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Red Cross agencies and Displaced Persons bureaus from several of the victorious nations helped them to get strong and get back to their homes. In most cases it was fairly straightforward, but there were some persons who did not get back to their own homes until sometime in 1947. The biggest problem most of the returned prisoners of the Nazi's had was that they lost everything they owned except what was on their backs.

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Q: What happened to the people who had been interned after they were released from the internment camps?
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What exactly are internment camps?

1. In Britain most adult male enemy aliens were interned (in internment camps), in many cases for a few months only. British Fascists were also interned or held in prisons. 2. The US had similar policies, but in the case of the Japanese even people born in America by Japanese parents and naturalized Japanese were interned as well as actual Japanese citizens.


What happened to the Japanese people that lived in pearl harbor?

They got sent to internment camps


How did people in northern Ireland respond to the introduction of internment in1971?

The Protestants in Northern Ireland didn't mind much as hardly any Protestants were arrested. Internment was entirely biased and one-sided, with 98% of all those arrested Catholics. Catholic were 100% opposed to internment and fierce rioting swept the country as British soldier arrived to arrest people. The Catholics were generally mistreated during their arrests and so internment was not popular among Northern Irish Catholics. Some people who were interned are still bitter about it to this day.


How many german-americans were detained in camps during World War 2?

A little over 100,000 Japanese were held in internment camps.


What factors made the experience of interned japanese americans so difficult?

The Japanese Internment camps were so difficult because the Japanese people being kept there were American citizens. They weren't treated especially harshly, but the fact that Americans were being kept against their will was disturbing


What was an internment camp?

The Japanese Internment Camps were America's version of Concentration Camps for US citizens of Japanese ancestry. However we felt the term Interment was more "polite" than Concentration to describe the camps. There was little difference between them and Nazi Concentration Camps of the time, except that they were not also frequently Extermination Camps where inmates were deliberately executed en masse as in the Nazi camps.


How were the Japanese internment camps in Canada evidence of discrimination during World War 2?

they were interned because during ww2, Canada was at war with Japan and many canadians on the homefront felt that there were enemy aliens in British Columbia and thus wanted all Japanese people to be separated from the other sreggin.


What was the purpose of internment camps?

Internment Camps were used to confine and isolate people form the outside world.


Why were Japanese forced into internment camps?

The reasons are rather Un-American. The people of the government overreacted and wanted to round up all the Germans, Italians and Japanese to see if they were spies and keep them interned. They did not put the Germans and Italians into camps because famous people told the government people it would be unfair and impossible with the amount of Germans and Italians in the United States. No one spoke up on behalf of the Japanese. So they were interned unconstitutionally and unfairly. They could not understand the Japanese people had no allegiance to Japan and were not spies.


What is force relocation and imprisonment of people?

internment


Were there Japanese American internment camps on the east coast?

no only on the west coast because the most Japanese people living in the U.S. lived on the west coast because when the people came from Japan they didnt want to go all the way across the U.S. so they stayed on the east coast. They interned people in the east coast because that was where most of the Japanese people were and it would be easiest 8--------


Did people in internment camps starve?

No. The Japanese Internment camps were not hurtful, they simply isolated the Japanese from the rest of the country.