The situation called for 110,000 Japanese Americans and Japanese who lived along the Pacific coast of the United States to be put into camps spread throughout the United States. Also 7,000 Japanese Americans and Japanese from Latin America were rounded up and transported to the US to the camps. These camps were active from 1942 to 1944.
In the Japanese internment camps, they let them live as close to a normal life as they could. They let them order products out of a Sears catalog, grow gardens, let them request the types of food they could eat, and other things to make them have the most "normal of a life" as possible while in containment. But, they were not allowed to leave, communicate with anyone outside the camp, or disobey the people who worked there.
By the documents I read, I conclude that no Japanese died in the two years in the camps in the United States. If someone get a document contrary to what I say with the number, I welcome to show it to us.
Yes it is true. Following the attack on Pearl Harbor, President FDR issued Executive Order 9066 which lead to the relocation of thousands of Japanese-Americans to internment camps. Though not as harsh as concentration camps set up by the Germans, people died and living conditions were rough.
the Japanese attack singpore during war 1 and war 2. they are cruel that they attack singpore. some people died during the war. what did Singapore do to the Japanese country? but at last the Japanese give up that they do not have enough bomb. fort canning is the place that the people died at that place.
During World War II, virtually all Japanese internment camps were terrible places. A telling statistic is this: Of all American soldiers in German POW camps, the percentage that died was just slightly above the normal death rate expected for that time period. - between 1% and 1 1/2%.The death rate for Americans in Japanese POW camps was a staggering 35%.
Barney Miller
2113 allied soldiers 1996 Japanese soldiers 4000 civilians
Chariots of Fire
It is not known exactly how many died on the actual walk but it is thought that during the walk and the four years internment at Bosque Redondo about 1/3 of the 10,000 died. It was a very traumatic experience for the Navajo people.
Yes, children were killed in internment camps.
None. The Japanese were not targeted during the Holocaust.
In total from both atomic bomb drops, around 215,000 people died during the atomic bomb droppings in 1945. 75,000 died in nagasaki and 140,000 died in Hiroshima.
2.12 Million Japanese soldiers died during WW2.
Japan lost approximately 85,000 men and Russia about 125,000 men during the war.