The Nidoto Nai Yoni, “Let it not happen again,” Bainbridge Island Japanese American Exclusion Memorial is built at the site where this first group of internees was taken from our island. The memorial honors those who suffered this injustice and the friends and neighbors who stood beside them and welcomed them back. Designated a satellite of the Minidoka Internment National Historic Site in Jerome County, Idaho, the Bainbridge Island memorial preserves this important moment in history.
Welcome to the History section of the BIJAC website. This section provides insight into the lives of the Nikkei (people of Japanese descent) of Bainbridge Island from the first immigrants who came to work in the lumber industry in the early 1900’s, to their families who lived through the evacuation and incarceration during World War II, to their lives in the post-War era. It will be of particular interest to:
- Educators wanting to share first-person experiences with their students.
- Family members researching their family history on Bainbridge Island.
- Historians wanting to understand the unique circumstances surrounding the Nikkei of Bainbridge Island, who were the first to be forcibly removed and excluded and one of the largest groups to return to their homes after the war.
Most of the photos and memorabilia featured on the History pages are personal contributions made by Issei and Nisei families on Bainbridge Island. They are supplemented with photos from the collections of news organizations and historical societies with a special interest in this topic.
Of unique value are our oral histories, which were undertaken as a project beginning in 2005. In these video clips, Nisei and other Bainbridge Islanders who lived through these events give personal, often intimate accounts of their experiences and feelings as children and young adults during these times. The oral histories are notable in that for some they represent the first time they had ever spoken publicly about the forced removal, life at the concentration camps, and the challenges that followed when they returned home. We are grateful for their courage.