Last weekend marked the 82nd anniversary of the signing of Executive Order 9066, which authorized the forced removal and incarceration of more than 125,000 Japanese Americans during World War II. Here in Seattle, we observed this year’s Day of Remembrance with a powerful two-part action led by our friends at Tsuru for Solidarity and La Resistencia: The day began with a ceremony of remembrance at the Washington State Fairgrounds — the site of the Puyallup Assembly Center in 1942 — before moving on to a rally outside the Northwest Detention Center in Tacoma, where immigrants and refugees have been staging hunger strikes to call attention to the abysmal and inhumane conditions inside this contemporary concentration camp.
At both sites, we heard powerful testimonies from incarceration survivors past and present, and calls to action to stand with those held inside the Northwest Detention Center today and #ShutDownNWDC for good. This day of remembrance and resistance was part of a week of action organized by Tsuru for Solidarity, during which activists also blocked entry to the federal building in downtown Seattle in order to protest proposed funding for immigrant detention, and marched to the King County Airport to deliver a letter to ICE contractor Signature Aviation demanding an end to the deportation flights serving NWDC. As Tsuru for Solidarity leaders Mike Ishii and Stan Shikuma wrote in The Seattle Times, “It is not enough to commemorate a grave past injustice. We must act together to stop the current one.”
Check out some powerful images from this 2024 Day of Remembrance captured by community photographer and Minidoka survivor Eugene Tagawa — and be sure to follow Tsuru for Solidarity for more ways to take action!