They were considered America's secret weapon in the war against Japan.
But decades later, their secrets — and the stories of their sacrifice — need to be shouted from our rooftops.
Eighty years ago this month, the first of 6,000 soldiers came to the Twin Cities during World War II to be trained at a covert military intelligence language school. Most were Nisei, born in the United States to Japanese immigrant parents. They would later be shipped to the Pacific theater to intercept radio signal communications, translate captured battle plans, interrogate prisoners of war, and even crawl toward enemy lines to spy on Japanese commanders.
Major Gen. Charles Willoughby, chief of military intelligence for Gen. Douglas MacArthur, estimated the Nisei shortened the Pacific war by two years and saved a million American lives.
Yet their contributions are unknown to most Minnesotans.
From his daughter's home in Savage, just a few miles from the site of the former Camp Savage language school, 94-year-old Seiki Oshiro has been trying to preserve this piece of history. He helped create a database of more than 8,000 names of those who, like him, served in the Military Intelligence Service (MIS).
The irony is that many of these men and women, or their families, were incarcerated because the U.S. government deemed them a national security threat due to their Japanese ancestry.

"I think about that all the time: Why would you fight for a country that put you in a prison camp?" said Kimmy Tanaka, program supervisor at Historic Fort Snelling. who has been educating visitors about this often-missed chapter.