Japanese Internment Camps

1661 Words7 Pages
Japanese Internment Camps The bombing of Pearl Harbor by Japan on December 7, 1941 is a dark day for American history. This day affected all Americans but even more so for the Japanese. This day marks the beginning of the worst period of history of racial prejudice that Japanese Americans would ever experience in the United States. Though the Executive Order 9066 signed by President Roosevelt it gave permission to create relocation camps and put any Japanese American in the camps in order to ensure the safety of the United States during war. In the process of relocating the government removed all rights and freedoms of the Japanese. Though these internment camps Japanese had to live though the horror of imprisonment. Understanding why internment…show more content…
There was a lot of hostility towards the Japanese. This movement was mostly motivated due to anti- Asian prejudices. “These attitudes were fueled by the threat of nomic completion, as evidenced by the passage of alien land laws to slow the progress of Japanese in agriculture, as well as perceived social and cultural differences” (NG 12). Many Americans felt that the Japanese were not able to adapt with the European- American culture. Many Americans began to show hostility towards Asian immigrants; “Japanese were stereotyped as being part of the “Yellow Peril”, an image in which hordes of Asians threatened to invade and conquer the United States” (NG 8). Racial prejudices began to take over and more Americans began to see Japanese as outsiders and strangers who could be threatening the livelihood of the United States. All these factors lead to the internment camps relocating about 120,000 Japanese…show more content…
Announced to the public on November 19144, it was decided that they would remove the exclusion order. They made this process a slow one based on they still weren’t sure if they trusted the Japanese. When the Japanese returned to their homes after the war they were not welcomed. Many of the locals residents were still very much anti- Japanese. With having few resources many Japanese had a hard time getting their lives back together. They had difficulties finding work and housing for their families. Some churches took in the refugees giving them temporary
Open Document