The legislature recognizes that on February
19, 1942, the President of the United States issued Executive
Order 9066 which authorized military rule over civilian law and
lives; that Executive Order 9066 led to the World War II
evacuation and internment of more than one hundred twenty
thousand Japanese Americans, most of whom were United States
citizens by birth; that Japanese Americans lost their homes and
livelihoods and suffered physical and psychological damage; and
that, despite widespread hostility and discrimination, Japanese
Americans served with distinction in the United States military
effort as members of the Military Intelligence Service and in the
segregated 100th Infantry Battalion and the 442nd Regimental
Combat Team. The legislature further recognizes that in the name
of "military necessity," Japanese Americans were deprived of
their fundamental constitutional rights and civil liberties; and
that the Japanese American experience during World War II
tragically illuminates the fragile nature of our most cherished
national beliefs and values.
The legislature declares that an annual day of recognition
be observed in remembrance of Japanese Americans interned during
World War II as a reminder that, regardless of the provocation,
individual rights and freedoms must never be denied.
[2003 c 68 § 1.]