Romantic Crossings: Making Love, Family, and Non-Whiteness in California,
1925–1950
by Allison Varzally
"I'M SORRY IT IS only a dollar," Tommy Yoneda apologized in the note accompanying
his donation to United China Relief, a social service agency dedicated
to war-torn China, "but I am an evacuee here with my parents who are Americans,
the same as I am. My daddy used to be a longshoreman in San Francisco,
and he picketed together with thousands of Chinese and white people—although
he is of Japanese descent." A young boy of mixed race, Tommy entered a
Japanese internment camp just after the outbreak of World War II with
his Jewish mother, Elaine, and Japanese father, Karl. In 1930s and 1940s
California, Karl and Elaine had mingled with an eclectic mix of minority
activists and participated in leftist organizations ranging from the Civil
Rights Congress, Communist party, and International Labor Defense to the
Filipino social club and Chinese Worker's Association. When Tommy learned
from his parents of suffering among Chinese displaced and disoriented
by conflict, he looked beyond his own difficult circumstances and ethnic
roots to express his support. His empathy persisted after his mid-war
release. As soon as Karl enlisted in the United States Army's Military
Intelligence Service, Elaine secured her and her son's exit from Manzanar
on the condition that Tommy remained in a Caucasian's custody. She begrudgingly
accepted the terms, but not before voicing her objection: "If Tommy was
to spend weekends or what have you with any of our Chinese, Filipino,
or Negro friends," she asked the camp director, "would he be in violation
of his right to be in Military Area No.1?" Practicing the multicultural
preferences of his mother, Tommy regularly associated with non-whites
in his new home of Petaluma, California. As a Jew and Japanese at a time
when both ethnic groups were subject to hatred and hostility, Tommy was
doubly vulnerable. But rather than defend himself against anti-Semitic
or anti-Japanese attacks, Tommy devoted his energies to countering the
racist remarks of classmates "who were just terrible as far as the Negroes
are concerned." Tommy's personal experiences of discrimination and his
family's teachings made him appreciate and challenge the breadth of ethno-racial
prejudice he observed.
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