After being uprooted from their homes and communities, the incarcerated people had to endure primitive, sub-standard conditions Each camp was intended to be self-sufficient, and Manzanar was no exception. beauty salons and barber shops, shoe repair, libraries, and more.
Food The barracks at Manzanar had no cooking areas, and all meals were served at block mess halls. Food at Manzanar was based on military requirements. Meals usually consisted of hot rice and vegetables, since meat was scarce due to
rationing. The food varied in quality, but was mostly substandard compared to the food the internees ate prior to incarceration.
Togo Tanaka described how people "got sick from eating ill-prepared food." Frank Kikuchi, an internee at Manzanar, stated that some of the newspapers lied to the American public by telling them that the "Japs [in the camps] are getting steaks, chops, eggs, or eating high off the hog." Jobs included clothing and furniture manufacturing, farming and tending orchards, military manufacturing such as camouflage netting and experimental rubber, teaching, civil service jobs such as police, fire fighters, and nursing, and general service jobs operating stores, beauty parlors, and a bank. Shortly after being interned,
Togo Tanaka and Joe Masaoka were hired by anthropologist
Robert Redfield as documentary historians for the camp. It was published with both Japanese and English sections, with the Japanese section added on July 14, 1942. The paper was originally published as four pages biweekly which were hand-typed and
mimeographed. Beginning on July 22, 1942,
Chiye Mori, poet and journalist, was listed as an editor. Despite the name of the newspaper, the
War Relocation Authority (WRA) controlled the content of the paper and used it to publish announcements from the camp administration, news from other camps, orders, rules and guidelines from the WRA, and upcoming camp events, in addition to the regular content. Some content was not allowed to be published. The standard content included articles about life in the camps, sports scores and coverage, coverage of the war, and so on.
Lou Frizzell served as the musical director, and under his mentorship
Mary Nomura became known as the "songbird of Manzanar" for her performances at dances and other camp events. Theatre performances—for internees, camp administration and WRA staff, and even for some members of the surrounding communities—included original productions by internees as well as traditional Japanese works of
kabuki and
noh. Teams were divided into leagues, regular seasons were established, and championship games held, drawing huge crowds of spectators. Teams included both amateur and semi-professional players. The most serious incident occurred at Manzanar on December 5–6, 1942 (with some of the actions on both sides carrying over into the following days), Some of the tension that precipitated the riot was related to work availability and the pay of those jobs, with
Nisei and members of the
Japanese American Citizens League (JACL) getting preferential treatment. After several months of tension between those who supported the JACL and a group of
Kibei (Japanese Americans educated in Japan), rumors spread that sugar and meat shortages were the result of black marketing by camp administrators. To make matters worse, JACL leader Fred Tayama was beaten by six masked men on the evening of December 5. Harry Ueno, the leader of the Kitchen Workers Union, and two others suspected of involvement, were arrested. The other two suspects were questioned and released, but Ueno was removed from Manzanar. Between two and four thousand people gathered at the meeting where they listened to speeches and chose five people to present their grievances to the camp director. The crowd decided to follow the five representatives, which caused the camp director to tell the military police to muster in order to be available to control the crowd. The five representatives demanded that Ueno be released, but the camp director did not immediately agree. At that moment, the military police fired into the crowd, killing a 17-year-old boy instantly. The training record of the 100th Battalion at Camp McCoy WI from June to December 1942 convinced the War Department to authorize the formation of the 442nd Regimental Combat Team (RCT) on February 1, 1943. On August 21, 1943, the 100th Battalion was deployed to Oran in North Africa. This unit became the War Department's test on whether JA soldiers could be trusted in combat when it landed in Italy in September 1943 as part of the 34th Infantry Division. The unparalleled bravery of the 100th Battalion in the first weeks of combat forever answered this question of trust, paving the way for the 442nd RCT to join them in June 1944. Because of the 100th Battalion's sterling training record and the Varsity Victory Volunteers, a group of University of Hawaii ROTC students who received positive publicity for their volunteer civilian labor for the U.S. Army, along with many organizations and leaders in Hawaii and on the mainland lobbying the government to allow Japanese Americans to serve in the armed forces, President Roosevelt authorized the formation of the 442nd Regimental Combat Team (RCT) on February 1, 1943. When the announcement about the new unit was made, 10,000 young men in Hawaii signed up from which 2,686 were selected, and along with 1,182 from the mainland, they were sent to Camp Shelby in Mississippi for basic training in April 1943. Along with the cadre of those already in the Army, roughly 2/3 of the 442nd RCT were from Hawaii and 1/3 from the mainland. Of the nearly 160,000 people of Japanese descent living in Hawaii in 1940, fewer than 2,000 were incarcerated compared to the mass incarceration of those on the West Coast; thus, less than 2% of the soldiers from the islands had families in the camps. == Closure ==