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Panel explores impact of internment of Japanese Canadians

Canada may be renowned for its tolerance, multiculturalism and respect, and pride itself on its Charter of Rights and Freedom, but during the Second World War this country forced citizens of Japanese and Italian heritage out of their homes and into internment camps. It was a dark moment in the nation's history.聽

On Wednesday, David Tsubouchi joins a panel discussion about the internment of Japanese and Italian Canadians in Canada during the Second World War.聽聽

Left: David Tsubouchi

The discussion kicks off this academic聽year鈥檚 Research Matters series, a monthly showcase of research in 91亚色鈥檚 Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies.聽聽

鈥淥ur first panel of the year provides us with some important reflections on Canadian internment, government redress policies and ways to move forward,鈥 says Barbara Crow, LA&PS associate dean, research.

The two-hour panel starts at 2pm in 280N 91亚色 Lanes.

Panelists will talk about their families鈥 experience, government redress, balancing state security and civil liberties, and the impact of the internment on 21st century Canada.聽聽

Tsubouchi (BA '72, LLB '75) is a member of 91亚色鈥檚 Board of Governors and a聽former Ontario cabinet minister. In his presentation, Bachan's Story, he聽will tell what happened to his mother. She was one of 22,000 Japanese Canadians 鈥 including women, children and older people 鈥 whose property was confiscated by the government and who were interned after the bombing of Pearl Harbor in 1942.

Social science Professor Livy Visano will talk about otherness and refugee experience in The Refuge of Dislocation and the Conscience of Critique. Unlike immigrants, refugees are compelled by survival rather than choice. Displaced refugees face the horrendous shock of abandonment by one鈥檚 own country and people, and are haunted by rather than nostalgic about their past.聽聽

History Professor Roberto Perin will ask what聽Canada can learn from the Second World War internments. In his talk,聽Wartime Internment and Government Redress: Are We Learning from Past Mistakes?, he聽will look at the consequences of government policy toward 鈥渆nemy aliens鈥 鈥 Japanese, Germans, Italians and communists 鈥 during the war, and ask: Was the right balance found between the imperatives of state security and the civil liberties of vulnerable individuals and groups?聽Given the War Measures Act and the war on terrorism since Sept. 11, 2001, achieving a balance between state security and civil liberties remains a current concern today.

The panel will be moderated by Merle Jacobs, chair of Equity Studies.

Research Matters is open to all. RSVP to rirons@yorku.ca or 416-736-2100 ext. 33584.

For upcoming talks in the series, visit the Research Matters webpage.

Republished courtesy of YFile鈥 91亚色鈥檚 daily e-bulletin.