The United States clandestinely funds the operation of a huge prison in Cuba. Men, women, and children are spirited away from their homes and imprisoned indefinitely. No charges are made; no legal counsel is allowed. Newspapers fill with stories of espionage and enemies. Current events? No.
During World War II, the United States used tactics remarkably similar to those in use today against presumed terrorists. By 1939, President Franklin Roosevelt had covertly authorized J. Edgar Hoover’s Secret Intelligence Service to begin surveillance of Axis nationals in Latin America. Believing that “all German nationals without exception [are] dangerous,” the United States surreptitiously pressured Latin-American countries to arrest and deport more than four thousand civilians of German ethnicity to the United States. There, many languished in internment camps, while others were shipped to war-torn Germany.
Heidi Donald is a native of Costa Rica who was deported to the United States with six family members and interned at Crystal City, Texas during World War II. We Were Not the Enemy, her recently published memoir, is a personal look at the pain this indiscriminate civilian internment program inflicted on her family.
Table of Contents
We Were Not the Enemy, Heidi Gurcke Donald’s moving memoir about her family fate at the hands of the U.S. government during World War II, is a critical addition to internment literature.
—John Christgau, Enemies: World War II Alien Internment
This is a cautionary tale. It is a chapter of American history that is not taught in school. But it happened. And it could happen again, if we do not vigilantly safeguard our civil liberties.
—Jay Feldman, When the Mississippi Ran Backwards
We Were Not The Enemy is a fascinating look at a little-known piece of American history and stands as a testimony to how patriotism can go awry.
—Mary McCaslin, Santa Cruz Sentinel
We Were Not the Enemy is available by special order
from your local bookstore or through
Barnes and Noble, Amazon, or iUniverse.
Acknowledgments
The Nazi Shadow
Babies and Blacklists
Costa Rican Photographs 1929-35
Deportation (a reading)
Immigration Detention Station,
Terminal Island (San Pedro, California)
Crystal City Family Internment Camp, Texas (1943–44)
The Charges Revealed
Internment at Large
Forced Repatriation?
Home at Last
Reunion
A Wider View
Selected Bibliography