This is an excerpt from another letter Fusa wrote to Miss Breed. Miss Breed was the children’s librarian at San Diego Public Library from 1929 to 1945. When her young Japanese American patrons were forced into concentration camps with their families in 1942, Miss Breed became their reliable correspondent, sending them books and assisting with requests for supplies. Through her actions, she served as a reminder of the possibility of decency and justice in a troubled world.
When Fusa wrote this letter, she had already left camp in Poston, Arizona, and moved to Minneapolis, Minnesota, where her sister and brother-in-law were living.
- How would you describe the tone of this letter excerpt?
Even without reading the letters Miss Breed wrote to her students, one can find many things revealed in letters the students wrote to her.
- Based on the content of this letter, what can you conclude about Miss Breed?
- What evidence brings you to those conclusions?