notes: japanese americans, african americans, mexican americans, jewish americans

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Notes: Japanese Americans, African Americans, Mexican Americans, Jewish Americans WWII: Big Question: Is there such a thing as a “good” war?

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Page 1: Notes: Japanese Americans, African Americans, Mexican Americans, Jewish Americans

Notes:

Japanese Americans, African Americans,

Mexican Americans, Jewish Americans

WWII:Big Question: Is there such a thing as a “good” war?

Page 2: Notes: Japanese Americans, African Americans, Mexican Americans, Jewish Americans

Japanese Interment Camps

Japanese Americans

Page 3: Notes: Japanese Americans, African Americans, Mexican Americans, Jewish Americans

Fearing that Japanese Americans would be disloyal to the US, President Roosevelt ordered all people of Japanese ancestry living on the West Coast into internment camps

These camps were located in deserts, and living conditions were harsh

Families were forced to live in flimsy barracks without running water

Despite these injustices, Japanese American men volunteered for military service

The Japanese 442nd Regiment earned more medals than any other army brigade in US History

Japanese Americans

Page 4: Notes: Japanese Americans, African Americans, Mexican Americans, Jewish Americans

900,000 African Americans served in the military during WWII

They were trained in segregated camps and initially assigned to noncombat jobs

Eventually they were allowed to participate in combat, where units such as the Tuskegee Flyers became known for their skill and courage

At home, 2 million African Americans helped the war effort by working in defense plants

African Americans

Page 5: Notes: Japanese Americans, African Americans, Mexican Americans, Jewish Americans

Many Mexican Americans served with distinction in the military, some earning the Congressional Medal of Honor.

However, Mexican Americans still faced prejudice in the armed forces and at home

The Bracero Program, designed to increase food production, allowed farmers to hire Mexican workers to pick crops, usually for low wages

Mexican American workers at defense plants moved into areas called barrios

Zoot suiters became targets for attack by white sailors and soldiers in Los Angeles in 1943

Mexican Americans

Page 6: Notes: Japanese Americans, African Americans, Mexican Americans, Jewish Americans

Jewish Americans were deeply concerned about the anti-Semitism that swept Germany before and during WWII

Refugees, fleeing Hitler’s terrible persecutions, found few countries that would accept them

At first the US refused to increase immigration limits for German Jews

Eventually, FDR established the War Refugee Board, which rescued 200,000 Jews from the Nazis

Jewish servicemen saw firsthand the horrors of the death camps

Jewish Americans