The Japanese-Americans didn't get lot or much money in WW2 during Peal Harbor Attack.
The Japanese Americans that were put in internment camps faced the racism of whites. They were afraid of the hatred of those around them that made threats.
Not anymore, but there were in the Second World War. They were known more commonly as internment camps during those times; the term concentration camp was created by the Nazis in the 1930's.
The Japanese were very badly treated in those internment camps. They were shipped to desert and mountainous areas with nothing but a horse stable to lay in sometimes with manure in it from the horses before them
Some of the Japanese internment camps in the United States during World War II were located in places such as Manzanar and Tule Lake in California, Heart Mountain in Wyoming, and Topaz in Utah. These camps were established to detain Japanese Americans, many of whom were U.S. citizens, following the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941. The internment policies were driven by wartime fears and racial prejudice, leading to significant loss and suffering for those affected.
The Japanese internment camps in the United States were largely dismantled and closed by 1945, after World War II ended. Many of the camps were demolished or repurposed in the years following the war, with some remaining structures being removed throughout the late 1940s and 1950s. Today, a few sites have been preserved as historical landmarks to commemorate the experiences of those who were interned.
Of the approximately 110,000 Japanese Americans who were relocated to internment camps during World War 2, 62% of them were American citizens. Half of those interned were children.
German concentration camps were mostly extermination or death camps designed to murder the inmates, primarily Jews. Some camps also sent out inmates to be used as slave labor. All the German camps were operated in total violation of international law and well outside all standard norms of behavior. The American camps were not "concentration" camps, but internment camps for Japanese, German & Italian nationals, as well as several thousand Japanese-Americans citizens and Japanese legal aliens from the west coast of the US. In accordance with international law, those foreign nationals from enemy countries (in the US when the war started) were interned in the camps only as long as the war lasted, and were freed at the end of the war. Unfortunately there are many myths and misconceptions about the relocation and internment of Japanese in the US. Japanese-American citizens and legal aliens were not relocated from Hawaii, the mid-west or the east coast of the United States. Only those living in the west coast areas were subject to this government action. Japanese-Americans were released from these camps based on various criteria, some well before the end of the war, others later near the end. Most of the Japanese-Americans that were interned the longest were from families that were unwilling to swear allegiance to the United States. Internment was based on the US government suspicion that many of the Japanese in America as legal aliens were loyal to Japan not the United States. In fact, a minority of those interned were vocally pro-Japanese and anti-American. Many Japanese-Americans volunteered to serve in the US military during the war. If they were currently interned, then they were permanently released to serve. The volunteer rates of those inside the camps was actually lower than from those Japanese-Americans outside the camps. In any event, it was not the policy of the US government to mistreat the internees. In fact the internees were generally well treated and cared for in almost all cases. The US court system had ruled in WW2 that it was legal for the government to take this action. Regardless, the Japanese-American citizens believed that the idea was wrong for them to have been sent to the camps in the first place. They petitioned the US government for compensation after the war. Eventually the US government apologized and paid some compensation to former internees, but the bitterness would remain for many.
The purpose of the Japanese-American Internment in concentration camps, not to be confused with the Death Camps of the National Socialist Party (NAZI) of Germany, was to protect the United States from internal sabotage from those within the Japanese American community who would be sympathetic to Japan, our prime enemy during World War II.
Japanese-Americans living on the US west coast were sent to internment camps. Those living elsewhere in the 48-states and in Hawaii were free to work and move about but were generally under suspicion and were often discriminated against by others.
they were put into camps were they had to live away from public for safety reason as the USA were paranoid of other attacks. They were not treated badly in these camp but just kept away from the publicThey were put in internment camps because the government thought there were spies. Only those Japanese and Americans of Japanese descent who lived on the West Coast of the United States were interned. The Japanese and Americans of Japanese descent in Hawaii were not incarcerated!
they were put into camps were they had to live away from public for safety reason as the USA were paranoid of other attacks. They were not treated badly in these camp but just kept away from the publicThey were put in internment camps because the government thought there were spies. Only those Japanese and Americans of Japanese descent who lived on the West Coast of the United States were interned. The Japanese and Americans of Japanese descent in Hawaii were not incarcerated!
If you mean those camps for weening kids off the internet then im not sure? i heard it on the news a while ago that china just invented those camps. so if that helps i dunno