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WHEREAS, we are a nation of
immigrants, made up of diverse people; and
WHEREAS, sixty-four years ago,
President Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066; and
WHEREAS, during World War II,
120,000 civilians of Japanese descent, two thirds of whom were American
citizens, were incarcerated in internment camps; and
WHEREAS, almost 10,000 of the
total 120,000 civilians of Japanese descent were incarcerated in an internment
camp called Minidoka or “Hunt”, in Jerome County, Idaho; and
WHEREAS, the former Minidoka site
is now Minidoka Internment National Monument; and
WHEREAS, almost 1,000 Japanese
American men from the Minidoka internment camp fought in the United States Army;
and
WHEREAS, Minidoka had the highest
enlistment rate and highest casualty rate of all ten major internment camps in
the United States; and
WHEREAS, volunteers from Minidoka
were part of the units, known as the 442nd Regimental Combat Team and 100th
Battalion during WWII and highly distinguished themselves in combat; and
WHEREAS, the United States
government has recognized the injustice of the evacuation and internment; and
WHEREAS, Japanese Americans in our
communities have continued to contribute to our society and have distinguished
themselves in all walks of life;
NOW, THEREFORE, I, DIRK
KEMPTHORNE, Governor of the State of Idaho, do hereby proclaim February 16th,
2006, to be
A D A Y O F R E M E M B
R A N C E
in Idaho, to commemorate the anniversary of the internment and as a time to
reflect on the need for tolerance, especially in times of national emergency and
war.
IN
WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand and caused to be affixed the Great
Seal of the State of Idaho at the Capitol in Boise on this sixteenth day of
February in the year of our Lord two-thousand and six and of the Independence of
the United States of America the two hundred thirtieth and of the Statehood of
Idaho the one hundred sixteenth.

DIRK KEMPTHORNE
GOVERNOR

BEN YSURSA
SECRETARY OF STATE
(printable PDF file)
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