The prime minister was extremely worried about Australia, and with little regret, withdrew Australian troops from where the British were fighting, and although the British were furious, Australia stood their ground and brought the troops home to help defend Australia and Drive the Japanese back.
The Japanese Imperial Army had been expanding steadily since their entrance into the war. There were several aggressive actions undertaken by the Japanese which would have stricken fear into the Australians. The Japanese Bombed Darwin, Broome and several other North australian towns as well as invading many islands between Japan and Australia, includin PNG, ending with the kokoda campaign.
The Australians felt like they had been scarred by the Japnese. They just left it mostly behind them saying that it had happened and don't need to talk about it. That was a very tragic day for all Australians but they kept being strong.
Australians hated(no offence) Japanese because of the fact that they tried to capture Australia and Join the British in the Bid to over throw the Japanses
they were mad
The chrysanthemum on Japanese weapons has always been an insignia for the EMPEROR OF JAPAN and represents the loyalty that Japanese feel to the Emperor.
The US wanted to stay nuteral from ww2 because of their foreign policy. They didnt feel it was necessary to fight in the war. they were supplying both sides of the fight and because of this they ended up getting sucked into the war when the japanese bombed pearl harbor. basically the us wanted to stay isolated as long as possible
It was like hell.
In their history books it never happened. Neither did the Japanese military invasion and atrocities in China leaving millions dead. The negative events from 1933 - 1945 are mostly forgotten and not even taught to the current generation of Japanese students.
"How do you feel" - "Szitaka srakatuka madziara"
When schools were bombed in world war 2, children were scared. Many were upset their schools were destroyed because they held an attachment to their schools.
I live in Australia and its boiling hot.
Generally, it means the system of writing that is not phonetic in Japanese when in Western culture, but it definitely has some other meanings. Real Japanese scholars please feel free to edit/add. Hope I helped for the time being.
Retarted
Surrendering was not an option.
Few people are alive today that remember that attack. For people of today, it is history.
they were mad
Japanese children in the internment camps often felt confused, scared, and isolated. They were separated from their homes, schools, and friends, which caused feelings of disorientation and trauma. Many experienced a sense of injustice and discrimination.
The chrysanthemum on Japanese weapons has always been an insignia for the EMPEROR OF JAPAN and represents the loyalty that Japanese feel to the Emperor.
The people who immigrated might have felt happy because they were going to have a good new life or sad because they were being held as slaves.
coz they are asian