Sanji Abe Parole sponsorship papersInternees at Honouliuli were permitted to request parole with approved sponsorship assuring close contact,observation of activities and compliance with the terms of release.

Mr. Sanji Abe was a veteran of World War I and the first Japanese American elected to the Hawai‘i TerritorialSenate in 1940. He was arrested when a Japanese flag was found in a Hilo theater which he owned. After 16months of confinement, he wrote a letter to the Military Governor requesting his release, citing a son’svolunteering for the U.S. Army. He then applied for parole, sponsored by Frank Locey. Locey submitted asponsor’s report on Abe’s compliance with the terms of his parole.

Handwritten letter requesting release [PDF]

Parole Regulations; Release Request; Sponsor’s Agreement; Sponsor’s Report [PDF]

Original Source: U.S. National Archives and Records Administration

Location in JCCH Resource Center: Japanese American Relocation & Internment: The Hawaii Experience--Archival Collection (AR 19, Box 4, Folder 45)

MLA citations:Abe, Sanji. "Consideration for Release from Internment." Letter to Lt. Gen. Robert C. Richardson, Jr. 11 Jan.1944. MS. Honouliuli Internment Camp, Honolulu, Territory of Hawaii. The Untold Story: The Internment ofJapanese Americans in Hawai‘i . Web. [date of access]

Parole and sponsorship papers for Sanji Abe. March-December 1944. Office of the Military Governor,Territory of Hawaii. The Untold Story: The Internment of Japanese Americans in Hawai‘i. Web. [date of access]