The United States had the Japanese in camps across the nation but none were sent to Japan.
They never left the US.
The U.S. sent Japanese Americans to Internment camps, right after Pearl Harbor, so they could keep an eye on them.
The thinking was that among the population of Japanese Americans on the west coast there had to be spies, so the government collected everyone and put them in the camps. The people lost farms, homes, and businesses in the process. It wasn't right that the government did this.
because, they were scared that they could start building concentration camps and send people in their
During World War II, anti-Japanese sentiment was high in the United States. Many Americans feared that these Japanese-Americans were spies for Japan. Everyone was afraid after the Japanese strike on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. Most of the population believed that the Japanese-Americans could send inside information to the Japanese and allow for another attack on United States soil. President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066 to sent the Japanese to the camps. However, the Japanese weren't the only ones to be sent to Internment Camps by the United States. Some German-Americans and Italian-Americans were also sent to camps.
he made camps for Jews where he starved them, put them in a gas chamber, tourtured, invaded their homes just to send them to the camps, killed Jews, separated families, etc.
They were sent to concentration camps ...
It was an unanimous decision by the United Nations counsel.
no mother ******
no mother ******
May 1940 in a big load but hitler did send jews to camps as early as 1933 but none of them were killed