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Everyone in America was suddenly afraid of innocent Japanese Americans. They became outcasts with little money and no one willing to help. Soon the US government forced all Americans of Japanese descent to go into concentration camps, miserable places where they were forced to stay. They were in the camps for many year (for more information try reading Farewell to Manzanar) and once they were out they were still strongly discriminated against.
Japanese-Americans
Native Americans didn’t adopt European dress unless they were forced to.
When pearl harbor happened the USA decided that they needed to help the other allied countries fight in world war II!
Well it abolished slavery.. It said that people could be forced to work if they committed a crime.
See website: Japanese-American internment
Japanese American in Hawaii were not forced into internment camps following WWII because Hawaii in the 40's did not seem that important to the states. The government was more worried about the main land.
It was the forced relocation by the US of the Japanese Americans~Sarah
Internment camps
Japanese Americans had to be forced out from their homes, cities and businesses and sent to relocation camps.
FDR (Franklin Delano Roosevelt) signed a executive order that would put the Japanese Americans (most were loyal to the US, actually) in the internment camps.
Presumably this refers to Japanese-Americans who were forced into internment camps.
The internments were motivated by the fear of covert Japanese attacks on the mainland United States, and by outbreaks of public hostility toward Japanese-Americans.
All of the above. Apex
"Japanese-American internment" where US citizens sere forcibly relocated into what was euphemistically referred to as "War Relocation Camps" : Executive Order 9066 .
Japanese Americans were forced to sell or abandon their homes, businesses, and possessions before being sent to internment camps during World War II. They were also required to report to assembly centers where they were temporarily held before being transported to the camps.
Japanese and Japanese Americans living on the US west coast were placed in internment camps on the claim that spies and sabatouers could be hiding among them. Since Japanese and Japanese Americans living in Hawaii and in the US east of the Mississippi were not forced into camps, and since no American citizens of German or Italian descent were placed in internment camps, the actual reason is more likely related to racial stereotypes and anti-Japanese hysteria.Read more: Why_were_Internment_camps_set_up_for_Japanese_Americans