2026 Grantee Gathering Resource List

Graphic image of a dandelion blowing in the wind with the text that reads "We were here before. We will be here after."

Books 

Films/Videos 

Podcasts 

Artists/Exhibitions 

Terminology

In the 1940s, government officials and military leaders used euphemisms to describe their punitive and unjust actions against people of Japanese ancestry in the United States. The deceptiveness of that language can now be judged according to evidence from many sources, most notably the government’s own congressionally-ordered investigation, documented in Personal Justice Denied (1982-83), the report of the U.S. Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civilians (CWRIC).

Today, these decades-old euphemisms persist in textbooks, news sources, and other platforms—meaning that most Americans learn about this history through a distorted lens that diminishes the harsh realities of Japanese American WWII incarceration. Learn more here: https://densho.org/terminology/.

Acknowledgements  

Our appreciation to Nikkei ProgressivesDensho, and Little Tokyo Service Center for their contribution to this guide. 

To learn more about Heart Mountain and the incarceration of Japanese Americans, click here.

Graphic of dandelions flying in the air.