During World War II, Japanese citizens in the United States were targeted through widespread discrimination, suspicion, and fear following the attack on Pearl Harbor. The U.S. government forcibly relocated and interned around 120,000 Japanese Americans, most of whom were U.S. citizens, in internment camps under the pretext of national security. This unjust treatment stemmed from racial prejudice and wartime hysteria, leading to significant loss of property, civil liberties, and personal dignity for those affected.
If born in the US, Japanese Americans are American citizens. They have all the rights as every person born in America.
Japanese American citizens
Japanese Americans
It was the Executive Order which ordered Americans of Japanese descent and Japanese citizens living in America into internment camps.
The policy towards Japanese-American citizens was to place them into Internment (Concentration) Camps .
due to ww1
Japanese and Japanese-Americans, many of whom were US citizens.
The US and Canada interned their Japanese citizens in horrible camps illegally. The Supreme Court determined the US Government had broken the constitution when they interned the Japanese people, took their homes and possessions and shut down their businesses.The camps were not suitable or habitable for humans to live in. They were kept in these camps until up to a year after the war was over. An excellent book to read is Farewell to Manzanar to learn what the Japanese went through and how mistreated they were when they were innocent citizens.
If born in the US, Japanese Americans are American citizens. They have all the rights as every person born in America.
The Japanese
Japanese American citizens
A person who is born in the US is automatically a citizen even if his parents are not. Many Japanese had immigrated and some of them had become citizens, but they had children born here.
hiroshima and nakasaki.
Japanese Americans born in America are American citizens. The term Japanese Americans means that they are of Japanese decent but live in the US.
Japanese Americans
None. The Japanese were not targeted during the Holocaust.
Don't believe the first person! The real answer is Japanese who lived in America. There are 2 types of Japanese-Americans; Nisei, and Issei. Issei are Japanese citizens who immigrated to the US, while the Nisei are Japanese who were born into the US. J3LLYF1SH NEVER LIES!