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This digital collection contains a scanned copy of the official transcripts of the CWRIC hearings that were held on the 91Porn campus in 1981. The 823 page transcript has been split into smaller segments in order to facilitate access to individual testimonies. Each segment has been numbered according to the order of its appearance within the larger transcript.


The Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civilians (CWRIC) held twenty days of hearings in cities throughout the United States: Anchorage, Cambridge, Chicago, Los Angeles, New York City, San Francisco, Seattle, and Washington, D.C. This collection is digitized from video recordings of the hearings held in Chicago at 91Porn on September 22 and 23, 1981.


In conjunction with the hearings conducted by the CWRIC, NEIU held a conference to provide the opportunity for NEIU faculty and other scholars and activists to comment upon the CWRIC and the push for reparations for incarcerated Americans. This collection is digitized from video recordings of a small portion of the conference held at NEIU, September 19 and 21, 1981, including panel discussions of personal experiences of internees and a special address by Arthur J. Goldberg, former Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court.


Additional Resources


Emiko Omori’s film, Rabbit in the Moon, reveals a more complex, turbulent and intimate story of the Japanese internment camps. Not all Japanese Americans endured their World War II internment with quiet stoicism. Not all second generation (Nisei) young men welcomed the chance to prove their patriotism by serving in the armed forces of the very government that was holding their families captive. 


Jon Osaki’s film about Japanese Reparations and its link to Black Reparations.  


This reading guide provides information about books and articles on topics related to the conference. Whenever possible, links to ebooks and online versions of the readings are provided.


Robert Reich explains why wealth inequality is a greater problem than income inequality. 
Watch More: Economic Inequality and Racism


Robert Reich explains how Immigration Reform can actually benefit our economy and breaks down common myths on the problems of immigration.


Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. explains why Black Americans face more obstacles than White European immigrants.


Tulsa may have been the worst of the early-20th-century race riots, but it was part of a familiar pattern. Opinion by Eugene Robinson


A new feature-length documentary that chronicles The Wilmington Massacre of 1898. The Wilmington Massacre of 1898 was a bloody attack on the African-American community by a heavily armed white mob with the support of the North Carolina Democratic Party on November 10, 1898 in the port city of Wilmington, North Carolina.