Allied civilians and possibly European Jewish refugees
The American government placed people of Japanese descent into internment camps for fear that they would be succeptible to acts of espionage.
1942 I think.
Under an Executive Order, Americans interred Japanese-Americans.
Japanese Americans were placed in internment camps during World War II primarily due to wartime fears, racial prejudices, and the perception that they posed a security threat after Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor. This decision was fueled by long-standing stereotypes and distrust towards people of Japanese descent, which were not similarly directed at German and Italian Americans, who were viewed as less of a threat due to their larger numbers and integration into American society. The internment was a result of a combination of hysteria and scapegoating, rather than evidence of actual disloyalty or espionage.
Concentration Camps and Japanese Americans were sent to internment camps. Many thousands of Jews were put to death in the camps - but be clear: this happened only in countries overrun by the Nazis, and is known as the Holocaust which, unbelievably, there are still people who deny that it ever happened.
Japanese
Japaanese Americans to keep them out of trouble
There isn't a consolidated online resource for finding the identities of Japanese people placed in internment camps. One would have to inquire with the Department of Justice or search through records of the War Relocation Authority.
The American government placed people of Japanese descent into internment camps for fear that they would be succeptible to acts of espionage.
502001
1942 I think.
1943
Japenese Americans
Japanese Americans were placed in American internment camps, during World War II.
Under an Executive Order, Americans interred Japanese-Americans.
See: Japanese American internment camps
Japanese Americans were placed in internment camps during World War II primarily due to wartime fears, racial prejudices, and the perception that they posed a security threat after Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor. This decision was fueled by long-standing stereotypes and distrust towards people of Japanese descent, which were not similarly directed at German and Italian Americans, who were viewed as less of a threat due to their larger numbers and integration into American society. The internment was a result of a combination of hysteria and scapegoating, rather than evidence of actual disloyalty or espionage.