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Journal articles about Honouliuli written by UH West Oʻahu faculty
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Browsing Articles by Author "Rosenfeld, Alan"
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Item Barbed-Wire Beaches: Martial Law and Civilian Internment in Wartime Hawai‘i(University of Illinois Press, 2011) Rosenfeld, AlanItem Neither Aliens nor Enemies: The Hearings of “German” and “Italian” Internees in Wartime Hawai‘i(University of Hawaiʻi Press, 2014) Rosenfeld, AlanAlthough officially billed by J. Edgar Hoover as an “Alien Enemy Control” program, an examination of the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s wartime internment of civilians in Hawai‘i reveals that the bureau grossly overstepped the authority provided under the Alien Enemies Act. Specifically, the hearing board transcripts of those detained as German and Italian alien enemies demonstrate that wartime authorities in martial law Hawai‘i proceeded emphatically on the side of caution and security, even at the expense of justice. In fact, those apprehended for the purposes of “Alien Enemy Control” and subsequently interned at the Sand Island and Honouliuli detention camps included numerous US citizens—both by naturalization and by birth—and several men who had served in the US Armed Forces. One could also find people from a variety of ethnic backgrounds among the ranks of Hawai‘i’s “German” and “Italian” internees, ranging from civilians of Scandinavian descent to an Irish American woman and a family of Jewish refugees from Nazi-occupied Austria. The stories of this diverse array of internees underscore the importance of defending democratic principles, particularly in moments of crisis.