Japanese Americans
Japanese American Citizens.
They said they were a threat to the state and national security and all that stuff
The government set up camps during the Great Depression to help the unemployed.
In the concentration camps, Jews and everyone else marched around the camps.
to keep the undesirable element locked away from society.
They were basically concentration camps. The Nazi's first started moving or relocating Jews and others to different areas. Kind of the like what the Americans did to the Indians. These relocations camp soon where not just a new home to Jews they were their last homes. Many died relocating, being worked to death, and just being murdered because the Nazi's wanted to.AnswerThey were basically concentration camps. The Nazi's first started moving or relocating Jews and others to different areas. Kind of the like what the Americans did to the Indians. These relocations camp soon where not just a new home to Jews they were their last homes. Many died relocating, being worked to death, and just being murdered because the Nazi's wanted to.
the fear that Japanese-Americans might betray the U.S.
They said they were a threat to the state and national security and all that stuff
internment camps
The government set up camps during the Great Depression to help the unemployed.
In the concentration camps, Jews and everyone else marched around the camps.
Internment Camps were camps created by the United States government to house Japanese-Americans during the Second World War. Japanese-Americans were removed from their homes and forced into camps, for the government feared some were spies for the Japanese Empire.
Not anymore, but there were in the Second World War. They were known more commonly as internment camps during those times; the term concentration camp was created by the Nazis in the 1930's.
If you are asking about the Japanese Americans who were placed in camps in WW 2 yes they have been apologized to by the government and given some funds for what they lost. It never should have happened and no amount of money or apologies can give back what was taken away.
First segregation in ghettos, then relocation to work camps or outside of Germanies territories, then instead of relocating, the final solution.
Concentraion camps
The U.S. government put many Japanese Americans in internment camps
to keep the undesirable element locked away from society.