SAISE Summary – US internment camps during WWII Analysis – not much taught in our schools about US internment camps, taught about German and Japanese camps, US had many camps/detention centers – some were almost as bad as the German concentration camps, not called concentration camps – had a negative connotation – camps sounded better, number varies in research 24 – 30, Seagoville most unusual camp run by INS, set up like a college campus, had dorms, had many luxuries, had more freedom than those which held only men, had hospital, rec hall, library, allowed gardening, farming and many outside activities, still a prison as evidence by barbed wire fence and guards, was a women’s reformatory prior to WWII, able to cook and grow own food, Crystal City, Texas family internment camp - a prison, more freedom than other camps, largest camp in country, housed whole families, were able to grow & cook own food, whole families traded for “more important” American prisoners in Germany & Japan, had…
The internment camps during World War 2 was seen as necessary, positive and needed to those who were not interned because of the Pearl Harbor Bombing in 1941, which was the hegemonic narrative. Many euphemisms were used to disguise the truth behind the interment of the Japanese-Americans like the words camp, opportunities and more. The place where Japanese-Americans were interned was anything but a camp, it was where they experienced no happiness or fun. It was simply a place where the Japanese- Americans were segregated from others and treated as prisoners who had to be locked in and constantly watched with machine guns being pointed at them. In When the Emperor was Divine, Otsuka demonstrates how the internment camps had psychologically damaged and traumatized everyone from how the girl starts to become distant with her family, the woman breaking down trying to cope with…
The putting of the Japanese Americans in these camps due to their background was a horrible…
The Japanese Relocation speech covered how the Japanese were treated, what their daily life was inside of an internment camp, and some of the features that came along with living there. The people were served free food, housing, and they even conjured up a community government. The President made it sound like living there was not that bad. On the other hand he explained his reason for why he ended up placing Japanese into internment camps. Later in the speech he states “The Japanese's were within a stone's throw of a Naval air base, shipyards, and oil wells, Japanese fishermen had every opportunity to watch the movement of our ships” (Document A). This statement proves that the Japanese could have been spying on us at any moment so the President took preliminary precautions to ensure that it would not happen. His decision to put them in internment camps was not only justified, it was also warranted and correct.…
In america in the 1940’s japanese americans were put into internment camps. This can be compared to the salem witch trials in 1642. A similar comparison to the salem witch trials would be what america did to the mexican americans in 1930’s. Though there can be many similarities there can also be many differences between these three events. In this essay i will discuss the similarities between each other and also the differences.…
Describe the everyday experiences had by both prisoners and guards in POW camps. Compare the experiences of Australian POWs in German and Japanese camps.…
In Corrie’s book The Hiding Place it offers a more personal view into the concentration camps in Germany and all her personal experiences along the way. It offers a direct view into her thoughts and emotions and being able to imagine it so clearly the state of the camps she went to. You feel all of her pain and see it all through her eyes with how clearly she explains it. The state of the camps being so dirty, sleeping on rotten beds crowded with people, and even in the middle of the night the person next to you life slips away by morning. It is very sobering how real it all feels even to the reader. Corrie Ten Boom and her whole family went off to the camps for keeping Jews safe and out of her whole family she was the only one that survived. It is a very sobering book to read indeed, you feel all the pain, anxiety and feel all of the fear she experienced.…
Japanese internment during WWII was justified because America feared attacks. “The West Coast was a combat zone”(government newsreel). Because of the recent Pearl Harbor attack, there was much fear of another attack. If the Japanese were to attack again, it was uncertain how the Japanese-Americans would react. They could either side with the US and fight against them, or join their ancestry and join the Japanese. After the attack, major portions of the Pacific Fleet was crippled, and the West Coast was exposed. There were more than 115,000 Japanese-Americans living along the coast. “...racial group, bound to an enemy nation by strong ties of race, culture, custom, and religion along a frontier vulnerable to attack constituted a menace which…
In George Takei’s interview he states,”...we had to take loyalty tests, as if moving away to a camp far away from our home, wasn’t enough to prove that we were.” The purpose for the Japanese internment camps was the fear of being attacked. The Americans were skeptical of the Japanese because they had just bombed America on Pearl Harbor. In the Holocaust documentary it says that people were killed by gas chambers and mass-burnings. When the Nazis got bored they would kill randomly and have random roll calls for hours. This tells me that the purpose of the concentration camps was hate. Finally, the Nazi concentration camps were also known as “death camps”. This proves that the Nazis wanted to kill the Jews and anyone who they felt weren't worthy of being included in the Hitler’s “master…
In many parts of America, there have been the controversy of who should be considered American. After listening to “Who is an American?” podcast by LatinoUSA, it brought attention to many listeners like myself of what it is meant to be an American. As stated in the podcast, “as identity begin to continue to evolve, many are left out of the picture”, in other words, there are many identities that may once been a part of a specific culture, but as time progress, they may not affiliate themselves with that culture anymore. A great example would be China and Taiwan. Taiwan was once part of China; however, they decided to separate themselves from China and become a country themselves, yet speaking…
At the beginning of World War II, there were 23,278 Japanese living in Canada. Of these, 14,119 were Nisei (second-generation Canadian born), 3,159 were naturalized as Canadian citizens, and 6,000 were still Japanese citizens when all suspected Japanese-Canadians were branded as ‘enemy aliens’ after Japan’s attack on Pearl Harbour. The War Measure ACT shortly came after giving the government authority to detain or remove any suspected people of having a Japanese descent. The Canadian government took the Japanese community from their homes and treated then harshly during their time in the camps.…
World War II is looked upon with greatness for our nation due to the success of defeating the Japanese, but many fail to realize what we did the innocent ones living within the United States. Similar to the Germans during World War I, America had built concentration camps of their own. (“Japanese-American Internment”) Nisei, also known as Japanese-Americans, were imprisoned in these camps. (“Japanese-American Internment”) What happened to the Japanese-Americans during World War II and why? What kinds of challenges did Japanese-Americans face during, and after being in the concentration camps?…
Along with concentration camps there were also a few death or extermination camps. These types of camps were used to “exterminate jews” (Extermination Camps). Few people in these camps came out alive. They were tortured and worked more than the regular concentration camps. Death camps were much worse than concentration camps because people were sent there not to just be held prisoner but to be killed.…
Internment camps and barbed wire fences. Japan bombed Pearl Harbor and America went into fight or flight, they put all Japanese in an internment camp to stop them from having any connections with the Emperor and trying to sabotage America until the war was over. Internment camps and concentrations camps weren't made for the same thing because, Germany was prejudice against the jews and put them in concentration camps out of hate, Nazi concentration camps and Jewish internment camps are not essentially the same thing because, America responded to an attack not out of hate, Japanese had more freedom, and the camps were made for two different things.…
According to Joseph G. Peterson (2012), “Several died the day the bomb was dropped. Some lived six months after the explosion but died anyway. They were all lost. It was so long ago, young man. To you it is a history story. To me it is my life.” This quote that many people died during WWII including the axis power living in the states. The cause of this came from Japanese attacking Pearl Harbor on December 7. Thousands of enemy alien were deported to internment camps and some families even got separated. During WWII internment camps were temporary prison camps for those who were considered “enemy aliens,” including Japanese-Americans, German-Americans, Italian-Americans, and all their relatives living in the United States. Japanese-American…