| |||||||
| |||||||
| |||||||
1 | HOUSE RESOLUTION
| ||||||
2 | WHEREAS, The people of Illinois seek to uphold the values | ||||||
3 | that make the United States and the State of Illinois great, | ||||||
4 | those of freedom, justice, and equal treatment under the law | ||||||
5 | for all, and all civil liberties enshrined in the United States | ||||||
6 | and Illinois Constitutions; and
| ||||||
7 | WHEREAS, It is most appropriate and necessary to | ||||||
8 | commemorate those incredible individuals who have defended | ||||||
9 | civil liberties and resisted oppression within our Nation; and
| ||||||
10 | WHEREAS, An assault on civil liberties was launched on | ||||||
11 | February 19, 1942 when President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed | ||||||
12 | Executive Order No. 9066, authorizing the internment of all | ||||||
13 | people of Japanese descent in the United States; under the | ||||||
14 | order, those of Japanese ancestry, many American citizens, were | ||||||
15 | subject to a curfew and ordered to submit to imprisonment and | ||||||
16 | placed in American internment camps without trial, access to | ||||||
17 | legal counsel, or notice of any criminal charges; and
| ||||||
18 | WHEREAS, Fred T. Korematsu of Oakland, California, | ||||||
19 | valiantly refused to comply with these directives in an | ||||||
20 | admirable display of civil disobedience and continued to | ||||||
21 | proudly live his life as a free American citizen; Fred | ||||||
22 | Korematsu was subsequently arrested and tried for refusing to |
| |||||||
| |||||||
1 | comply with Civilian Exclusion Order No. 34, which was | ||||||
2 | authorized by Executive Order No. 9066, and sent to Topaz | ||||||
3 | internment camp in Utah; and
| ||||||
4 | WHEREAS, Fred Korematsu, in a selfless act of sacrifice, | ||||||
5 | agreed to be the representative for those wrongfully | ||||||
6 | imprisoned, and appealed his case with the help of Earnest | ||||||
7 | Besig of the American Civil Liberties Union; the case was heard | ||||||
8 | by the United States Supreme Court; and
| ||||||
9 | WHEREAS, The Supreme Court upheld the decision to imprison | ||||||
10 | Fred Korematsu in a 6-3 ruling, as well as the | ||||||
11 | constitutionality of discrimination against a racial group as | ||||||
12 | justified under conditions of war; that decision remains a | ||||||
13 | scourge upon civil liberties and American values of equal | ||||||
14 | protection; the conviction of Fred Korematsu was overturned via | ||||||
15 | a writ of error corum nobis on November 10, 1983 by the United | ||||||
16 | States District Court of Northern California; the Supreme Court | ||||||
17 | decision has yet to be challenged; and | ||||||
18 | WHEREAS, Fred Korematsu and his legal team appealed to | ||||||
19 | overturn his conviction inspiring the Civil Liberties Act of | ||||||
20 | 1988, which was signed into law by President Ronald Reagan | ||||||
21 | which formally apologized to those wrongfully incarcerated | ||||||
22 | under Executive Order No. 9066, and acknowledged the order was | ||||||
23 | issued because of "racial prejudice, wartime hysteria, and a |
| |||||||
| |||||||
1 | failure of political leadership"; Fred Korematsu was later | ||||||
2 | awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President Bill | ||||||
3 | Clinton, the highest honor awarded to a civilian who has | ||||||
4 | admirably served the interests of the Nation; and | ||||||
5 | WHEREAS, Fred Korematsu continued throughout his life to | ||||||
6 | raise his voice for the voiceless and defend the defenseless in | ||||||
7 | solidarity with those denied civil liberties, including | ||||||
8 | speaking out against the solitary confinement of an American | ||||||
9 | Muslim man in a United States military prison without trial; | ||||||
10 | and | ||||||
11 | WHEREAS, Fred Korematsu passed away on March 30, 2005; | ||||||
12 | today, the Fred Korematsu Institute works to educate people | ||||||
13 | about his life story and the importance of civil liberties; the | ||||||
14 | institute also aims to promote awareness of Fred Korematsu by | ||||||
15 | observing his birthdate, January 30, as Fred T. Korematsu Day | ||||||
16 | of Civil Liberties and the Constitution by schools, the general | ||||||
17 | public, and state and federal legislators; therefore, be it
| ||||||
18 | RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE ONE | ||||||
19 | HUNDREDTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we | ||||||
20 | honor Fred T. Korematsu for his courageous efforts; and be it | ||||||
21 | further
| ||||||
22 | RESOLVED, That we honor the legacy of Fred Korematsu, his |
| |||||||
| |||||||
1 | institute, and his children, who work so diligently to educate | ||||||
2 | the public by encouraging schools and institutes of higher | ||||||
3 | learning throughout the State of Illinois to incorporate the | ||||||
4 | story of Fred Korematsu and his valiant stand for American | ||||||
5 | values of justice into their curriculum; and be it further | ||||||
6 | RESOLVED, That suitable copies of this resolution be | ||||||
7 | presented to the Illinois Department of Education, and each | ||||||
8 | Illinois state university.
|