Title:
S/Sgt. Tatsumi Iwate, a Japanese American Infantryman, who bears a piece of Nazi shrapnel an inch deep in his brain despite
two operations to remove it, is on furlough at the farm of his uncle, Tashikaza Wada, Rt. 1, Gill, Colorado, from Hammond
General Hospital, Modesto, California, until September 17. He and his uncle are seen hoeing weeds in a cabbage field. He was
wounded in France last October during the rescue of the Texas Lost Battalion by the Japanese American 442nd Combat Team. Formerly
of Lomita, California, Sgt. Iwate, 28, entered service in February, 1942, a month before evacuation of Japanese Americans
from the West Coast. Sgt. Iwate is keenly disappointed in his friend, 19-year-old Seiichi, now in a Justice Department Internment
Camp after renouncing his American citizenship, and who has lost faith in his country. He wrote him a letter, which was made
public by WRA, in which he expressed his surprise and disappointment in his actions and said I am an American to the last
drop of my blood, and being aware of discrimination that is practiced by people who dare not see farther than the color of
our skin, but I will continue to fight the enemy of my country be it foreign or domestic. Ready for either duty or discharge
after 7 months of hospitalization, he says, I may be washed up as an Infantryman, but I'm still willing to tackle any assignment
if they decide to keep me in the Army. --
Photographer: Mace, Charles E. --
Gill, Colorado. 7/14/45
Contributing Institution:
The Bancroft Library. University of California, Berkeley.
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