The conditions of the Japanese Americans in WW2 were very harsh. When people tried to escape, they were shot. Not only that, but they were in very remote, desertlike places, with nowhere to escape to. The food was awful-rice with a sweet, syrupy sauce. According to the Japanese, rice was to be eaten with salty food. Oh well, I guess.
Places where governments put there own people when its politically expediant. Both sides did it in WW2.
According to gentracer.org New York had 20 POW camps in WW2
Internment camps
There were 110,000 - 120,000 sent to the camps during WW2.
WW2.
No, the Japanese- Americans were not happy about the internment camps in WW2.
The liberation of the concentration camps did not impact WW2 at all. POW camps and slave labour camps were also liberated, servicemen were able to return to their units, but that was the limit of the impact.
After the attack upon Pearl Harbor that was commited without warning, the United States declared war on Japan. The citizens of America knew that there were Japanese - Americans living in the United States. They were worried that any one of the Japanese living in America could be a spy or a sabateur. To make sure that this did not happen president Roosevelt ordered that the Japanese - Americans be placed in relocation camps. Unlike the concentration camps in Europe, the relocation camps were more hospitable. The inhabitants of the camps were given appropriate quarters and were treated fairly, but were surrounded by a barbed wire fence with guards and towers.
Americans thought Japanese Americans were helping japan during ww2
Germany's concentration camps in WW2, although not all were used in that way when final solution went into effect.
WW2 from citizens to soldiers to concentration camps
Sadly there were 110,000 - 120,000 Japanese Americans sent to the internment camps during WW2.