Day 3 of the @aachristcollab Asian American History #reclaimtrip:

We drove 3 hours to Manzanar, one of ten concentration camps where Japanese Americans were incarcerated for years being able to only bring the things they could carry with them. ImageImage
In front of the guard station and the Manzanar concentration camp sign. The US unconstitutionally incarcerated 127,000 Japanese Americans in camps like this. Over 10,000 Japanese people were forced here. Image
When we arrived into the visitor center at Manzanar, a white couple walking out with their very young child said, “This can’t be true. The US would never do anything like this. This must be fake news.” Image
This is what the barracks would’ve looked like. It was especially harsh in 100 degree heat. We were barely there for ten minutes and feeling like the oxygen was running out from the hot temperatures. Imagine going from your home to this because the government rounded you up. Image
This is what the barracks look like from the outside. There were rows and rows of this along one square mile. Each area was managed by a Japanese person who was essentially placed in an impossible position of maintaining “peace” and providing “oversight.” Image
This is what an “upgraded” child’s room (partition) would’ve looked like. The incarcerated were so stripped of everything that they celebrated getting linoleum fours and wall coverings. Image
This is a cemetery, which includes the graves of the elderly and of children. The little mounds in the back are grave sites. These camps were placed in “undesirable” and very distant places from population centers so coming here would have been an inconvenience for anyone. Image
This is the women’s toilet area. There was no privacy and this setup stripped away the dignity of people who would otherwise go to the restroom in private. Testimonies about the shame and embarrassment that the toilets and the showers induced are plenty. ImageImage
The Japanese weren’t told where they were going or for how long. Read this quote about how unnerving it was. Image
The US government was very much aware of the “magnitude of the task” and got multiple agencies involved, while also creating a new one called the War Relocation Authority for this unconstitutional effort. Image

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More from @tweetraychang

Jul 19
Day 2 of @aachristcollab #reclaimtrip:

Starting in Little Tokyo with Bill Watanabe, who is giving us a tour of some Japanese American history displayed here.

Here we are at the “Go for Broke” memorial. Image
When WW2 ended, there was a large debate among the Japanese American community as to whether they should create a memorial to honor the soldiers who had fought. Those who survived were torn, feeling like they shouldn’t erect a memorial to themselves as they were still alive. Image
Others felt like they should erect a memorial because their story was unique, especially as many fought in the war while their families were incarcerated in mass because of widespread suspicion.

Bill Watanabe is taking us to school! Image
Read 18 tweets
Jul 19
Just landed in LA to join the @aachristcollab Asian American History #reclaimtrip.

Starting at the First Korean Presbyterian church in LA and what used to be the Korean National Association.

This is the first Korean Church in LA, established in 1906 (building built in 1938). Image
This is the first Korean Church building to be built from the ground up. It was built in 1938 after purchasing the lot in 1936. The first Korean church established was in Hawaii in 1903.

This is the interior of the building.

It’s an aging congregation. Image
At the Korean National Association museum where we are learning about the independence movement that took place here in the US during Japanese colonial rule over Korea.

It’s great to see so many people from different generations on the #reclaimtrip. Image
Read 7 tweets
Jul 18
The consistent pattern where engaging with social issues that don’t fall along politically conservative lines creates suspicion around one’s theological commitments demonstrates how deeply politicized the evangelical movement is.
Far too often, political conservatism is far more the norming norm than Biblical truth and church tradition is. People read the Bible through a politically conservative lens more than they do a contextually informed exegetical reading.
Even those who try to incorporate historical & cultural context often leave out some key environmental factors that would change the reading in some significant ways due to a modern politicization of faith - for example, overlooking how much imperialism shaped Christian thought.
Read 8 tweets
Jun 18
This is the outcome of the CRT mania. A CRT mania that began with people (including many Christians) misrepresenting what CRT is to the public and seeking to discredit it because it sought to distract people away from actually addressing racism.

Our education is truncated: 🧵
My younger school years, we didn’t really talk about histories that didn’t make America sound like a perfect country. Our bipartisan governmental system was propped up as a perfect system where I was led to believe that every person had a voice that was heard.
I pledged allegiance to the flag of the United States of America and felt weird about it, but didn’t have a conceptual framework for knowing why.

Little did I know that “one nation under God” was added later - & signaled a type of Christian nationalism.

religionnews.com/2021/07/02/pat…
Read 14 tweets
Jun 18
Soon enough, if things don’t change, churches will have to become closed and isolated communities.

I shared with every senate office the following:

Most churches in the US are under 100 people. Most can’t afford metal detectors. If they get funding, it’s still inadequate. 1/
People can find ways to sneak by metal detectors unless they have a security guard. Most can’t afford a security guard, this especially leaves churches like ITPC in Laguna Woods (which is made up of elderly people) especially vulnerable.
It’s not like municipalities and states are going to hire enough police officers to guard every house of worship throughout the week. And if there was only one officer, if a group of people were intent on killing, it would be pointless.
Read 5 tweets
Jun 17
On this day in 2015, a white supremacist gunman bursted into Mother Emanuel AME, murdering 9 African American Christians huddled around the Scriptures.

Yesterday, I was in Sen. Tim Scott’s office in Washington D.C. to advocate for increased gun safety measures. It hits deeply.
These are the #emanuel9. Each of them precious in God’s sight. Each of them whose lives were senselessly taken because hate has a home and is able to so easily access a weapon that belongs in war zones.
This is the Bible study material and a Bible from that horrific and tragic day.

It’s on exhibit at the African American History museum in DC.
Read 4 tweets

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