Chapman, Gordon K.
Biographical notes:
Biography/Administrative History
The organization was set up in response to Executive Order 9066 ordering all Japanese-American citizens and aliens evacuated from the U.S. West Coast and relocated to centers in the interior. It was first named the Western Area Protestant Church Commission for Wartime Japanese Service. The majority of the members were Protestant ministers who had served as missionaries in Japan for considerable amounts of time, several from about 1900 on. The Commission was headquartered in Berkeley, California for the first few months during 1941-42. It then moved to San Francisco. As the government evacuation orders were being enforced, Japanese and Japanese-American ministers, working with their congregations in the assembly centers (transit camps), appealed to their Caucasian colleagues for assistance. The Commission was formed for the purpose of assisting the Japanese and Japanese-American ministers with their pastoral duties in the relocation centers (commonly know as camps). The U.S. War Relocation Authority authorized church activities, but would give no monetary or material assistance. As the internees were relocated from the assembly centers to the camps, various Protestant churches and denominations came together to lend assistance. These activities included: 1) staffing stationary camp churches, 2) designing and building churches, 3) setting up preaching missions to the camp churches, 4) assisting returning missionaries from Japan to seek employment in the camp churches, or with the WRA as teachers or social workers, 5) setting up denominational conferences for ministers in the camps, and 6) other activities such as funding drives, and providing Bibles and other religious tracts. As the War continued, the Commission acted as a conduit of information among the camp churches, various denominational headquarters, and the wider American culture. Toward the end of the War, the Commission's main activity was to aid returning evacuees, clergy in resuming their interrupted ministries, lay people their lives. Discussions centered on whether or not it was better for returnees to be integrated as members of the local congregations or form separate ethnic congregations as they had been prior to the War. During the spring and summer of 1945 as the camps were being emptied, the Commission recruited divinity students as volunteers to minister to the dwindling numbers of internees. The Commission ceased operation in late 1945.
Gordon K. Chapman, a Presbyterian minister with extensive Japanese missionary experience, was the Executive Director from start to finish. There was one paid secretary. All expenses were borne by the various Protestant Churches through monetary allocations, in-kind loan of ministers, or sponsoring fund raising activities.
From the guide to the Gordon K. Chapman: Protestant Church Commission for Japanese Service, 1941-1947, (The Graduate Theological Union. Library.)
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Subjects:
- Japanese Americans