Title:
Reverend Yamazaki Was Beaten in Camp Jerome
Creator/Contributor:
Sugimoto, Henry
Date:
1943
Identifier:
92.97.6
Format:
painting
oil on canvas
Denson, Ark.
Inscription:
Signed in medium, bottom left corner: H. Sugimoto, Jerome 1942. Bottom left: "When I received the blow I felt/as my own child
hitting me/for they were of my own kind/each blow reminded me of God's will/who taught me of our own lack of suffering."
Description:
Stretched and framed. Gold frame, on stretcher. To the right, one man, dressed in tan pants, blue shirt, dark blue socks and
grey shoes, holds another man, Reverend John Yamasaki, from behind, locking his arms under the Reverend's arms about the shoulders
and behind the neck, while another man, on the left, in tan shirt, dark blue pants, striped socks and brown shoes, kicks and
punches Yamazaki. He holds a stick in his left hand. The Reverend, dressed in black with white collar and dark brown shoes,
has blood on his face and down the front of this clothes, spattering the ground. His jacket is torn. His black hat and eyeglasses
lie on the ground to his right. A book with the words "Holy Bible" lies near his feet in the lower right foreground. Above
it, there are five lines of Japanese writing. Five lines of poetry in English appears at the bottom foreground (see inscription
field). A mess hall and a barracks are in the background.
Historical Note:
In 1943 the government mandated the registration of all camp inmates through a questionnaire. The registration served two
purposes: to identify those "loyal" to the United States, and to recruit male nisei for service in the military. Some questioned
how the government could ask nisei to fight, while denying their civil rights. In addition, Issei, legally barred from becoming
naturalized United States citizens, were asked to foreswear allegiance to Japan. Tension mounted as the community wrestled
with the question of what constitutes loyalty, At Jerome, this erupted in an attack on Reverend John Yamazaki who translated
government documents into Japanese for the non-English speaking population. In the eyes of some, he appeared to be colluding
with the government. Sugimoto wrote, "While I did not witness this beating, I read about it in the [camp] newspaper...which
also printed the waka [poem] that Reverend Yamazaki composed as a response to the beating. I began to envision the beating
as the subject of a documentary painting. When I moved from camp to New York City...I added [the poem to an] empty part of
the canvas."
Subject:
Men
Bible
Concentration Camps, Jerome
Jerome Relocation Center (Denson, Ark.)
Arkansas
Violence
Assault and battery
Clergy
Blood
Eyeglasses
Japanese Americans
Poetry
Christianity
Loyalty oaths
United States