They Called Us Enemy

by

George Takei

George Takei is the author and protagonist of the memoir. George is only five when the Japanese bomb Pearl Harbor and the U.S. declares war on Japan. Months later, the Takei family is incarcerated in an internment facility, first in Rower, Arkansas and later at Camp Tule Lake in California. Given his age, internment seems like a great adventure to George. He and his little brother, Henry, don’t know anything different, so they don’t think it’s abnormal to, for instance, have to travel on a train with guards or eat meals on a set schedule in the mess hall. Rather, George and Henry throw themselves into discovering as much about their world as possible while they’re in the camps. Though George gets occasional glimpses into the adult world of politics and danger, Mama and Daddy mostly shelter him, which means that George’s childhood is as enjoyable as possible given the circumstances. It’s not until he’s a teenager in Los Angeles that George becomes curious about his childhood in the internment camps and speaks to Daddy about it. From Daddy, George is able to add context—often dark—to his happy childhood memories. Through these talks, George also becomes enraged with Daddy for not doing more to fight back against internment. But eventually, George comes to believe Daddy when he says that the family did protest by staying safe, alive, and fighting for their principles in ways aside from just attending rallies. These conversations with Daddy cause George to share his father’s optimism and admiration for American democracy, optimism that shines through the narrative. As an adult, George becomes an actor—most notably on the TV show Star Trek—and dedicates himself to spreading awareness about Japanese internment. He sits on a number of committees and boards throughout his life that seek to educate people about Japanese internment or improve the lives of those who were interned. They Called Us Enemy is part of this project—Takei insists that if people don’t learn about the dark moments in American history, the country is bound to repeat them.

George Takei Quotes in They Called Us Enemy

The They Called Us Enemy quotes below are all either spoken by George Takei or refer to George Takei. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
American Democracy and Civic Engagement Theme Icon
).
They Called Us Enemy Quotes

“In the meantime, we, the people, are already prepared for action.”

That same day the president signed a proclamation declaring that every adult Japanese citizen inside the U.S. was now an “alien enemy” and must follow strict regulations.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), Eleanor Roosevelt (speaker), President Franklin D. Roosevelt
Page Number: 16
Explanation and Analysis:

In California at that time, the single most popular political position was “lock up the Japs.” The attorney general of California, Earl Warren, decided to get in front of that issue.

He wanted to run for governor... and would do anything to get that office. He saw the division his rhetoric caused.

He knew that he was talking about a hundred thousand people who had not been charged with any crime. But he made an amazing statement for not just any lawyer... but the top lawyer of the state.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), Earl Warren
Page Number: 20
Explanation and Analysis:

On February 19, 1942, seventy-four days after Pearl Harbor... he issued Executive Order 9066.

The order never used the words “Japanese” or “camps”—it authorized the military to declare areas “from which any or all persons may be excluded,” and to provide “transportation, food, shelter, and other accommodations” from persons excluded from these areas.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), President Franklin D. Roosevelt
Page Number: 22
Explanation and Analysis:

Each family was assigned a horse stall still pungent with the stink of manure. As a kid, I couldn’t grasp the injustice of the situation.

But for my parents, it was a devastating blow. They had worked so hard to buy a two-bedroom house and raise a family in Los Angeles... now we were crammed into a single, smelly horse stall. It was a degrading, humiliating, painful experience.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), Daddy/Takekuma Norman Takei, Mama
Page Number: 32
Explanation and Analysis:

As a teenager, I had many after-dinner discussions with my father... discussing everything from the government’s forced incarcerations of Japanese Americans... to politics.

He taught me the power of American democracy—the people’s democracy.

“People can do great things, George. They can come up with noble, shining ideals.

“But people are also fallible human beings, and we know they made a terrible mistake.”

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), Daddy/Takekuma Norman Takei (speaker), President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Lt. General John L. DeWitt
Page Number: 45
Explanation and Analysis:

Memory is a wily keeper of the past... usually dependable, but at times, deceptive.

Childhood memories are especially slippery.

Sweet and so full of joy, they can often be a misrendering of the truth.

For a child, that sweetness... out of context and intensely subjective... remains forever real.

I know that I will always be haunted by the larger, vaguely remembered reality of the circumstances surrounding my childhood.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), Daddy/Takekuma Norman Takei, Mama, Henry Takei
Page Number: 50-51
Explanation and Analysis:

Mama began the impossible work of making a home for us out of the rough-hewn single room.

She ran up curtains made from government surplus fabrics.

Using strips of discarded rags, she braided together colorful floor mats.

About the only thing Mama didn’t have to do was cook.

But to her it was no relief. The kitchen was just one more aspect of caring for her family that she was denied.

One more loss. I realize that besides comforting us... perhaps everything she did was also her own statement of defiance.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), Mama
Page Number: 70-71
Explanation and Analysis:

There were fishermen and farmers, shopkeepers and professionals. We were so diverse, all so different. And yet, we were the same. We were all Japanese Americans and we were all in Block 6 at Camp Rohwer. That was our common denominator. Daddy felt keenly that we needed to forge a community together.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), Daddy/Takekuma Norman Takei
Page Number: 76
Explanation and Analysis:

“Die, you Japanese cowards! Bang bang bang!”

“He got me! I’m dead!”

“Gotcha again! America wins the war!”

“Let’s play again, but this time I’ll be American.”

The older boys would play “war.”

“Nuh-uh, you be Japanese. I’m American.”

“No fair! You’re always American!”

It was like cowboys and Indians, but with Japanese and Americans instead.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker)
Page Number: 82
Explanation and Analysis:

Childhood memories come rich with sensations...

... Fragrances, sounds, colors, and especially temperatures. That golden afternoon when Daddy took the family on that wonderful jeep ride...

... Is a fond memory that glows radiantly with warmth.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), Daddy/Takekuma Norman Takei, Mama, Henry Takei, Nancy Reiko Takei
Page Number: 100
Explanation and Analysis:

From the moment the war began, our loyalty as Americans was constantly under suspicion.

General John L. DeWitt, the commanding general of the western theater of operation:

“A Jap is a Jap... It makes no difference whether he is theoretically an American citizen, he is still a Japanese.”

Senator Tom Stewart (D-TN):

“They cannot be assimilated. There is not a single Japanese in this country who would not stab you in the back.”

Never mind that in the early days of the war, Japanese Americans showed up in great numbers to register for military service.

This was an act of patriotism, but it was met with a slap in the face. They were denied military service and categorized as 4-C: enemy aliens.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), Lt. General John L. DeWitt
Page Number: 111
Explanation and Analysis:

Question 27 wanted us to pledge our lives for a country that had upended our families and put us behind barbed-wire fences.

Question 28 rested on a false premise: that we all had a racial allegiance to the emperor of Japan. To answer “yes” would be to agree that we had such a loyalty to give up. Yes or no, either response would be used to justify our wrongful imprisonment—as if they’d been right to call us “enemy aliens” and lock us up in the first place.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker)
Page Number: 115
Explanation and Analysis:

As President Clinton said that day, “Rarely has a nation been so well-served by a people it has so ill-treated.” These brave soldiers clung to their belief in the shining ideals of their country.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), President Clinton (speaker), Senator Daniel K. Inouye
Page Number: 121
Explanation and Analysis:

Though they responded in different ways—caring for their families...

Fighting on the battlefield...

Or serving time for their principles—all these Japanese Americans showed incredible courage and heroism.

They proved that being American is not just for some people. They all made difficult choices to demonstrate their patriotism to this country even when it rejected them.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), Mama, Senator Daniel K. Inouye, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
Page Number: 123
Explanation and Analysis:

It was there I discovered the power of movies. I remember Charles Laughton in The Hunchback of Notre Dame most vividly.

I empathized with this love-starved character whom people scorned.

That movie was a transporting experience. Old Paris was fascinating.

Other nights the movies were Japanese, and often missing the audio track.

Daddy explained to me how a benshi provided the soundtrack for the film.

I was mesmerized by the benshi—how he could be so many voices from one.

In the days of silent movies, Daddy said, benshi were considered artists, similar to actors.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), Daddy/Takekuma Norman Takei
Page Number: 131-32
Explanation and Analysis:

During out after-dinner discussions, Daddy would reveal more details about that time in our lives... filling in some of the gaps that escaped me.

“It was a demonstration in protest of the arrest of a man accused of being a radical.”

“Was he?”

“No! But regardless of whether he was or not... it was important to exercise our right to assemble. Send a message that we were united as a group and opposed to their actions.”

It dawned on me in that moment... I had been participating in democracy as far back as I can remember. That is the strength of our system. Good people organized, speaking loudly and clearly. Engaged in the democratic process.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), Daddy/Takekuma Norman Takei (speaker)
Page Number: 144-45
Explanation and Analysis:

“We’re free! We can finally go home!”

“Don’t be a fool! You think our homes are still there? You think white people will welcome us with open arms?”

The irony was that the barbed-wire fenced that incarcerated us also protected us.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker)
Page Number: 152
Explanation and Analysis:

Our childhoods continued to be made up of grotesquely abnormal circumstances...which would eventually become our “normal.”

It had become routine to line up three times a day to eat lousy food in a noisy mess hall...but the routines of incarceration had all been thrown out. Now we found ourselves in constantly noisy surroundings with a perpetual stench.

But children are amazingly adaptable. We would survive this experience too.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), Henry Takei, Nancy Reiko Takei
Page Number: 168
Explanation and Analysis:

I had an unsettling feeling...

“I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America...”

That her calling me “Jap boy” had something to do with our time in camp.

“...and to the republic for which it stands...”

I was old enough by then to understand that camp was something like jail...but could not fully grasp what we had done to be sent there.

The guilt which surrounded our internment made me feel like I deserved to be called that nasty epithet.

“One nation, indivisible...

“with liberty and justice for all.”

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), Mrs. Rugen
Page Number: 172
Explanation and Analysis:

I had to learn about the internment from my father, during out after-dinner conversations. That remains part of the problem—that we don’t know the unpleasant aspects of American history...and therefore we don’t learn the lesson those chapters have to teach us. So we repeat them over and over again.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), Daddy/Takekuma Norman Takei
Page Number: 174
Explanation and Analysis:

Of course, I did get that role.

As Lieutenant Hikaru Sulu, I had the chance to represent my Asian heritage with honor...to millions of viewers on television...

And six times on the silver screen as (Lt.) Commander Sulu, eventually reaching the rank of captain.

But most importantly, my unexpected notoriety has allowed me a platform from which to address many social causes that need attention.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker)
Related Symbols: Star Trek (the Starship Enterprise)
Page Number: 189
Explanation and Analysis:

It was not until 1991 that I received a letter of apology...with a check for $20,000 signed by George H.W. Bush. As my father would say, “the wheels of democracy turn slowly.”

That makes an amazing statement about this country.

It took a while, but it did apologize. That apology came too late for my father. He passed in 1979, never to know that this government would admit wrongdoing.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), Daddy/Takekuma Norman Takei, President Reagan
Page Number: 193
Explanation and Analysis:

It was a disastrous depression that Roosevelt pulled us out of.

It took that man, and his determination and creative energy...

To establish all those programs, and lift the fortunes of our great country.

But as we were driving here today, I thought, “I’m going to the home of the man who imprisoned me.”

And now I’m here in his home...

Only in America could that happen.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), President Franklin D. Roosevelt
Page Number: 194
Explanation and Analysis:

These rulings, which found Executive Order 9066 to be constitutional...were never officially overturned by the Supreme Court...

Until June 26, 2018.

Justice Roberts’ statement went on to say the ruling “has no place in law under the constitution...”

But in a cruel irony, the court struck down Korematsu in a mere side note in Trump v. Hawaii...

The very same ruling that upheld President Donald Trump’s ban on immigration from Muslim countries.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), Fred Korematsu
Page Number: 200
Explanation and Analysis:
Get the entire They Called Us Enemy LitChart as a printable PDF.
They Called Us Enemy PDF

George Takei Quotes in They Called Us Enemy

The They Called Us Enemy quotes below are all either spoken by George Takei or refer to George Takei. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
American Democracy and Civic Engagement Theme Icon
).
They Called Us Enemy Quotes

“In the meantime, we, the people, are already prepared for action.”

That same day the president signed a proclamation declaring that every adult Japanese citizen inside the U.S. was now an “alien enemy” and must follow strict regulations.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), Eleanor Roosevelt (speaker), President Franklin D. Roosevelt
Page Number: 16
Explanation and Analysis:

In California at that time, the single most popular political position was “lock up the Japs.” The attorney general of California, Earl Warren, decided to get in front of that issue.

He wanted to run for governor... and would do anything to get that office. He saw the division his rhetoric caused.

He knew that he was talking about a hundred thousand people who had not been charged with any crime. But he made an amazing statement for not just any lawyer... but the top lawyer of the state.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), Earl Warren
Page Number: 20
Explanation and Analysis:

On February 19, 1942, seventy-four days after Pearl Harbor... he issued Executive Order 9066.

The order never used the words “Japanese” or “camps”—it authorized the military to declare areas “from which any or all persons may be excluded,” and to provide “transportation, food, shelter, and other accommodations” from persons excluded from these areas.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), President Franklin D. Roosevelt
Page Number: 22
Explanation and Analysis:

Each family was assigned a horse stall still pungent with the stink of manure. As a kid, I couldn’t grasp the injustice of the situation.

But for my parents, it was a devastating blow. They had worked so hard to buy a two-bedroom house and raise a family in Los Angeles... now we were crammed into a single, smelly horse stall. It was a degrading, humiliating, painful experience.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), Daddy/Takekuma Norman Takei, Mama
Page Number: 32
Explanation and Analysis:

As a teenager, I had many after-dinner discussions with my father... discussing everything from the government’s forced incarcerations of Japanese Americans... to politics.

He taught me the power of American democracy—the people’s democracy.

“People can do great things, George. They can come up with noble, shining ideals.

“But people are also fallible human beings, and we know they made a terrible mistake.”

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), Daddy/Takekuma Norman Takei (speaker), President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Lt. General John L. DeWitt
Page Number: 45
Explanation and Analysis:

Memory is a wily keeper of the past... usually dependable, but at times, deceptive.

Childhood memories are especially slippery.

Sweet and so full of joy, they can often be a misrendering of the truth.

For a child, that sweetness... out of context and intensely subjective... remains forever real.

I know that I will always be haunted by the larger, vaguely remembered reality of the circumstances surrounding my childhood.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), Daddy/Takekuma Norman Takei, Mama, Henry Takei
Page Number: 50-51
Explanation and Analysis:

Mama began the impossible work of making a home for us out of the rough-hewn single room.

She ran up curtains made from government surplus fabrics.

Using strips of discarded rags, she braided together colorful floor mats.

About the only thing Mama didn’t have to do was cook.

But to her it was no relief. The kitchen was just one more aspect of caring for her family that she was denied.

One more loss. I realize that besides comforting us... perhaps everything she did was also her own statement of defiance.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), Mama
Page Number: 70-71
Explanation and Analysis:

There were fishermen and farmers, shopkeepers and professionals. We were so diverse, all so different. And yet, we were the same. We were all Japanese Americans and we were all in Block 6 at Camp Rohwer. That was our common denominator. Daddy felt keenly that we needed to forge a community together.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), Daddy/Takekuma Norman Takei
Page Number: 76
Explanation and Analysis:

“Die, you Japanese cowards! Bang bang bang!”

“He got me! I’m dead!”

“Gotcha again! America wins the war!”

“Let’s play again, but this time I’ll be American.”

The older boys would play “war.”

“Nuh-uh, you be Japanese. I’m American.”

“No fair! You’re always American!”

It was like cowboys and Indians, but with Japanese and Americans instead.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker)
Page Number: 82
Explanation and Analysis:

Childhood memories come rich with sensations...

... Fragrances, sounds, colors, and especially temperatures. That golden afternoon when Daddy took the family on that wonderful jeep ride...

... Is a fond memory that glows radiantly with warmth.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), Daddy/Takekuma Norman Takei, Mama, Henry Takei, Nancy Reiko Takei
Page Number: 100
Explanation and Analysis:

From the moment the war began, our loyalty as Americans was constantly under suspicion.

General John L. DeWitt, the commanding general of the western theater of operation:

“A Jap is a Jap... It makes no difference whether he is theoretically an American citizen, he is still a Japanese.”

Senator Tom Stewart (D-TN):

“They cannot be assimilated. There is not a single Japanese in this country who would not stab you in the back.”

Never mind that in the early days of the war, Japanese Americans showed up in great numbers to register for military service.

This was an act of patriotism, but it was met with a slap in the face. They were denied military service and categorized as 4-C: enemy aliens.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), Lt. General John L. DeWitt
Page Number: 111
Explanation and Analysis:

Question 27 wanted us to pledge our lives for a country that had upended our families and put us behind barbed-wire fences.

Question 28 rested on a false premise: that we all had a racial allegiance to the emperor of Japan. To answer “yes” would be to agree that we had such a loyalty to give up. Yes or no, either response would be used to justify our wrongful imprisonment—as if they’d been right to call us “enemy aliens” and lock us up in the first place.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker)
Page Number: 115
Explanation and Analysis:

As President Clinton said that day, “Rarely has a nation been so well-served by a people it has so ill-treated.” These brave soldiers clung to their belief in the shining ideals of their country.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), President Clinton (speaker), Senator Daniel K. Inouye
Page Number: 121
Explanation and Analysis:

Though they responded in different ways—caring for their families...

Fighting on the battlefield...

Or serving time for their principles—all these Japanese Americans showed incredible courage and heroism.

They proved that being American is not just for some people. They all made difficult choices to demonstrate their patriotism to this country even when it rejected them.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), Mama, Senator Daniel K. Inouye, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
Page Number: 123
Explanation and Analysis:

It was there I discovered the power of movies. I remember Charles Laughton in The Hunchback of Notre Dame most vividly.

I empathized with this love-starved character whom people scorned.

That movie was a transporting experience. Old Paris was fascinating.

Other nights the movies were Japanese, and often missing the audio track.

Daddy explained to me how a benshi provided the soundtrack for the film.

I was mesmerized by the benshi—how he could be so many voices from one.

In the days of silent movies, Daddy said, benshi were considered artists, similar to actors.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), Daddy/Takekuma Norman Takei
Page Number: 131-32
Explanation and Analysis:

During out after-dinner discussions, Daddy would reveal more details about that time in our lives... filling in some of the gaps that escaped me.

“It was a demonstration in protest of the arrest of a man accused of being a radical.”

“Was he?”

“No! But regardless of whether he was or not... it was important to exercise our right to assemble. Send a message that we were united as a group and opposed to their actions.”

It dawned on me in that moment... I had been participating in democracy as far back as I can remember. That is the strength of our system. Good people organized, speaking loudly and clearly. Engaged in the democratic process.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), Daddy/Takekuma Norman Takei (speaker)
Page Number: 144-45
Explanation and Analysis:

“We’re free! We can finally go home!”

“Don’t be a fool! You think our homes are still there? You think white people will welcome us with open arms?”

The irony was that the barbed-wire fenced that incarcerated us also protected us.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker)
Page Number: 152
Explanation and Analysis:

Our childhoods continued to be made up of grotesquely abnormal circumstances...which would eventually become our “normal.”

It had become routine to line up three times a day to eat lousy food in a noisy mess hall...but the routines of incarceration had all been thrown out. Now we found ourselves in constantly noisy surroundings with a perpetual stench.

But children are amazingly adaptable. We would survive this experience too.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), Henry Takei, Nancy Reiko Takei
Page Number: 168
Explanation and Analysis:

I had an unsettling feeling...

“I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America...”

That her calling me “Jap boy” had something to do with our time in camp.

“...and to the republic for which it stands...”

I was old enough by then to understand that camp was something like jail...but could not fully grasp what we had done to be sent there.

The guilt which surrounded our internment made me feel like I deserved to be called that nasty epithet.

“One nation, indivisible...

“with liberty and justice for all.”

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), Mrs. Rugen
Page Number: 172
Explanation and Analysis:

I had to learn about the internment from my father, during out after-dinner conversations. That remains part of the problem—that we don’t know the unpleasant aspects of American history...and therefore we don’t learn the lesson those chapters have to teach us. So we repeat them over and over again.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), Daddy/Takekuma Norman Takei
Page Number: 174
Explanation and Analysis:

Of course, I did get that role.

As Lieutenant Hikaru Sulu, I had the chance to represent my Asian heritage with honor...to millions of viewers on television...

And six times on the silver screen as (Lt.) Commander Sulu, eventually reaching the rank of captain.

But most importantly, my unexpected notoriety has allowed me a platform from which to address many social causes that need attention.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker)
Related Symbols: Star Trek (the Starship Enterprise)
Page Number: 189
Explanation and Analysis:

It was not until 1991 that I received a letter of apology...with a check for $20,000 signed by George H.W. Bush. As my father would say, “the wheels of democracy turn slowly.”

That makes an amazing statement about this country.

It took a while, but it did apologize. That apology came too late for my father. He passed in 1979, never to know that this government would admit wrongdoing.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), Daddy/Takekuma Norman Takei, President Reagan
Page Number: 193
Explanation and Analysis:

It was a disastrous depression that Roosevelt pulled us out of.

It took that man, and his determination and creative energy...

To establish all those programs, and lift the fortunes of our great country.

But as we were driving here today, I thought, “I’m going to the home of the man who imprisoned me.”

And now I’m here in his home...

Only in America could that happen.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), President Franklin D. Roosevelt
Page Number: 194
Explanation and Analysis:

These rulings, which found Executive Order 9066 to be constitutional...were never officially overturned by the Supreme Court...

Until June 26, 2018.

Justice Roberts’ statement went on to say the ruling “has no place in law under the constitution...”

But in a cruel irony, the court struck down Korematsu in a mere side note in Trump v. Hawaii...

The very same ruling that upheld President Donald Trump’s ban on immigration from Muslim countries.

Related Characters: George Takei (speaker), Fred Korematsu
Page Number: 200
Explanation and Analysis: