A typical day in Japanese POW camp in World War II would have been one of deprivation. Many of the people held in those camps died of malnutrition and other diseases.
Japanese kamikazes
I would expect that all of the Japanese Americans that died were buried on US soil, they were, after all, American citizens. There may not be records compiled to calculate an actual number.
Japanese Americans were interned during World War 2 because some Americans feared they would be disloyal.Japan was urging Japanese Americans to act as spies. However, there was no evidence that any Japanese Americans had engaged in espionage or sabotage. During the entire war only ten people were convicted of spying for Japan and these were all Caucasian.Another factor was that white farmers were concerned about the competition from Japanese American farmers and saw internment as a way to get rid of their competitors.The US Government made amends through the Civil Liberties Act of 1988, when $20,000 per internee was paid out to individuals who had been interned or relocated, including those who chose to return to Japan. Some Japanese and Japanese Americans who were relocated during World War II received compensation for property losses, according to a 1948 law.
I tell someone to drop the bomb if I were president.Reasons:1. The world would still have no peace if the Japanese ruled.2. The evil Japanese would rule the world.3. Then the world wouldn't be in peace.4. Children wouldn't have education.There are many more reasons.
The only similarities there are, are that they were both rounded up and put in to camps. The Japanese were rounded up in the United States, because we believed that they were dangerous. The United States thought they would attempt acts of espionage. The Jews were rounded up all around Europe, and killed. I don't know of any deaths of Japanese during their incarceration. Six million Jews were killed during this time.
It would be the Germans and Italians along with the Japanese.
Japanese kamikazes
they went on with their lives because it would be a war crime to kill them
Kamikaze pilots would crash into their enemies for the good of their country during World War II.
The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour on December 7th 1941, would be the only motivation that the US would need during World War II.
During World War 2 it was often referred to as the 'meatball,' but it would not be politically correct to use the term today.
The purpose of the Japanese-American Internment in concentration camps, not to be confused with the Death Camps of the National Socialist Party (NAZI) of Germany, was to protect the United States from internal sabotage from those within the Japanese American community who would be sympathetic to Japan, our prime enemy during World War II.
The Japanese shared similar feelings to Hitler. Invade now, Think later. The Japanese wanted to invade the world with Hitler, so it would be common sense to think that they had a feeling of pure hatred toward the rest of Asia, and indeed the world.
There was a fear that Japanese/Americans, even second or third generation, would act as an internal threat to America during the second World War with Japan.
I would think during Japanese immigration into California in the early 1900's?
Halo isn't a world in Japanese so you would say Halo...
Japanese-Americans have always been a valuable part of any American war effort. During World War 1, they served as part of the All Japanese Company D unit, First Hawaiian Regiment of Infantry. Japanese Americans were a large portion of Hawaii's population during the time, and stepped forward to enlist willingly. They hoped their enlistment would lead to them gaining American citizenship. Sadly, this did not happen.