Sounding Board -- Art Stanlow
- Share via
I wish you “youngies” would do a little research on the subject you’re
assigned to report on when the events happened before your time. I’ve
just read the article, “War hysteria helped end curio shop’s history”
(April 15).
Despite the reporter’s use of the usually-dependable Robert Gardner
regarding World War II facts, I find it hard to believe that Gardner, a
World War II veteran like myself, would describe America as having been
in a state of hysteria. There was nothing approaching hysteria in America
during World War II. Never. Anger, yes. Vengeance, yes.
And unfairness to Asian citizens. That was an unworthy choice, putting
the West Coast Japanese in internment camps, but it wasn’t a war-long
event.
We eventually had a famous Japanese-American military unit fighting in
Italy. Nothing approached hysteria, just a groundswell of enlistments all
over the country of men wanting to even the score for something that
became a part of our folklore.
“Pulling a Pearl Harbor,” was the statement. There are still bodies of
our boys there, underwater. We didn’t get hysterical; we got even.
Unfortunately, some very nice Japanese-Americans were dealt with
unfairly; I know that. I dated a beautiful Japanese girl after the war
who even underwent an operation on her eyes in order to rid of her
Japanese look. It didn’t work.
Inside, she was permanently wounded. She would date no one except
whites and felt inferior even though she was the most attractive person
in any room that she entered.
I do wonder what happened to her. We were both war casualties. I got a
medal and a scar; she got a neurosis. She didn’t deserve it, but neither
did I.
* ART STANLOW is a Costa Mesa resident.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.