The United States thought that the Japanese was dangerous and were afraid they would attack again. It stunned everyone and the government thought the best solution was to relocate all of the Japanese immigrants. According to Document 4 the author states,
This order would protect them from people who might act out of anger towards the Japanese. Although this did not justify the reasoning behind the order for many people, it can be seen that there was a reasonable explanation behind it. The United States government did not create this order simply to be hostile towards Japanese-Americans. They did it with the rest of the country in mind. In this situation the benefits of internment camps outweighed the possible negative
President Roosevelt put Japanese internment into place in the February after the attack on Pearl Harbor. Titled as the Executive Order 9066 This order directly affected more than 110,000 Japanese men women and children based in the U.S., two-thirds of which were American citizens Japanese based in Hawaii however are exempted from this because the Japanese made up nearly 40% of the population and the economy would suffer too greatly if all had been imprisoned. Back in the states, especially out west in California, several Japanese families owned large farms and when the executive order is established these farms are essentially lost except for those that are bought from the central government
On December, 7th, 1941, Japan bombed Pearl Harbor. As a result the Americans decided to intern those of Japanese descent on the west-coast of the United States. The Japanese were uprooted from their homes and were relocated to internment camps where they would live their lives for the next 4 years. Japanese internment was a horrid act put upon those of Japanese ancestry in World War II, only using the common good as a reason to judge why the Japanese should be interned. The Civil liberties of the Japanese on the west-coast were more important than the common good because there was no valid evidence that the Japanese were planning an attack with their homeland.
They didn’t know if any of them were spies or helping Japan so they played it safe and put all Japanese citizens in internment camps. The Japanese were not happy about this at all. Many of the Japanese- Americans had lived in America for several generations. They worked so hard to get everything they own and he government tells them they have to sell it all and live in an
Japanese Internment Buses were taking people to an unknown destination. The buses were full of Japanese American men, women and children. They were all heading to internment camps. The event that caused this happened on December 7, 1941. On that day Japanese warplanes bombed an American naval base at Pearl Harbor.
Work Cited PBS. "THE WAR, Fighting for Democracy. " PBS.org. PBS, Sept. 2007. Web. 09
In 1939, World War II began with Germany invading Poland. Then, the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor on December 7th, 1941, bringing fear into the eyes of the American people. Americans were mistreating innocent Japanese-Americans who did nothing but live peacefully in the United States. As time went on, President Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066, which allowed the military to extract Japanese-Americans and other potential threats to the west coast of America to be held in internment camps. We should teach this history in schools across the nation, so none of this cruelty is ever perpetuated in America again!
Over a staggering 120,000 United States citizens were held captive during World War II. What was there crime? Being from Japanese ancestry. The Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. Many Americans were scared of another attack.
When you think of internment camps in World War II and the discrimination of an entire race, you probably think of the Nazi’s mass genocide of the Jewish people. However, not nearly as often discussed or taught, was the American discrimination of Japanese-Americans in the form of Japanese-American internment camps during World War II. Due to the terrible attack on Pearl Harbor, the American public became paranoid of another attack on American soil and as a result of this, war hysteria overtook the country. Anti- Japanese paranoia increased due to a large Japanese presence in the West Coast.
The United States Constitution consists of basic human rights granted to everyone in the country, which includes the First and Fourteenth Amendments. The First Amendment guarantees freedom of speech, religion, and press. The Fourteenth Amendment affirms that no state shall enforce a law that deprives a person of life, liberty, or property without due process. However, in 1942, Japanese Americans were deprived of these rights. Due to fear from the bombing of Pearl Harbor, many Japanese Americans were detained in internment camps or confinement places during wartime (“Japanese Internment,” 2007).
During WW2 American government and the Germans were taking foreign people and taking them to camps. The germans had no excuse to why they took the Jewish while we were trying to protect the Japanese Americans, and the Germans used force to take them as well. The internment camps from the U.S, and the concentration camps from germany are very different, the Germans used force, killed the Jewish, and America had a reason, provided common things like education and housing. First, The Germans used extreme force to get the Jewish, as well as separating a lot of the families from each other. In the Holocaust doucumentary “The residents were told to leave in a day and the rest were destoyied.
Desperation flows through the air like sea water as Japanese immigrants search for their new hope, America. Knowing little about the new land the Japanese travelled together and searched for work. As they shinned the web of status, the Japanese immigrants were met with disdain and hatred. Despite this, they continued to support their families, some able to create small businesses and become successful. Destruction was brought upon by the bombing of Pearl Harbor, fear and hysteria ran through America.
The internment of Japanese Americans during WWII was not justified. After Pearl Harbor, many Americans were scared of the Japanese Americans because they could sabotage the U.S. military. To try and solve the fear President Franklin D Roosevelt told the army in Executive order 9066 to relocate all Japanese Americans living on the West Coast. They were relocated to detention centers in the desert. Many of them were in the detention centers for three years.
Internment Camps vs. Concentration Camps Imagine sitting at home in your living room with your family, then all the sudden there is a loud bang on your front door. Your father gets up to answer the door and is drug out into the street by soldiers. You are told to gather everything you can carry and leave safety right away. You have no idea where you’re are going or what lies ahead of you. This happened to many innocent lives in Europe during World War II.