u.s. internment of japanese americans in wwii

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U.S. Internment of Japanese Americans in WWII Primary Source Analysis

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U.S. Internment of Japanese Americans in WWII. Primary Source Analysis. in·tern·ment n . 1. The act of interning or confining, especially in wartime. 2. The state of being interned; confinement. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: U.S. Internment  of Japanese  Americans in WWII

U.S. Internment of Japanese Americans inWWII

Primary Source Analysis

Page 2: U.S. Internment  of Japanese  Americans in WWII

in·tern·ment  n. 1. The act of interning or confining,

especially in wartime.2. The state of being interned; confinement

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Public notices were posted announcing that all Japanese Americans – even those with as little as 1/16th Japanese blood – had 48 hours to sell their property and possessions and gather at assembly points.

Civilian exclusion order #5, posted at First and Front streets, directing removal by April 7 of persons of Japanese ancestry, from the first San Francisco section to be affected by evacuation.

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Farmers and business owners, forced to sell their interests far below market value, suffered financial losses estimated in the billions of dollars.

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Japanese residents at Civil Control station for registration

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Residents of Japanese ancestry awaiting the bus at the Wartime Civil Control sta., San Francisco, Apr. 1942

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Camps were in remote, desolate areas; some were hastily assembled on Native American reservations, without prior agreement or consultation. Surrounded by fences with barbed wire, armed guards were stationed in watchtowers with orders to shoot to kill anyone who attempted to escape.

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Each family was issued a number, instructed to bring only what they could carry and then herded onto crowded trains to be transported to internment camps.

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Anonymous Poem Circulated at the Poston Camp Poem from University of Arizona Library

THAT DAMNED FENCEThey've sunk the posts deep into the groundThey've strung out wires all the way around.With machine gun nests just over there,And sentries and soldiers everywhere. We're trapped like rats in a wired cage,To fret and fume with impotent rage;Yonder whispers the lure of the night,But that DAMNED FENCE assails our sight.

We seek the softness of the midnight air,But that DAMNED FENCE in the floodlight glareAwakens unrest in our nocturnal quest,And mockingly laughs with vicious jest.

With nowhere to go and nothing to do,We feed terrible, lonesome, and blue:That DAMNED FENCE is driving us crazy,Destroying our youth and making us lazy.

Imprisoned in here for a long, long time,We know we're punished--though we've committed no crime,Our thoughts are gloomy and enthusiasm damp,To be locked up in a concentration camp.

Loyalty we know, and patriotism we feel,To sacrifice our utmost was our ideal,To fight for our country, and die, perhaps;But we're here because we happen to be Japs.

We all love life, and our country best,Our misfortune to be here in the west,To keep us penned behind that DAMNED FENCE,Is someone's notion of NATIONAL DEFENCE!

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Japanese American kids at school in an internment camp. Every single day they started school with the pledge of allegiance.

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A Japanese family returns home to find their garage vandalized with graffiti and broken windows in Seattle on May 10, 1945

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Congress passed the Civil Liberties Act of 1988. Popularly known as the Japanese American Redress Bill, this act acknowledged that "a grave injustice was done" and mandated Congress to pay each victim of internment $20,000 in reparations.