3000 items
3000 items
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Kara Kondo Interview Segment 39 (ddr-densho-1000-139-39)
Different experiences in Carlisle, Pennsylvania
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Kara Kondo Interview Segment 48 (ddr-densho-1000-139-48)
Political activism: League of Women Voters and serving on committees dealing with land use and water issues
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Kara Kondo Interview Segment 31 (ddr-densho-1000-139-31)
Description of living quarters at Heart Mountain concentration camp, Wyoming
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Kara Kondo Interview Segment 40 (ddr-densho-1000-139-40)
Working in Louisville, Kentucky; husband encounters discrimination when trying to enlist in the Army Air Corps
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Kara Kondo Interview Segment 25 (ddr-densho-1000-139-25)
Helping parents prepare for removal; selling and discarding household items
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Kara Kondo Interview Segment 34 (ddr-densho-1000-139-34)
Thoughts on military service and the so-called "loyalty questionnaire"
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Kara Kondo Interview Segment 1 (ddr-densho-1000-139-1)
Father's family background: immigration to the U.S., settled in the Yakima valley
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Kara Kondo Interview Segment 6 (ddr-densho-1000-139-6)
Community events in the Yakima valley: church services, sports, and cultural groups
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Kara Kondo Interview Segment 36 (ddr-densho-1000-139-36)
A visit by Caleb Foote and Gordon Hirabayashi
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Kara Kondo Interview Segment 14 (ddr-densho-1000-139-14)
Varying ways for the Issei to acquire land
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Kara Kondo Interview Segment 11 (ddr-densho-1000-139-11)
Description of photographs of early family life
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Kara Kondo Interview Segment 13 (ddr-densho-1000-139-13)
Difficult life for Issei in the early 20th century: "they were pioneers in the Yakima valley"
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Kara Kondo Interview Segment 33 (ddr-densho-1000-139-33)
Working as a "society editor" for the "Heart Mountain Sentinel"
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Kara Kondo Interview Segment 19 (ddr-densho-1000-139-19)
A frightening incident of racially motivated violence
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Kara Kondo Interview Segment 20 (ddr-densho-1000-139-20)
An early period of independence: attending a design school in Seattle
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Kara Kondo Interview Segment 55 (ddr-densho-1000-139-55)
Reflections on September 11, 2001, current activities, hopes for the future
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Kara Kondo Interview Segment 51 (ddr-densho-1000-139-51)
First hearing of losses suffered by Japanese American families as a result of incarceration
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Kara Kondo Interview Segment 54 (ddr-densho-1000-139-54)
Thoughts on redress: hoping for a positive outcome, writing a letter to President Ronald Reagan before the appropriations were made
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Kara Kondo Interview Segment 42 (ddr-densho-1000-139-42)
Feeling unwelcome upon returning to the Yakima valley after the war
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Kara Kondo Interview Segment 47 (ddr-densho-1000-139-47)
Postwar involvement in political organizations: League of Women Voters, Human Rights Commission
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Kara Kondo Interview Segment 46 (ddr-densho-1000-139-46)
Raising children: no direct discussions with them about discrimination, ethnicity
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Kara Kondo Interview Segment 50 (ddr-densho-1000-139-50)
Involvement in beginnings of the redress movement: pressuring elected representatives for support
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Kara Kondo Interview Segment 35 (ddr-densho-1000-139-35)
Writing society columns for the "Heart Mountain Sentinel"
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Kara Kondo Interview Segment 45 (ddr-densho-1000-139-45)
Adopting two children: "it did change my life"