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The Japanese Internment in the United States started in 1942, during World War II.
it began in the year 1942 and ended in 1946
The Nazis did not plan to murder all prisoners in camps built before the Holocaust
Although the Japanese were the first to start the war in Asia on July 7, 1937 with their invasion of China, historians generally agree that September 1, 1939 was the start of the Second World War when Germany attacked Poland.
The Japanese attacked the US Fleet and airfields at Pearl Harbor. This was the start of war.
in ur dreams
The Japanese Internment in the United States started in 1942, during World War II.
The first reporters usually always told the truth as they saw it from day one. Just do a search on "1942 news clippings from the past" and start with Part 1. What kind of "truth" are you searching for?
The Japanese internment camps were sort of like special prisons for Japanese-Americans during World War II. The camps weren't very nice, nor was being imprisoned in them, but at the same time, the internees were not tortured or otherwise severely harmed. Still, it's not one of America's proudest moments. They were intended to keep Japanese-Americans on the West Coast from assisting the Japanese military if it ever invaded the USA. The Nazi concentration camps were special prisons that were initially meant to function a lot like the aforementioned internment camps. However, the Nazis didn't wait long to start doing terrible things to the internees, such as using them as slave laborers, performing medical experiments on them, or simply executing them. Unlike the Japanese internment camps, the Nazi concentration camps were intended primarily to get rid of any people that the government didn't like- Jews, Russians, Poles, Romany, homosexuals, political opponents, and so forth.
it began in the year 1942 and ended in 1946
The Japanese Americans were removed from the west coast of California and forced into camps so we could keep an eye on them. Towards the end of the war we allowed the Japanese-Americans return to their homes, even though they had to start completely over because they had to sell everything when they went to the camps. They also used the Nuclear bomb, the ultimate weapons of mass destruction. A bomb meant to take lives of inoccent people and not a battle type weapon. Since then the nuclear bomb has been banned in the 1968 Nuclear Non-Proliferation treaty, primarily for it's very long lasting effects. There a Japanese people who are still affected by the radiation in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. A criminal act that has yet to be judged.
The type of suffering in the holocaust was very devastating. Those who were captured were sent into internment camps (like the Japanese-Americans) and were cut off from everyday life, necessities, and sanitation. Life was miserable; those who weren't captured were killed and those that were lucky fled the country and had to leave their old life behind and start a new one.
because, they were scared that they could start building concentration camps and send people in their
My grandpa was interned when he was 9. His family did not wish to go back to California due to the racism and they had lost their home when they were forced to evacuate. Instead, they went to New Jersey because they were offered low paying jobs in factories. Many companies took advantage of the thousand of internees and their situations. Because the internees were forced to sell everything when they evacuated many had to start over completely and they did not wish to start over in the place that they had been kicked out of.
First Japanese production started in 1976
i guess it was the first person to read the newspaper on 22nd March 1933. the camps were not a secret, it was what was happening inside the camps that was the secret. A better question would be when did certain things start to happen inside the camps, but then you are entering a moral minefield as different people will think that different methods are appropriate and you would also be making a moral judgment on what happens in the camps today. Or you could ask when the camps changed to a policy of murder rather than punishment and rehabilitation.
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