social worker Ruth Kingman to voluntarily migrate to New York, where she attended business school and worked as a secretary for John Thomas of the American Baptist Home Mission Society. This allowed her to avoid internment in the camps. After working for Thomas, Sugihara undertook roles in the publicity offices of the Protestant Welfare Council's Human Relations division and the Federal Council of Churches. During this time, she wrote for the Religious News Service.[1]

Sugihara supported the assimilation of Nisei into American society after the war.[1] In a 1945 article for the Commonweal, she argued that Japanese Americans should not return to the West Coast following internment but should instead disperse across the country to avoid further discrimination.[5]

Political activism

Personal life

References

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