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Japanese American Internment

Submitted by craziblades on June 15, 2005

Category: American History
Words: 903 | Pages: 4
Views: 284
Popularity Rank: 25,665
Average Member Grade: N/A (Add a Comment / Grade this Paper)

What was the Japanese American internment?

• In 1941, Japan bombed Pearl Harbor, a U.S. military base. “Many Americans already disliked the Japanese as a result of racism when the Japanese were being used for cheap labor.”1
• As a result “120,000 Japanese men, women, and children were sent to detention camps.”1 They were forced away from their homes, schools, and businesses under the pretense of protecting the American citizens.
• “The FBI investigated alleged charges of conspiracy, but couldn’t find any evidence against the Japanese. The information was suppressed by the government.”1 This information wasn’t released for years after the internment.
• “Families did start being released in 1943 after the Japanese started challenging the internment in the Supreme Court.”1 Once the war was over in 1945, there still were many Japanese American families being held in detention camps.







How were the Japanese removed from their homes?

• “After the Pearl Harbor invasion, the FBI rounded up 1,212 Issei (Japanese who moved to America from Japan), placing them in U.S. Justice Department Internment camps.”2 Many of the Issei sent away were religious leaders, school teachers, and doctors.
• “On February 19,1942, President Roosevelt signed executive order 9066, authorizing the Army to remove Japanese American and place them in designated military areas.”2 Many Families were given little notice, and the camps were far away from their homes so they had to leave all their personal belongings behind.
• “110,000 Japanese were sent to internment camps under executive order 9066, 2/3 of which who were American Citizens.”2 The Japanese were stripped of their rights and privileges shared with by American citizens.
• The Japanese American internment was the American concentration camp during WWII.






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