Japanese Internment Camps.
Japanese-Americans.
The Take Them To The Camps.
when the Japanese attacked peral harbor, the United States declared war on Japan. As a security means, all Japanese American citizens were brought to holding camps in the Arizona state.
They were denied their constitutional rights and detained without trial in remote camps Japanese-Americans living in California, Oregon, and Washington state were transported from their communities and sent to detainment camps in desolate areas, as they were perceived to be a security threat.
Because of Pearl Harbor.
All camps were technically concentration camps, generally the extermination camps were called 'death camps'.
To put all their "undesirables" in one place. Sort of like American Reservations for the Native Americans or American Concentration Camps for Americans of Japanese decent after Dec. 7, 1941 when the Japanese attacked the USA at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. Then, in January 1942, Germany decided to kill all the Jews they could get their hands on, and many of the camps, became sites of gassing and cremation of bodies.
What are the pros of the Japanese internment camps? to protect what the US saw as a 'threat' after pearl harbor was bombed
They were awfully ugly.
what does that mean?? internment camps were used in the US in the WWII time period for Japanese people because of the attack on peral harbor. The houses were called barracks, they were mostly makeshift and could house 3 to 5 families at a time.
See: Japanese American internment camps
Pearl Harbor!