People at the Manzanar monument

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Silencing History: Protecting Truth in Public Spaces and Museums

People at the Manzanar monument

バーチャルイベント

Silencing History: Protecting Truth in Public Spaces and Museums

Across the country, National Park Service sites are becoming ground zero in a growing battle over historical memory. Signs with QR codes invite the public to report “negative” or “unpatriotic” portrayals of American history. On the surface, these codes claim to ensure “accuracy.” But for communities like Japanese Americans, who have fought for decades to have the truth of their incarceration recognized, this development raises troubling questions. Who decides what version of history is “patriotic”? What happens when telling the truth about injustice is deemed “negative”?

Compounding these concerns is the administration’s call to eliminate national monuments, historic sites, and other areas under NPS management, alongside mounting political and cultural pressure on museums to sanitize exhibits that might appear “divisive.” The fight is not only to preserve sites, artifacts, and memory, but also to resist the erasure of lived experience and cultural identity from the nation’s historical record.

Join the Democracy Center at JANM to explore the politicization of public memory, the dangers of historical erasure, and the consequences of silencing hard truths—whether in our shared outdoor landscapes or in our cultural institutions. The program will focus on the unique perspective of Japanese Americans, whose experience of wrongful incarceration during World War II was denied and ignored until generations of activism forced a reckoning, and make the case that truth-telling is not unpatriotic—it is essential.

FREE: Virtual Only, but registration required to receive Zoom link

2025年09月15日(月)

5:00 PM ~ 6:00 PM PDT

Across the country, National Park Service sites are becoming ground zero in a growing battle over historical memory. Signs with QR codes invite the public to report “negative” or “unpatriotic” portrayals of American history. On the surface, these codes claim to ensure “accuracy.” But for communities like Japanese Americans, who have fought for decades to have the truth of their incarceration recognized, this development raises troubling questions. Who decides what version of history is “patriotic”? What happens when telling the truth about injustice is deemed “negative”?

Compounding these concerns is the administration’s call to eliminate national monuments, historic sites, and other areas under NPS management, alongside mounting political and cultural pressure on museums to sanitize exhibits that might appear “divisive.” The fight is not only to preserve sites, artifacts, and memory, but also to resist the erasure of lived experience and cultural identity from the nation’s historical record.

Join the Democracy Center at JANM to explore the politicization of public memory, the dangers of historical erasure, and the consequences of silencing hard truths—whether in our shared outdoor landscapes or in our cultural institutions. The program will focus on the unique perspective of Japanese Americans, whose experience of wrongful incarceration during World War II was denied and ignored until generations of activism forced a reckoning, and make the case that truth-telling is not unpatriotic—it is essential.

National Parks conservation associationJACL Security Through Unity

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ann burroughs headshot

Ann Burroughs

Ann Burroughs is the President and CEO of JANM. An internationally recognized leader in the fight for human rights, she is currently chair of the Board of Amnesty International USA, chair of the Japanese American Confinement Sites Consortium, and serves on the board of the Heart Mountain Wyoming Foundation. 

Dennis Arguelles

Dennis Arguelles

Dennis Arguelles is the Southern California Director for the National Parks Conservation Association. He works with a variety of partners, advocates, and communities to protect and expand existing parks, preserve new landscapes and ensure the national parks tell the stories of all Americans. 

Dana Fujiko Heatherton

Dana Fujiko Heatherton

Dana Fujiko Heatherton is the Chair of the Japanese American Confinement Site Consortium and the Co-Chair of the National Japanese American Memorial Foundation.The legacy of her family—incarcerated at Manzanar and Gila River, and her grandfather Kazuo Inouye’s service in the 442nd Regimental Combat Team—fuels her commitment to justice and remembrance.

Mark Segal

Mark Segal

Mark Segal serves on the Joint Diversity Council of Comcast NBC/Universal to educate the network on LGBT issues. From the Stonewall Riots to the Christopher Street Gay Liberation Day Committee which created the world’s first Gay Pride in 1970, he has been involved in LGBT civil rights since 1969.

The Democracy Center explores the rights, freedoms, and fragility of democracy, helping to build bridges, and find common ground between people of diverse backgrounds and opinions.

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