answersLogoWhite

0


Want this question answered?

Be notified when an answer is posted

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: Are there any Chinese internment camps that are still standing?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

How long were Jews in the internment camps for?

We're still in exile.


When we dropped the bomb on Hiroshima were the Japanese internment camps still in existant?

yes


Are concentration camps still used today?

Yes, concentration camps are still used today in some parts of the world, such as in China where Uighur Muslims are detained in internment camps. These camps have drawn international condemnation for their human rights abuses and violations.


Ways Japanese internment camps could have been avoided?

Japanese Internment camps were never a necessity. Based on a few Japanese people who hid a Japanese pilot, the entire population of Japanese Americans were convicted without a jury. Yet, Japanese Americans still continued to join the army, and go to fight for their country while their families were forced to live in internment camps. Historians agree this was a very dark time in American history.


Where were the Jewish people placed during World War 2?

Concentration Camps and Japanese Americans were sent to internment camps. Many thousands of Jews were put to death in the camps - but be clear: this happened only in countries overrun by the Nazis, and is known as the Holocaust which, unbelievably, there are still people who deny that it ever happened.


What year did the Japanese Internment stop?

The Japanese Internment Camps officially closed in March, 1946. Over 110,000 people of Japanese descent had been forced to live in the camps since 1942, when President Roosevelt issued Executive Order 9060 to imprison them. When it was over, Japanese American citizens were only given $25 and a ticket back to their homes.


What was the treatment of Japanese Americans during the World War 2?

The U.S. government put all Japanese-Americans in internment camps. They weren't treated well at all. Some internment camps housed these people in old horse stalls!!!!


What is the theme in Juliet S. Kono's poem Internment?

The theme of Internment could be the treatment of people during war and how it brings out the worst in people and governments as well. It could also be that through the dimmest and saddest of times, people still manage to find the best in their surroundings.


Are there still concentration camp's around the world?

Auschwitz and Dachau have been preserved as museums. Some parts of Buchenwald are still standing and are a memorial site.


How many camps were built during world war 2?

There were thousands of camps all over Germany a long time before they started building the true death camps. If you tap in concentration camps into any web search engine, it will show you a map of the camps. They were not all death camps, but were camps for Germans who were not Nazi's, and were used for, what they called 're-training'. IF you were released, and still able to think or even walk, you made sure you followed the rules and joined the 'Nazi Party' and kept your thoughts, to yourself in future.


If the people in the United States were using money still during World War 2 then what did the Japanese use for money in the internment camps during World War 2?

world war 1 killed the most because they had more people


What is the difference between an Japanese internal camp and a concentration camp?

The Japanese internment camps were sort of like special prisons for Japanese-Americans during World War II. The camps weren't very nice, nor was being imprisoned in them, but at the same time, the internees were not tortured or otherwise severely harmed. Still, it's not one of America's proudest moments. They were intended to keep Japanese-Americans on the West Coast from assisting the Japanese military if it ever invaded the USA. The Nazi concentration camps were special prisons that were initially meant to function a lot like the aforementioned internment camps. However, the Nazis didn't wait long to start doing terrible things to the internees, such as using them as slave laborers, performing medical experiments on them, or simply executing them. Unlike the Japanese internment camps, the Nazi concentration camps were intended primarily to get rid of any people that the government didn't like- Jews, Russians, Poles, Romany, homosexuals, political opponents, and so forth.