It seems every generation of Americans have to relearn the lessons of the past about the irrational fear of the other.
The task is always made more difficult by systematic efforts to obscure and rewrite well documented accounts of previous intolerance such as we see now being conducted by the Trump administration.
Fortunately, there are still many easily accessed resources for learning and teaching about irrational and destructive prejudice. One very good one is the non-profit densho.org which got its start twenty-five years ago in Bellevue, Washington. The area's Japanese-American community drew on its own experience with WWII internment as inspiration to put together a thorough multi-media effort to create a fact-based tool-set for combating intolerance.
While the primary focus of Densho is based on the personal history accounts of the Japanese-American community, the website also provides a good overview of the many versions of intolerance which have plagued the country. The highlights of the story are told very nicely in the short film, "Other": A brief history of American xenophobia.
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