What Honor Looks Like in America
On this anniversary of Pearl Harbor , and in the midst of another, more subtle
attack by Radical Islamic Terrorists, it might be good to look at the best and
worst that history can teach us.
One
of the most shameful times in this nation’s history is when we chose to inter
Japanese-Americans in concentration camps at the beginning of World War
II. That action can not be
defended. It can not be excused. It can only be mourned, regretted and held up
as example of the mentality of the mob.
Yet, through every dark sky there shines some point of
light. Bob Fletcher, who died on May 23,
2013 at the age of 101, was just such a bright spot. Mr. Fletcher worked as a California agricultural inspector. As such, he must have known, first hand, the
work ethic, morals and cultural integrity of the Japanese families who worked
in the agriculturally rich central valley of California .
When these families were forced to leave their land and move to
internment camps three months after the bombing of Pearl
Harbor , Mr. Fletcher quit his job so he could manage the fruit
farms of three Japanese families.
Of the 120,000 Japanese sent to camps, many grew fruit in
orchards around the town of Florin , near Sacramento . Many of these Americans of Japanese descent
had been in California
since 1890, yet that did not earn them a fair hearing in the court of public
opinion. They were herded up, their
private lives examined, their loyalties considered suspect, and their futures
thrown into limbo.
In the midst of what must have been a morass of
conflicting emotions, fear, anger and depression, Al Tsukamoto approached a man
that he did not know well except by his reputation. Fletcher was considered to be an honest man
and Mr. Tsukamoto, about to be imprisoned by his country based on nothing but
his heritage had to trust someone.
Tsukamoto approached Fletcher with a business proposal. Fletcher would manage the farms for three
Japanese families. He would pay the
taxes and mortgages, keeping the farms going.
In return Fletcher could keep all the profits until the Japanese could
return.
Think of the leap of faith this involved! These Japanese families, despite what was
being done to them, had faith not just in Fletcher, but faith that this country
would see the error of it ways and release them from their concentration
camps. I am humbled by such devotion to
hope.
Bob Fletcher left his government job and labored over
three farms for three years. He worked
90 acres of land through 18 hour days.
He lived in a bunkhouse reserved for migrant workers, paid the bills and
kept, not all, but only ½ of the profits.
When the three families returned they found their farms intact, money in
the bank, and a house cleaned and readied for their return.
Fletcher’s willingness to save the Japanese farms was not
applauded by many citizen’s of Florin where
the Japanese success was resented (hatred and demonization of hard-working,
successful people was not new in 1942 and has not died in 2015). But this didn’t faze Fletcher who is quoted
in a 2010 interview in the Sacrament Bee as saying, “I didn’t believe in the evacuation…It
was obvious they had nothing to do with Pearl Harbor .”
Like many people of quiet courage Bob Fletcher didn’t see
himself as extraordinary. What he did
see was a massive wrong which he could make partially right. He had personal honor, character, strength
and dogged determination. I call that
principled living. Just as the
internment shames me, Bob Fletcher makes me proud.
Live so that each action you take could become a
universal law, and keep the faith.
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