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Spark Matsunaga




Spark Masayuki Matsunaga (, 1916 in Kukuiula, Hawaii – died April 15 , 1990 in Toronto, Ontario ) was a United States Senator from Hawaii. He was a Japanese American Democrat whose Legislation as a United States Senator led to the creation of the Commission On Wartime Relocation And Internment Of Civilians .

He became a United States Army Reservist in 1941 , volunteered for active duty in July of the same year, and was twice wounded in battle while serving with the renowned 442nd Regimental Combat Team . After his release from the Army, Captain Matsunaga entered Harvard Law School , graduating in 1951. He served as a public procecutor and private practice attorney and was a member of both the Hawaiian statehood delegation to Congress and the territorial legislature before being elected to the House Of Representatives in 1962 , where he served until 1976 . Matsunaga went on to serve in the United States Senate from 1977 until his death at the age of 73 from Prostate Cancer in 1990 . His portrait currently appears on US Series I Bond s in the $10,000 denomination. There is also an elementary school in Germantown, Maryland named after him.

Matsunaga was also known for his sense of humor. One famous incident occurred involving Sen. Matsunaga and then- Secretary Of State Alexander Haig , at a reception at the White House for Japanese Prime Minister Zenko Suzuki in 1981 . Haig reportedly mistook Matsunaga for a member of the Japanese delegation and asked if he spoke English. Matsunaga replied, "Yes, Mr. Secretary, I do — and I had the honor of voting for your confirmation the other day."SPARKY: Warrior, Peacemaker, Poet, Patriot. A Portrait of Senator Spark M. Matsunaga, by Richard Halloran. Honolulu: Matsunaga Charitable Foundation, 2002, 259 pp., paper Although this incident appeared to be a careless misunderstanding, many Asian American communities take the incident as an example of racial prejudice in the US society. Sen. Matsunaga became a well-known figure in Asia as the incident is often cited by Asian American and Asian media. Committee of 100 and its relationship between China and Taiwan

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