This has got to be one of the single greatest songs that I have ever heard. It is one of those songs that I am not afraid to admit that chokes me up, in fact no matter how many times I listen to it there is one part of the song that brings a tear to my eye.
I love to hear music with a purpose, meaning and finally have some substance and this song is just one of the many songs on the Fort Minor album The Rising Tied that contains this. It’s not really something that fits in “my normal genere” of music, but good music is good music and this album and band gets all the respect in the world from me, especially if they can follow this album up.
Fort Minor – Kenji:
My father came from Japan in 1905
He was 15 when he immigrated from Japan
He, he… he worked until he was able to buy this patch
And build a storeLet me tell you the story in the form of a dream,
I don’t know why I have to tell it but I know what it means,
Close your eyes, just picture the scene,
As I paint it for you, it was World War II,
When this man named Kenji woke up,
Ken was not a soldier,
He was just a man with a family who owned a store in LA,
That day, he crawled out of bed like he always did,
Bacon and eggs with wife and kids,
He lived on the second floor of a little store he ran,
He moved to LA from Japan,
They called him ‘Immigrant,’
In Japanese, he’d say he was called “Issei,”
That meant ‘First Generation In The United States,’
When everyone was afraid of the Germans, afraid of the Japs,
But most of all afraid of a homeland attack,
And that morning when Ken went out on the doormat,
His world went black ’cause,
Right there; front page news,
Three weeks before 1942,
“Pearl Harbour’s Been Bombed And The Japs Are Comin’,”
Pictures of soldiers dyin’ and runnin’,
Ken knew what it would lead to,
Just like he guessed, the President said,
“The evil Japanese in our home country will be locked away,”
They gave Ken, a couple of days,
To get his whole life packed in two bags,
Just two bags, couldn’t even pack his clothes,
Some folks didn’t even have a suitcase, to pack anything in,
So two trash bags was all they gave them,
When the kids asked mum “Where are we goin’?”
Nobody even knew what to say to them,
Ken didn’t wanna lie, he said “The US is lookin’ for spies,
So we have to live in a place called Mandinar,
Where a lot of Japanese people are,”
Stop it don’t look at the gunmen,
You don’t wanna get the soldiers wonderin’,
If you gonna run or not,
‘Cause if you run then you might get shot,
Other than that try not to think about it,
Try not to worry ’bout it; bein’ so crowded,
Someday we’ll get out, someday, someday.As soon as war broke out
The G.I came and they just come to the house and
“You have to come”
“All the Japanese have to go”
They took Mr. Lee
People didn’t understand
Why did they have to take him?
Because he’s an innocent (neighbour/labourer?)So now they’re in a town with soldiers surroundin’ them,
Every day, every night look down at them,
From watch towers up on the wall,
Ken couldn’t really hate them at all;
They were just doin’ their job and,
He wasn’t gonna make any problems,
He had a little garden with vegetables and fruits that,
He gave to the troops in a basket his wife made,
But in the back of his mind, he wanted his families life saved,
Prisoners of war in their own damn country,
What for?
Time passed in the prison town,
He wanted them to live it down when they were free,
The only way out was joinin’ the army,
And supposedly, some men went out for the army, signed on,
And ended up flyin’ to Japan with a bomb,
That 15 kilotonne blast, put an end to the war pretty fast,
Two cities were blown to bits; the end of the war came quick,
Ken got out, big hopes of a normal life, with his kids and his wife,
But, when they got back to their home,
What they saw made them feel so alone,
These people had trashed every room,
Smashed in the windows and bashed in the doors,
Written on the walls and the floor,
“Japs not welcome anymore.”
And Kenji dropped both of his bags at his sides and just stood outside,
He, looked at his wife without words to say,
She looked back at him wiped the tears away,
And, said “Someday we’ll be okay, someday,”
Now the names have been changed, but the story’s true,
My family was locked up back in ‘42,
My family was there it was dark and damp,
And they called it an internment campWhen we first got back from camp… uhh
It was… pretty… pretty badI, I remember my husband said
“Are we gonna stay ’til last?”
Then my husband died before they close the camp.
Like I said, it’s a very emotional song and though I cannot relate to this it just goes to show yet another time in history where racial ignorance existed. It still exists to this day and I get a tear in my eye everytime I hear these lyrics of the song:
But, when they got back to their home,
What they saw made them feel so alone,
These people had trashed every room,
Smashed in the windows and bashed in the doors,
Written on the walls and the floor, “Japs not welcome anymore.”
Makes you think about the past and the current. It makes you realize we still have a long way to go when you think about the present day. Makes you think that no matter what you try to tell yourself we as human beings have not made any real progress when it comes to acceptance. That’s all.
February 8, 2006 at 12:18 pm
This is one of the few songs ive heard that has almost brought me to the brink of tears.
also makes one think just how big ego are around the world and how its killing people.if you want to act like the “big brother” to the rest of the world,dont stab us in the back when not looking!
this is one of the few meanings the song expresses.
this day in age,where hypocrisy is part of every presidential speech and life,its sad to see that we preach on thing and live another.Sum Americans are still on the rock mentallity of “Kill the Japs & Vietnamese” They’re all the same.Kills the Cubans,Communists and everyone who dares to have something to say against our country[America].Dont they realise that its type of thinking that got people killed.45million Jews,almost 2 million in the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and all the other wars around the world.
This song is more than just Mike expressing pain and sadness what Kenji went thru,It also serves as an eye opener.We are the creators of our own demise unless we decide to learn from the past and move towards a common goal.A goal now only a select few enjoy around the world and those who do have it,take for granted:FREEDOM
If you cant look at your fellow man as your equal or acknowledge their individuality,then everything we live is a lie.Democracy,Freedom,Capitalism and just the fact that you can walk down the street freely.ITS ALL A LIE!
March 13, 2006 at 4:50 pm
i absolutely agree with you! i just heard that song that just wants youy to hear it again and again. i asked some people i they knew “fort minor” but actually no one did! when i listended to this song i just wanted to find out what ‘mandinar” is, i wanted to know more about histories like that!
its so rare t find musicans that write song that express something!
i’ m impressed by this work.
June 9, 2006 at 9:03 am
I have a couple Fort Minor songs and you’re right. When I first heard this song i had talked with my freinds about world politics, and why the hell we are such busybodies. We take our freedom you’re right, but we are losing it, the U.S. will end all threats. And you know what REALLY SUCKS in 15 years after most of this is over the defeated will band together and bomb us really bad, we’ll go to war, but without allies except for maybe the U.K. We’ll DIE.
As for fort minor and kenji yes i had heard the song, i bought it off i tunes and it has brang me to tears at least 3 times. It’s one of those songs that hits you, i showed fort minor to my best freind, he said they were really good and the next day he told me he’s buying the rising tied. I read a review of fort minor on i tunes that said that he liked mike when he was in linkin park and said he hated him for possibly breaking up linkin park and that he was a “gangster wannabe like all the other rappers” i read a lot of rejection to that review. I also said that if you have songs like kenji and where’d you go (i’m talking about the video, because the song itself lacks much emotional effect) how can you be a gangster wannabe? one thing more to say. A lot of good artists just come out with really really good songs that will stun you. Sum 41 realeased “peices” and it is really sad. Some artists publish good songs and sometimes make really really good songs like modest mouse published “float on”
Fort Minor and Mike deserve to go to, the top but he just hasnt got enough word out, its popular in some places but not others. Fort Minor is definitely my favortite band right now. Also when looking through i tunes i discovered that many minumum rap listeners (like me, but i consider fort minor alterenative rap (and i mean the new style alternative not that stuff 50+ old fashioned alternative))
July 23, 2006 at 5:59 pm
Mandinar is actually Manzanar. There’s a good Wikipedia article on the camp. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manzanar.
It’s a very emotional song for me too.
December 19, 2006 at 10:08 am
I listened to the song for atleast a 55 times , when I first got it, continuously…
All I can Say about this article -
Seems like a couple of like- minded people have been moored ashore to your very interesting blog…
But for a difference…
These lines Still linger on to the corner of my mind…even when I write this blog…
‘That meant ‘First Generation In The United States,’
When everyone was afraid of the Germans, afraid of the Japs,
But most of all afraid of a homeland attack,’
‘He, looked at his wife without words to say,
She looked back at him wiped the tears away,
And, said “Someday we’ll be okay, someday,”‘
‘I, I remember my husband said
“Are we gonna stay ’til last?”
Then my husband died before they close the camp.’…
good article , In a nutshell…
Always wanted to Do sumthi like this..
January 22, 2007 at 9:13 am
I didn’t think this song had the same effect on anyone else. I choke up every time at the same bit you do. I’ve had the album on repeat for the last two days and I always choke up on this song.
My ancestors were persecuted for their religion, racially we are a mishmash of everything from Caucasian to Mongoloid, very subtle features, but I feel a kinship with eastern asian cultures and discrimination of any kind sickens me. The songs on this album deserve much more praise than they are getting.
April 23, 2008 at 6:14 pm
I’m a Swedish guy and we were and have mostly been neutral, even in WW2, but i can still feel a tear pressing through my channel. something comes crawling in the back of my head telling me that this has actualy happened, this is real.
even thought his song makes me angry and sad, its the best song i have ever heard!
May 27, 2008 at 6:27 pm
My grandmother was in the camps. The only name she remembers was Poston, which was split into 3 parts, she was in camp II. It was also called the colorado river internment camp.
She doesn’t talk much about it, but we went to the opening of a memorial for the internee last year, it was pretty emotional.