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Essay On Japanese Internment

706 Words3 Pages

Japanese Internment
Imagine losing your house, business, car, freedom, everything you have ever owned, for a crime you did not commit. That is what happened to Japanese Americans in the 1940’s, these people were forced out of there homes, and sent dingy barracks surrounded by tall, barbed wire fences. Although several causes led to this unrighteous internment and its negative effects, it could have been averted if the U.S. (as a government and as a nation of individuals) had acknowledged that they had done no wrong. Bill Shishima was a normal eleven year old boy who lived his day to day life like a normal person. He played baseball after school with his friends, and with his extra pennies he bought comic books. Then Bill’s life drastically changed after President Franklin Delano Roosevelt signed executive order 9066 which had Bill, and his family carted away into internment camps. The beginning of the idea of internment camps began on December 7, 14941, Pearl Harbor which launched the U.S. into “World War II”. Pearl Harbor began a raging fire of prejudice and racism. February of …show more content…

The media is what got the people ramped up which would eventually lead to FDR signing Executive Order 9066. Executive Order 9066 is what sent all Japanese Americans to the internment camps. However if FDR did not sign it, it could result in his impeachment because of how the media demonized Japanese Americans. What white people could have because they have the power to make change is that they could have gone to the churches where they were being taken or hide them. Japanese American’s could have not gone to the church, but they would be then beaten and taken to the camps anyway. The internment of Japanese Americans was an atrocious event, it could have been avoidable, but it happened, that event will go down in history as one of the most heinous actions the United States have ever

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