Search the Media Repository

Discover the curated images, videos, and primary sources featured throughout Foundations and Futures

History is more than just text on a page; it is the photographs, voices, and artifacts of the people who lived it. The images and recordings featured across Foundations and Futures are part of a meticulously curated media repository. Whether you are building a lesson plan or investigating an artifact, you can use this database to trace the provenance of our media: discover who created an asset, the historical context behind it, and how it can be used to bring Asian American and Pacific Islander experiences into your classroom.

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  • Image
    Temporary Detention Centers and War Relocation Authority Camps Map

    Map of Temporary Detention Centers and War Relocation Camps.

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  • Video
    Looking Like the Enemy

    Japanese Americans recount the fear prevalent after the attack on Pearl Harbor, and what it was like to be forced from their homes.

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  • Image
    Kimiko Kitagaki Waiting for a Bus

    Young Kimiko Kitagaki waits in Oakland for a bus to transport her to a government camp. Like all other Japanese Americans, the Kitagaki family attached tags with their names and government-assigned family numbers to their suitcases. They tied the same tags to the clothing they wore.

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  • Text
    Instructions to Japanese Americans Poster

    Signs like this appeared in Japanese American communities along the West Coast in the spring of 1942 ordering them to leave their homes.

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  • Video
    American Concentration Camps

    In this short video, Japanese Americans’ accounts of life in the camps contrast with the government’s depiction of them.

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  • Image
    FBI House Raid

    FBI agents searched the homes of many Japanese American families, like this one, and the Yasui family in Hood River, Oregon.

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  • Image
    Hood River Community Welcome

    Masuo Yasui led a successful effort to create a Japanese Community Hall in Hood River, Oregon, where local Issei held cultural events, holiday gatherings, and Japanese language classes for children.

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  • Image
    Signs Discriminating Against Japanese Americans

    In the decades before World War II, Japanese Americans along the West Coast faced discrimination in their daily lives: Restaurants denied them service. Barbers refused to cut their hair. Landlords would not rent to them. This woman in Hollywood, California, made clear that Japanese Americans were unwelcome.

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  • Image
    Masuo Yasui Portrait

    Masuo Yasui immigrated to the US from Japan when he was sixteen years old. He settled in Oregon’s Hood River Valley, where he became a successful farmer and businessman.

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