SHIOMICHI, JOE A (1920-1944)



 Relocated' idealist lived — and died — devoutly ‘pro-American'
July 05, 2004
By VANESSA DE LA TORRE, Staff Writer
     Yoko Thomas never knew her father.
     When she was born, he was dead, and since it confused her as a 5-year-old why no daddy lived in the house, Yoko sidled up to her mother one day and asked, as little kids do, "How come?"
     Miye had not prepared for this moment.
     "She became hysterical and started sobbing," remembered Yoko.

Pfc. Joe Shiomichi

     There was no talk of freedom, no mention of sacrifice, or even of her father, Pfc. Joe Shiomichi (Poston 6-5-D) of Brawley. Just fury and a lifetime of silence on the issue.
     Yoko, now 59, was so disturbed by her mother's reaction that she suppressed her curiosity for the next half century. The life of Joe Shiomichi, however, could not easily be ignored.
     Joe was the youngest of three kids, a Boy Scout while at Westmorland Grammar School, then a top shot-putter at Brawley Union High School. After graduating as salutatorian in 1938, Joe left the family farm for the University of California, Berkeley. But history would take its course.
     On Dec. 7, 1941, when the Japanese bombed American ships at Pearl Harbor, Joe's older brother, Tokio, was delivering 12 tons of pears from Chico to Los Angeles when he heard the news on his truck radio. Immediately he thought it was a joke. Didn't Orson Welles fool a lot of folks with "War of the Worlds" not too long ago?
     Tok went to a football game after dropping off the pears. It was at halftime, however, that he realized the seriousness of the situation when an announcer ordered all military personnel to report to their posts.
     The next morning Tok signed up for the Army but was rejected by the draft board. Military officials classified him as a 4-C enemy alien.
     A day of infamy would pave the way for another.
     On Feb. 19, 1942, about two months after the United States entered World War II, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066 that created 10 internment camps for 120,000 Americans of Japanese ancestry as a "protection against espionage and against sabotage to national defense material."
     Joe Shiomichi had just graduated from UC Berkeley, where he was president of the Japanese Students Club and a member of Phi Epsilon Chi fraternity, when he was forced to "relocate" with his family to Poston, Arizona. The Shiomichis were driven at gunpoint from their melon farm in Brawley.
     Most descendants of the two other Axis powers, Germany and Italy, were left untouched.
     Bitterness, however, was a road that Joe refused to stumble across.
     After 10 months at Poston Relocation Camp, Joe Shiomichi kept his patriotism much like his brother Tok, who became one of the first Japanese Americans to volunteer for the war once President Roosevelt allowed it. Joe wanted to sign up soon after, but their mother begged him not to — one son, she said, was enough.
     But in a letter dated March 11, 1943, Joe revealed to his college roommate and best friend since third grade, Eddie Tokeshi, his trouble sticking to that fear-driven order. At the time he began his courtship with Miye Kojaku, another Berkeley student at the camp, adding to the "thoughts constantly in a turmoil" in his head.
     A decision was at hand.
     "I've become more and more convinced that we must take a firm stand now in asserting our beliefs in regards to being Americans. We may have just causes for some of our grievances but I certainly don't feel that those grievances should be kept so long and harbored within us to the point of distorting our views for the future. …
     "Because there have been a few uprisings and a few outbursts of pro-Axis feelings, I've gone the other extreme and have continually asserted that I am pro-American," Joe wrote. "By volunteering for the Army, I feel that the Niseis are building up something concrete with which to fight discrimination after the war is over."
     Joe Shiomichi, known as the gentle chemistry teacher at Poston camp 1, also had little patience for the Niseis, or second-generation Japanese Americans, who refused allegiance to the United States — they "are either damned fools or want to be deported to Japan," he told Eddie.
     But many of his younger students, such as Lawrence Yatsu (Poston 35-14-C) , felt the oppression of internment. It was undeniable. They had no textbooks, lab materials or classrooms. So the teacher gave the students a few words to chew over.
     As Yatsu recalled to The Times-Picayune in 2000, Joe Shiomichi took him for a walk one day and said, "Larry, all this is a temporary aberration. We don't belong in a camp. But don't be bitter. Don't let this get you down.
     "America is the best country in the world. There will be flukes and aberrations along the  way. But get past it. This is temporary. America is the greatest country — don't forget that."
     Yoko Thomas, in discovering her father for the first time, read his words and grieved for her mother, whose sentiments were opposite of his.
     The two married April 16, 1943, in Poston, and after a few months Joe Shiomichi signed up for the Army to join his brother in Europe. In seeking out his legacy, Thomas also attended the 60th reunion of the 442nd Regimental Combat Team last April in Honolulu.
     "By a fluke," Thomas said, she sat at the table of Daniel Yamashita, co-author of "And Then There Were Eight," the story of the most decorated military unit in U.S. history: The all-volunteer, all-Japanese American 442nd RCT. Though hundreds were killed during the crucial battles to save the "Lost Battalion" (141st) from German annihilation, one of the most painful moments of the war, Yamashita told her, was before they entered combat.
     Of all the memories that had since faded, Yamashita still remembered, clearly, the stark image of a pregnant woman running along the train tracks, calling to her husband, Joe, as the men were shipped off to Camp Shelby, Mississipppi, for basic training.
     And then began the times that tried these men's souls.
     Thomas Paine, months before July 4, 1776, stood before a depleted army, battered by the December cold and British forces, and was ordered by Gen. George Washington to deliver this message: "The summer soldier and sunshine patriots will, in this crisis, shrink from the service of their country, but he that stands it now deserves the love and thanks of man and woman. Tyranny, like hell, is not easily conquered; yet we have this consolation with us, that the harder the conflict, the more glorious the triumph."
     A sniper's bullet caught Pfc. Joe Shiomichi three months into his combat duties in the Rome-Arno Campaign in Italy. The Graves Registration Report No. 113, dated July 19, 1944, was received by Miye Shiomichi a month before she gave birth to daughter Yoko.     
     Two days earlier, Graves Registration Report No. 112 had been filled out for Pfc. Shaw Kojaku, Miye's closest brother.
     Then came Aug. 31, the day Joe would have turned 24, when his brother Tok stepped on a land mine that blew off his right leg. Last July he died at age 86.
     Heaven has a price for all its goods, Thomas Paine had said, "and it would be strange indeed if so celestial an article as freedom should not be highly rated."
     After World War II ended, veterans of the 442nd Regimental Combat Team returned home to storefronts and restaurants that posted signs that read, "No Japs wanted."
     But throughout those times, Larry Yatsu, the wary chemistry student, remembered the words his teacher had said to him while walking along the dusty trails of Poston: "This is a temporary aberration … America is the greatest country."
     Yatsu would consider the man his lifelong mentor.
     "Here's Joe Shiomichi, torn away from his home, pilloried and put down by his neighbors. They stuck him and his family in a concentration camp, and they stripped him of everything. And he still didn't lose faith. He still believed. I think he belongs up there with the greatest of patriots."
     Pfc. Joe Shiomichi, the soft-spoken idealist, was posthumously awarded the Purple Heart, the Combat Infantryman's Badge and the Bronze Star. He is buried next to his brother-in-law, Pfc. Shaw Kojaku, at the Nisei Veterans Memorial at Evergreen Cemetery in Los Angeles.
     A yard away lies Miye.
     Yoko Thomas, married with a grown daughter of her own, now has a compilation of letters and remembrances that she has bound into a booklet called, "A Guy Named Joe." The title is taken from a letter written by Arthur L. Harris, Superintendent of Education at Poston, after he received word of her father's death.
     Joe fought to end "that dark era when man let greed, passion and hate rule his thought and his behavior," Harris wrote. "But never has this war hit so close to home as it did through that bit of news …
     "In June I received a letter from him, and his closing phrase was, ‘Take care of the students back there and we'll try to do our best up here.' Six weeks later Joe gave his life for his country, for the people, — yes, for all of us here in Poston.
     "He had ‘done his best.'"

Source: http://articles.ivpressonline.com/2004-07-05/internment-camps_24191553