Interned Japanese-Americans get diplomas

? Amid tears and their grandchildren’s shouts of glee, 58 Japanese-Americans sent to internment camps during World War II received diplomas Sunday, finally earning recognition from the communities they were forced to leave more than half a century ago.

The honorees, wearing colorful leis and sashes, walked down the aisle of Los Angeles Trade Technical College’s auditorium. Some needed canes, a few were in wheelchairs, and more than a few had tears in their eyes.

The graduates represented the largest group of former internees to ever receive their diplomas at one time.

Takashi Hoshizaki, who should have graduated from Belmont High School in 1944, was one of two student speakers. He told the crowd how his education and life detoured when he was sent to the camps in Wyoming.

“Some may consider a high school diploma just a piece of paper, but it’s a symbol to me,” Hoshizaki told a crowd of several hundred.

Toshiko Aiboshi, 77, accepted her diploma while her grandson Nicolas Echevestre, 23, accepted one for Aiboshi’s husband, Joe, who died in 2001.

Mioko Eshita, 81, foreground, waits in line to accept her retroactive high school diploma as her daughter Pauline Carrillo applauds Sunday during a graduation ceremony in Los Angeles. About 50 Japanese-Americans sent to internment camps during World War II received diplomas Sunday.

The Los Angeles resident said she hopes the event gave her grandchildren insight into a chapter that for so long was a source of shame to many of her generation.

“We both went to Nic’s graduation. That was a very special moment,” she said. “I hope Nic will feel this is a special moment.”

The diploma project is the result of legislation sponsored by Democratic Assemblywoman Sally Lieber to allow school districts to bestow diplomas on Niseis – second-generation Americans of Japanese ancestry – sent to the nation’s 10 wartime internment camps. The vast majority were from California.

The federal government interned more than 120,000 ethnic Japanese, most of whom were born in the United States, amid widespread anti-Japanese sentiment, between 1942 and 1945. Children went to school in the camps and received diplomas there, but not from the schools they were taken away from.

Since Lieber’s legislation passed last year, more than 400 people have received diplomas, some posthumously.