The following is a chronology of events regarding the treatment of
enemy aliens and the reaction in the Italian American community:
1941 to 1943 • On December 11, 1941,
Nazi Germany and
Fascist Italy declared war on the United States. The United States reciprocated and entered World War II. Beginning on the very night of the December 7, 1941
Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor yet before the US officially declared war against Italy, the
Federal Bureau of Investigation arrested a handful of Italians. By December 10, 1941, nearly all the Italians that FBI Director
J. Edgar Hoover planned on arresting—about 147 men—were already in custody. By June 1942, the FBI had arrested a total of 1,521 Italian aliens. About 250 individuals were interned for up to two years in the
WRA military camps in Montana, Oklahoma, Tennessee, and Texas, in some cases co-located with interned Japanese Americans. The government targeted Italian journalists, language teachers, and men active in an Italian veterans group. They were subject to curfew and movement restrictions. Later, they were forced to move out of certain areas. These restrictions were enforced more in the San Francisco area than in Los Angeles and also were much more enforced on the West Coast than on the East Coast: on the East Coast, there were more Italians, thus making up a much higher percentage of the population (especially in major urban centers). • On January 11, 1942,
The New York Times reported that "Representatives of 200,000 Italian American trade unionists appealed to President Roosevelt yesterday to 'remove the intolerable stigma of being branded as enemy aliens' from Italian and German nationals who had formally declared their intentions of becoming American citizens by taking out first papers before America's entry into the war." • A few weeks later, the same newspaper reported that "Thousands of enemy aliens living in areas adjacent to shipyards, docks, power plants, and defense factories prepared today to find new homes as Attorney General Biddle added sixty-nine more districts in California to the earlier list of West Coast sections barred to Japanese, Italian, and German nationals." These were areas defined as within the Exclusion Zone. Japanese Americans were much more affected by this ruling than were German Americans and Italian Americans. The WRA established a Exclusion Zone on the West Coast that adversely affected Italian Americans who had been working as longshoremen and fishermen, causing many to lose their livelihoods. Those in California were most severely affected. Perhaps because the Italians were more numerous and politically strong on the East Coast, there was never such an Exclusion Zone delineated. Italian Americans in the East did not suffer the same restrictions. • Later in February, the
Italian American Labor Council, founded by
Luigi Antonini, met in New York and voiced "opposition to any blanket law for aliens that does not differentiate between those who are subversive and those who are loyal to America." By September 23, 1942, the Justice Department claimed "…From the time of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor until 1 September, 6,800 enemy aliens were apprehended in the United States and half of them have either been paroled or released." Their report dealt with enemy aliens apprehended under the Alien and Sedition Act, who were primarily German nationals. • On
Columbus Day 1942,
Francis Biddle announced the restrictions were lifted against Italian nationals living as long-term residents in the United States stating that, "beginning October 19, a week from today, Italian aliens will no longer be classed as 'alien enemies.'" The plan was approved by President Roosevelt and many restrictions were lifted. Members of the Italian community could now travel freely again, own cameras and firearms, and were not required to carry ID cards. In addition a plan was announced to offer citizenship to 200,000 elderly Italians living in the United States who had been unable to acquire citizenship due to a literacy requirement. Those men in WRA camps were interned for nearly another year, until after Italy's surrender. • Italy's surrender to the Allies on September 8, 1943, resulted in the release of most of the Italian American internees by year's end. Some had been paroled months after "exoneration" by a second hearing board appealed for by their families. Most of the men had spent nearly two years as prisoners, being moved from camp to camp every three to four months. ==Attorney General's 2001 Report on Wartime Restrictions==