Anti Japanese Internment

Improved Essays
The attack on Pearl Harbor took place on December 6th, 1941– 17 years after the Immigration Act of 1924– when Japanese fighter planes attacked American Naval bases in Honolulu, Hawaii (History.com Staff). Out of guilt of association, 110,000 Japanese-Americans, regardless of their citizenship were sent to internment camps under president Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s Executive order 9066. Aggravated by the war, Anti-Japanese movements reached its highest point during this period, with citizens fueling their misdirected hatred and suspicion onto American citizens who happened to be of Japanese descent. At the camps, the Japanese were deprived of their basic human rights and most importantly, they were treated as second hand citizens in order to

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