 I had just come home from church and then we kept hearing Pearl Harbor was bombed, Pearl Harbor was bombed. I had no idea where Pearl Harbor was. My geography was not that sophisticated. I had no idea and my father said, oh, there's going to be trouble. And I said, well, how come? He said, well, Japan just bombed Pearl Harbor. And he says, we're at war with Japan. But I thought, why should it bother me? And I'm American. And then he said, you know, we are aliens. My parents, we don't have the citizenship, so they're going to do something. He says, we'll probably get taken away. But at that time, my parents had no feeling that we would be removed. So they were saying my brother would have to take on the response building to keep the family together because they may be removed or put into camp or whatever. And then when I went back to school that following morning, December 8th, one of the teachers said, you people bombed Pearl Harbor and I'm going, my people, you know. All of a sudden my Japaneseness became very aware to me. And listening to Aki, was that a normal story? I mean, she was a teenage girl in high school. Yeah. So Aki talked about how before December 7th, 1941, she really thought of herself as this sort of all-American teenage girl and growing up in Seattle at, again, a large public high school and thought of herself as an American. And then on December 7th after the bombing and then going to school the next day and having a teacher say, you people bombed Pearl Harbor. All of a sudden because Aki looked like the enemy, she was being treated like the enemy. And so that was, again, a story we heard over and over again from Japanese Americans. You know, very similar. This is a slight tangent. But right after 9-11, I was doing some interviews with Japanese Americans. And so I asked the question, so what were you thinking after you heard about 9-11? And almost all of them said the same thing. They said, we all thought about those poor Arab-Americans and Muslims because we knew that they were going to be targeted the same way that we were. And it shocked me when they said that because at first I thought, wow, they're going to say, oh, those poor people who died. But right away they thought about the people that sort of looked like the enemy and how they were going to be treated.