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KIYO SATO by Connie Goldsmith

KIYO SATO

From a WWII Japanese Internment Camp to a Life of Service

by Connie Goldsmith with Kiyo Sato

Pub Date: Sept. 1st, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-5415-5901-1
Publisher: Twenty-First Century/Lerner

Illuminates the story of a Japanese American activist’s experiences with internment and her perseverance in rebuilding her life.

In 1941, Sato’s family was living near Sacramento, California, on her family’s small but successful farm. Seven of her younger siblings were in school, another was in the U.S. Army, and Sato herself had just entered college. A year later, everything had changed: In February 1942, the U.S. government forced anyone with one-sixteenth or more Japanese ancestry into incarceration camps. In a straightforward and affecting narrative, the authors take readers through a personal journey well embedded in its historical context. The Satos’ experience is recounted alongside the dominant sentiments and political policies of the times. Sidebars further elucidate events, enhanced by photographs and archival documents. One such inset explains the contracting of photographers to paint internment in a positive light. Another examines the euphemistic language used to influence public perceptions of this suspension of civil rights. After the war, Sato pursued a career in nursing in the U.S. Air Force and in public health. A Korean War veteran and president of the Sacramento branch of the Japanese American Citizens League, she has been active as a public speaker, making school visits to educate youth about internment and advocating for human rights. This timely and important story puts a human face on a shameful chapter in American history.

A moving, insightful portrait.

(foreword, author’s note, family tree, timeline, glossary, source notes, bibliography, further information, index, photo credits) (Biography. 12-16)