Barracks at Honouliuli
Internment Resources: Sanji Abe - Request for ItemsBarracks at Honouliuli Internment Camp, ca. 1945-46. Photograph by R. H. Lodge. JCCH/AR 19 Collection

Hawaiʻi WWII Internment Resource List is available through the Japanese Cultural Center of Hawai'i's Tokioka Heritage Resource Center's online library catalog. To access the list of books, oral histories, archival collections, etc., click here.

Hawai‘i Internee Database

Selected Primary Resources:

ADMINISTRATION AND GOVERNANCE OF CAMPS
Jack Tasaka - Stories from Honouliuli

Dan Nishikawa - Recollections of Honouliuli

Sanji Abe - Request for items

Sanji Abe - Parole & sponsorship papers

LIFE OF INTERNEES & FAMILIES
Jean Ariyoshi - A Childhood changed forever

George Hoshida - Life of a Japanese immigrant boy

Sam Nishimura - Life in camp

Doris Berg Nye - Memories of Honouliuli

Jack Tasaka - Stories from Honouliuli
Ted Miyamoto - Censored letters from camp

Kazuki & Kayo Kosaki - Letter to an internee on the mainland

PRE-WWII PERCEPTIONS AND ACTIONS
1924 Senate hearings to limit immigration

"Woman Branded as Spy" (Star-Bulletin article)

REFLECTIONS ON INTERNMENT
Lily Arasato - Message from a daughter

Doris Berg Nye - Message for young people

Selected External Materials

“Stepping into the Past: Behind the Scenes of The Untold Story: Internment of Japanese Americans in Hawai‘i” by Ryan Kawamoto, Oct. 11, 2013 from Discover Nikkei

“The internment camp in West O‘ahu’s backyard” by Cheryl Ernst from Malamalama

“Honouliuli (Detention Facility)” by Alan Rosenfeld from Densho Encyclopedia

“Sand Island (Detention Facility)” by Alan Rosenfeld from Densho Encyclopedia

“Finding Honouliuli” from Honolulu Magazine

Honouliuli Gulch and Associated Sites: Final Special Resource Study and Environmental Assessment, August 2015 by the National Park Service.
This final study report was written to determine whether the Honouliuli Internment Camp and other internment sites in Hawaiʻi were feasible for inclusion in the national park system. The study evaluated 17 sites. Chapter 2, "Historical Overview and Resources," (p. 5-40) provides excellent historical background and descriptions of each of the Hawaii internment sites, enhanced by many maps and illustrations.