JUNE 21, 2019
Photograph Source: U.S. Customs and
Border Protection – Public Domain
concentration camp (noun): a place in which large numbers of
people, especially political prisoners or members of persecuted minorities, are
deliberately imprisoned in a relatively small area with inadequate facilities,
sometimes to provide forced labor or to await mass execution.
– Oxford English Dictionary
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY)
has ignited a firestorm of criticism, from both the left and the right as well as the mainstream
media, for calling US
immigrant detention centers “concentration camps.” To her credit, Ocasio-Cortez
has refused to back down, citing academic
experts and blasting the Trump administration for forcibly holding
undocumented migrants “where they are brutalized with dehumanizing conditions
and dying.” She also cited history. “The US ran concentration camps before,
when we rounded up Japanese people during World War II,” she tweeted. “It is such a shameful history that we largely
ignore it. These camps occur throughout history.” Indeed they do. What follows
is an overview of US civilian concentration camps through the centuries.
Prisoner-of-war camps, as horrific as they have been, have been excluded due to
their legal status under the Geneva Conventions, and for brevity’s sake.
Trail of Tears
Half a century before President
Andrew Jackson signed the Indian Removal Act into law in 1830, a young Virginia
governor named Thomas Jefferson embraced genocide and ethnic cleansing as
solutions to what would later be called the “Indian problem.” In 1780
Jefferson wrote that “if we are to wage a campaign against these
Indians, the end proposed should be their extermination, or their removal
beyond the lakes of the Illinois River.” However, it wasn’t until
Jackson that “emigration depots” were introduced as an integral part of official
US Indian removal policy. Tens of thousands of Cherokee, Muscogee, Seminole,
Chickasaw, Choctaw, Ponca, Winnebago and other indigenous peoples were forced
from their homes at gunpoint and marched to prison camps in Alabama and
Tennessee. Overcrowding and a lack of sanitation led to outbreaks of measles,
cholera, whooping cough, dysentery and typhus, while insufficient food and
water, along with exposure to the elements, caused tremendous death and
suffering.
Thousands of men, women and children
died of cold, hunger and illness in camps and during death marches, including
the infamous Trail of Tears, of hundreds and sometimes even a thousand miles
(1,600 km). This genocidal relocation was pursued, Jackson explained, as the
“benevolent policy” of the US government, and because Native Americans “have
neither the intelligence, the industry, the moral habits nor the desire of
improvement” required to live in peace and freedom. “Established in the midst
of a… superior race, and without appreciating the causes of their inferiority…
they must necessarily yield to the force of circumstances and long disappear,”
the man who Donald Trump has called his favorite president said in his 1833 State of
the Union address.
The Long Walk
Decades later, when the Sioux and
other indigenous people resisted white invasion and theft of their lands,
Minnesota governor Alexander Ramsey responded with yet another call for
genocide and ethnic cleansing. “The Sioux Indians of Minnesota must be
exterminated or driven forever beyond the borders of the state,” he declared in 1862, offering a bounty of $200 — over
$5,000 in today’s money — for the scalp of each fleeing or resisting
Indian. Around 1,700 Dakota women, children and elderly were force-marched into
a concentration camp built on a sacred spiritual site. Many didn’t make it
there. According to Mendota Dakota Tribal Chair Jim Anderson,
“during that march a lot of our relatives died. They were killed by settlers;
when they went through the small towns, babies were taken out of mothers arms
and killed and women… were shot or bayoneted.” Those who survived faced winter
storms, diseases and hunger. Many did not make it through the winter.
Two years later, Civil War general
and notorious
Indian killer James
Henry Carleton forced 10,000 Navajo people to march 300 miles (480 km) in the
dead of winter from their homeland in the Four Corners region to a
concentration camp at Fort Sumner, New Mexico. This followed a scorched earth
campaign in which famed frontiersman Kit Carson tried to starve the life out of
the Navajo, hundreds of whom died or were enslaved by white settlers and rival
tribes during what became known as The Long Walk. Those who survived the death march to Fort Sumner
faced starvation, lack of wood for heating and cooking during the bitterly cold
winters and ravaging diseases. Daily depredations included a ban on prayers,
spiritual ceremonies and songs. It is estimated that some 1,500 people died while interned at Fort Sumner, many of them
infants and children.
Contraband
At about the same time, the Union
Army was re-capturing freed slaves throughout the South and pressing them into
hard labor in disease-ridden “contraband camps,” as escaped and freed slaves
were considered captured enemy property. “There is much sickness, suffering and
destitution,” wrote James E. Yeatman of the Western Sanitary Commission
after visiting one such camp near Natchez, Mississippi in 1863. “There was not
one house that I visited where death had not entered… Seventy-five had died in
a single day… some had returned to their masters on account of their
suffering.” At one camp in Young’s Point, Louisiana, Yeatman reported
“frightful sickness and death,” with 30-50 people dying each day from disease
and starvation. One camp near Natchez, Mississippi held as many as 4,000 black
refugees in the summer of 1863; by fall 2,000 had already perished, most of
them children infected with smallpox and measles.
‘Benevolent Assimilation’ in the
‘Suburbs of Hell’
With indigenous peoples no longer
standing in the way of its “manifest destiny,” the US set its sights on
becoming a first-rate imperial power through overseas conquest and expansion.
After overthrowing Hawaii’s monarchy and annexing its islands, war was waged
against Spain, resulting in the capture of the first US colonies in Cuba,
Puerto Rico, Guam and the Philippines. When Filipinos resisted, US commanders
responded with tremendous cruelty. Echoing Andrew Jackson, President William
McKinley called this the “benevolent assimilation” of the Philippines into the
burgeoning US empire.
As General “Hell-Roaring” Jake Smith
ordered his troops to “kill everyone
over 10” in Samar,
future president William Howard Taft, the US colonial administrator of the
archipelago, instituted a “pacification” campaign that combined the
counterinsurgency tactics of torture and summary execution with deportation and
imprisonment in concentration camps, or reconcentrados, that one
commandant referred to as the “suburbs of
hell.” General J.
Franklin Bell, looking forward to his new post as warden of the notorious
Batangas reconcentrado, declared that “all consideration and regard for
the inhabitants of this place cease from the day I become commander.”
He meant it. In December 1901 Bell
gave the people of Batangas two weeks to leave their homes and report to the
camp; everything they left behind — their homes, farms, livestock, food
stores and tools — was stolen or destroyed by US troops. People who
refused to report to the camp were shot, as were random prisoners whenever
insurgents killed an American. Conditions were beyond horrific in many reconcentrados.
Hunger, disease and torture, which included waterboarding, were rampant. In
some camps, as many as 20 percent of internees died. In order to save food,
1,300 Batangas prisoners were forced to dig mass graves before being gunned
down 20 at a time and buried in them. “To keep them prisoners would necessitate
the placing of [US] soldiers on short rations,” one soldier explained. “There was nothing to do but kill them.”
Concentration Camps for US Citizens
During both world wars, thousands of
German nationals, German-Americans and Germans from Latin American nations were
imprisoned in concentration camps across the United States. However, their race
and relatively high level of assimilation saved most German-Americans from
internment, and conditions were much better than they had been in previous US
camps. Japanese-Americans weren’t so lucky. After the attack on Pearl Harbor,
President Franklin D. Roosevelt issued Executive
Order 9066, under
which all people of Japanese ancestry living on the West Coast were rounded up
and imprisoned in dozens of civilian assembly centers (where they were often
forced to sleep in crowded, manure-covered horse stables), relocation centers,
military bases, and “citizen isolation centers” — harsh desert prison
camps where “problem inmates,” including those who refused to pledge
allegiance to the United States, were jailed. Conditions varied by camp, but
overcrowding, lack of indoor plumbing, fuel shortages and food rationing were
common. Many of the camps were located in remote, scorpion- and snake-infested
deserts.
Incredibly, thousands of
Japanese-Americans volunteered to fight for the country that was imprisoning
them for nothing more than their ethnicity. These were some of the most highly-decorated US troops in the war. Meanwhile, the Supreme
Court sided with the government in three cases brought by Japanese-Americans challenging the
constitutionality of their detention, and an American public caught in the grip
of racist “yellow peril” hysteria acquiesced to the blatantly
unconstitutional mass imprisonment. Internment would last the duration of the
war, sometimes longer, with many detainees discovering their homes, businesses
and property were stolen or destroyed when they were finally released.
President Ronald Reagan would formally apologize and sign off on $20,000
reparation payments to former internees in 1988.
In addition to Japanese and some
Germans, a smaller number of Italians and Italian-Americans were also
imprisoned during World War II. So were the indigenous Aleuts of Alaska, who
were forcibly evacuated before their villages were burned to the ground
to prevent any invading Japanese forces from using them. Nearly 900 Aleuts were
imprisoned in abandoned factories and other derelict facilities without
plumbing, electricity or toilets; decent food, potable water and warm winter
clothing were in short supply. Nearly 10 percent of the detainees died in the
camps. Others were
enslaved and forced to
hunt fur seals.
During the early years of the Cold
War, Congress passed the Subversive
Activities Control Act of 1950 over President Harry Truman’s veto, which led to
the construction of six concentration camps that were meant to hold communists,
peace activists, civil rights leaders and others deemed a threat in the event
the government declared a state of emergency. The act was upheld by the Supreme
Court during the McCarthy/Red Scare years but in the 1960s the high court
ruled that provisions requiring communists to register with the
government and banning them from obtaining passports or government employment
were unconstitutional. The camps, which were never used, were closed by the end
of the decade.
From Japan to Vietnam
In a little-known atrocity, at least
3,000 Okinawans died from malaria and other diseases in camps set up by US
troops after they conquered the Japanese islands during fierce fighting in
1945. During and after the war, Okinawans’ land and homes were seized at
gunpoint and their houses and farms were bulldozed or burned to the ground to
make way for dozens of US military bases. Some 300,000 civilians were forced
into these camps; survivor Kenichiro Miyazato later recalled how “too many people died, so the bodies had to
be buried in a single mass grave.”
For sheer scale, no US concentration
camp regime could match the Strategic Hamlet Program. In 1961 President John F. Kennedy approved the
forcible relocation, often at gunpoint, of 8.5 million South Vietnamese
peasants into over 7,000 fortified camps surrounded by barbed wire, minefields
and armed guards. This was done to starve the growing Viet Cong insurgency of
food, shelter and new recruits. However, few hearts and minds were won and many
were indeed lost as US and South Vietnamese troops burned people’s homes before
their very eyes before marching them away from their land, and with it their
deepest spiritual bonds with their revered ancestors.
War on Terrorists and Migrants
Although prisoner of war camps are
not included in this survey of US concentration camps, the open-ended global
war against terrorism started by the George W. Bush administration after the
September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States has seen a blurring of lines
between combatant and civilian detention. According to Col. Lawrence Wilkerson, the former chief of
staff for Bush-era secretary of state Colin Powell, most of the men and boys
held at the Guantánamo Bay military prison were innocent but held for political
reasons or in an attempt to glean a “mosaic” of intelligence. Innocent
civilians were also held in military prisons, some of them secret, in Iraq,
Afghanistan and elsewhere. Many detainees were tortured and died in US custody. Some of these men have been held
without charge or trial for as many as 17 years, while some deemed too innocent
to charge remain imprisoned at GITMO despite being cleared for release for many years.
Now it’s the migrants’ turn. And
despite the howling protestations of those who commit or justify the crime of
tearing infants and children from their parents’ arms and imprisoning them in
freezing cages that Trump officials have euphemistically compared to “summer camp,” there is no doubt that concentration camps are
in operation on US soil once again. The Trump administration’s attempt to
portray child imprisonment as something much happier instantly recalls World
War II propaganda
films showing
content Japanese-Americans benefiting from life behind barbed wire. Actor
George Takei, who was interned with his family for the duration of the war, was
anything but content. “I know what concentration camps are,” he tweeted amid the current controversy. “I was inside two
of them. In America. And yes, we are operating such camps again.”
Takei noted one big difference
between then and now: “At least during the internment of Japanese-Americans, I
and other children were not stripped from our parents,” he wrote, adding that “‘at least during the internment’ are
words I thought I’d never utter.”
More articles by:BRETT WILKINS
Brett Wilkins is editor-at-large for US news at Digital
Journal. Based in San Francisco, his work covers issues of social justice,
human rights and war and peace.
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