Japanese American

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    Between 1942 and 1945, thousands of Japanese Americans, regardless of United States citizenship status, received orders to evacuate their homes and businesses. Sparked by rising fear and anxiety of the American people after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, a United States Naval base in Hawaii, the U.S. government relocated Japanese Americans to remote areas on the West Coast and in the south, isolating them in internment or relocation camps. With no actual evidence supporting the creation of…

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    Essay One The japanese- American internment was when many japanese citizens of the united states were moved into camps do to Pearl Harbor and World War Two, but war time panic wasn’t the only reason they were relocated. Prejudice played a big role in the americans. It played a big role because the americans thought that the japanese were sealing their jobs, they didn’t fit in, and they were unlike them. The first reason why prejudice played a big role in the japanese-American Relocation was…

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    Japanese-Americans’ Fight to Retain a Dual Identity During WWII Since the United States was founded in 1776, the nation has remained a country of immigrants, who journey to America in search of a promising future, freedom, and opportunity. Unfortunately, throughout the United States’ history racism and xenophobism have existed against immigrants. American citizens have exhibited hostility toward immigrants, in fear the newcomers will steal their jobs and threaten the prevalent culture of their…

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    Japanese-Americans were interned during World War II because after the bombing at Pearl Harbor in 1941, the majority of Americans used their fear of another Japanese attack to display an extreme level of prejudice. On February 19, 1942, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed and issued Executive Order 9066. This order called for the clearing and deportation of all Japanese Americans from military areas. According to Black, it was the Japanese citizens’ responsibility to follow the exclusion…

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    called “War Relocation Camps”. It’s where they forced 110,000 Japanese-Americans to live there. Oh, by the way, they weren’t actually for war relocation, it was for Japanese Internment. In the 1940s, Japanese-Americans were considered loyal to the United States. That was until “Japanese naval and air forces attacked the United States…

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    Roosevelt once famously called December 7, 1941, the bombing of Pearl Harbor, “a date which will live in infamy”, but the period following December 7, 1941, Japanese Internment, would be just as infamous. Pearl Harbor was a devastating event. Japan launched a massive air strike on Pearl Harbor, a naval base in Hawaii, killing 2403 American citizens and many more were wounded. The bombs sunk eight battleships, four naval vessels, three destroyers, and demolished three light cruisers. Japan…

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    wartime propaganda convincing themselves that the Japanese were animals instead of people. The American people began to believe the Japanese race was the “enemy” instead of the Axis powers. They had even convinced our own government to imprison its own citizens because of their race instead of their ideals. The internment of Japanese Americans encouraged racism in the U.S. because the wartime hysteria influenced the American people to think that the Japanese were the “enemy” and the government…

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    Mary was a 17-year old Japanese-American girl living in the United States with her family. She was born and raised in America and had her citizenship, but her parents did not. For all she knew all her life she thought she was just like every other Caucasian American that lived in that same country. She went to an American school, spoke fluent English, had American friends, had her citizenship and everything else that you would think she needed in order to be considered an American. She never had…

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    How the Government Justified Internment Camps for Japanese-Americans Many people forget what happened to the Japanese-Americans after the attack on Pearl Harbor, many may not care since it was so long ago. But, it is something that should never be forgotten. After the attacks on Pearl Harbor the United States feared that the Japanese-Americans that were in the United States were here as spies, and meant to do harm on American soil. With the United States at a heightened state of fear, they took…

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    President Roosevelt declared that the Japanese people are forced to be sent to internment camp. About 120,000 Japanese-Americans were sent to these camps by force. These camps were similar to prisons, the Japanese-Americans were forced to be sent to an area where it’s all fenced in with barbed wire so they never even have a chance to leave. They made these camps for the Japanese because they were sure that Japanese-American had a shy that would help the Japanese after the war. They didn’t want…

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