Located not far from U.S. Naval Base Pearl Harbor, near Ewa and Waipahu, is a grisly piece of history many people would like to forget: the Honouliuli Internment Camp in Hawaii. The former World War II Japanese-American internment camp highlights the demoralizing consequences of a wartime suspension of basic civil rights.
Shortly after the Japanese air strikes on Pearl Harbor, government officials began to round up Japanese-Americans suspected of disloyalty throughout the islands.
The Honouliuli Internment Camp held an estimated 320 internees and became the largest prisoner of war camp in Hawaii, with nearly 4,000 individuals held while the camp was open from March 1943 to 1946.
In the height of the camp’s operation, it was bustling – with 175 buildings, 14 guard towers, and more than 400 tents throughout seven compounds on 160 acres. The camp, isolated in a deep gulch, and the Japanese American internees referred to the camp as jigoku dani, or “hell valley.”
After it was closed, the camp was all but consumed by the jungle and the site was forgotten about until 2002 when the staff of the Japanese Cultural Center of Hawaii rediscovered the site with the help of a local farmer.
After an effort to learn more about the site by the Japanese Cultural Center of Hawaii staff, the National Park Service took notice, and Honouliuli was dedicated as a national monument on March 31, 2015, in a ceremony at the Cultural Center.
The ceremony, photographed above, was attended by the United States Secretary of the Interior Jewell, Governor Ige, and Senators Schatz and Hirono, among others.
Currently, the site looks like little more than an overgrown gulch, hidden from view by the nearby highway. All visits must be pre-arranged and guided, though there are plans to develop the site into a full-fledged national monument – with visitor facilities that could include trails, interpretive waysides, and restroom facilities.
This informational video produced by the Japanese Cultural Center gives us a glimpse into the lives of those who were held at Honouliuli.
While many would like to forget this terrible time in American history and the effects of World War II in Hawaii, it is important to remember what we did, and how we can ensure that this terrible act of injustice never happens again. Those who would like to witness the Honouliuli Internment Camp in Hawaii can contact the National Park Service to schedule a visit.
To view photos of Hawaii during the time of World War II, click here for our previous post.
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