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The people at Manzanar faced several difficulties. As an internment camp for Japanese Americans, the facilities were always overcrowded. At times, there were both food and water shortages as well. There was also a lot of animosity between the Japanese Americans and the U.S. servicemen that were assigned to the camp.
idk but japanese food is very good better than chinese
Japanese internment was obviously immoral, but internees did receive free health care (including free glasses and dentures if they needed them), were mostly treated humanely, and received decent portions of food daily.
No, Olive Garden does not serve Japanese food. It is an Italian-American eatery that serves Italian-American dishes, such as spaghetti, pasta, and steak.
I think that bottlenose dolphins serve humanity as food just in China and Japanese, because they are the only ones that kill them. And eat them.
Cuase Japanese people want to share their foods which helps everybody to try one.
most camps served the Japanese fruit syrup poured over rice, stew, and organ meats such as kidney, heart and liver.
food
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.
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.
nothing except old rags and cushions. that's a mean answer... what about clothes, are you saying the Japanese are a dirty people?? i happen 2 b Japanese and they could only carry what they can with their hands they packed clothes and toiletries, blankets and food the children couldn't bring toys the farmers also brought seeds
Animal food in Japanese is..... Esa