Only a few and they weren't even Japanese.
In the US, there were three types of "internment camp": WCCA Civilian Assembly Centers, WRA Relocation Centers, and the DOJ's Internment Camps. The Pacific coastal states of California, Oregon, and Washington had quite a few camps, but there were also camps in New Mexico, Texas, Idaho, Utah, Wyoming, Colorado, and Montana.See the related Wikipedia link listed below for more information:
After the tragic Pearl Harbor bombing, that brought the United States into the second World War, Americans began mistreating the Japanese residing here. All Japanese-Americans, including citizens, were all put into Internment camps. There were hundreds and hundreds of them, in an area as small as a square mile. They were not given proper bedding, food, or restrooms. This was a sad time for the Japanese-Americans. You may want to read the book "Manzanar". It is based off of a true story.
We were at war with japan and thought that they may be spying on the US.The Japanese Americans were sent to the relocation camps because the Americans suspected that there were spies in that particular group.
germany ____ No, actually in German-occupied Poland.
1. The Holocaust refers to the specific actions of the Nazis against the Jews, it is not a term for general mistreatment of a section of society. It is also not an interchangeable term for genocide, The Holocaust was one specific attempted genocide. 2. America felt the need to intern its population of Japanese origins for national security. 3. Even though the conditions were not acceptable; there was no intention to systematically kill the inmates.
i just don't know. ive looked and looked but i know that they found blocks of wood around the camps to make a traditional Japanese sandal called a geta.... that's about all
because after pearl harbor we found out japanese american spys gave them pictures and specs on pearl harbors dock and helped the japs bomb it. after that america didnt trust them and put them in containment camps.
because of what was found in them.
Korematsu v United States (1944) remains a profound case and precedent in the study of civil liberties and American Constitutional law. The chief significance was the Courts majority opinion that national security (against espionage) was a compelling interest enough that the use of internment was/is justified.
All the armies involved found so many of these camps, there was no single army or people who found out about this.
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She definitely knew the possibility. She knew that if she actually gets found out in the Secret Annex, then she could die in the concentration camps.