Yes.
In Canada, in most parts, they worked on and built rail roads.
They really were much different Relocation Camps and Internment camps were the same thing just that relocation camps were the real camps and internment camps were where the Japanese Americans had to go before they made the relocation camps.
Yes, children were killed in internment camps.
Internment Camps were used to confine and isolate people form the outside world.
When the Japanese Canadians were sent to the internment camps, their property was sold by the government of Canada in order to fund the internment. After the war, most of the Japanese Canadians had nothing to return to in B.C. so they started a new life in other provinces.
1982
Canada: Canadian citizens of Japanese descent lived in the internment camps. I'm not too sure about the Americans :P
In Canada, in most parts, they worked on and built rail roads.
They really were much different Relocation Camps and Internment camps were the same thing just that relocation camps were the real camps and internment camps were where the Japanese Americans had to go before they made the relocation camps.
there are 39 diffrent Japanese internment camps
See website: Japanese-American internment camps.
Yes, children were killed in internment camps.
Yes, all internment camps are forced incarceration.
No, the Japanese- Americans were not happy about the internment camps in WW2.
Internment Camps were used to confine and isolate people form the outside world.
Japanese-American internment camps were established following the U.S. government's Executive Order 9066, which was signed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt on February 19, 1942. The camps began opening in the spring of 1942, with the first one, Manzanar, opening in March. By mid-1942, over 120,000 Japanese Americans had been forcibly relocated to these camps across the country. The internment lasted until the camps were closed in 1945.
When the Japanese Canadians were sent to the internment camps, their property was sold by the government of Canada in order to fund the internment. After the war, most of the Japanese Canadians had nothing to return to in B.C. so they started a new life in other provinces.