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How Did Ww2 Affect Racial Relations

750 Words3 Pages

Racial Relations after World War II Racial relations have always been an issue throughout the world. The lack of trust and acceptance between races throughout the world is frightening. War is the primary factor of racial discrimination. If World War II had never occurred, the Japanese-Americans would have been able to live peacefully within the country without persecution. World War II has negatively impacted racial relations with Japanese- Americans through the attack on Pearl Harbor and the Japanese- American internment. After the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor, American citizens grew skeptical of the Japanese- Americans who resided within the Country. For instance, citizens feared their loyalty would lie with their ancestry. It was believed …show more content…

After the attack on Pearl Harbor, prejudice individuals began to convict the Japanese-Americans of attempting to sabotage the war efforts (“Japanese-American” n.pag.). Racial relations between the Japanese-Americans and the rest of America began to dissemble. The lack of trust between them initiated the wedge in their relationship. American Japanese found themselves conflicted after the U.S. entered World War II. Many of the Japanese- Americans had families who remained residing in Japan, so they found themselves conflicted between origin and residence. Many of the Japanese-American families had strong, negative, opinions about America during this time. A plethora of families went to America for work and money, then planned to return to Japan (Daniels 3). The Japanese-Americans had families who remained in Japan, so they found themselves struggling to defend their country while attacking their heritage. Secondly, Japanese-Americans became scapegoats for all of the setbacks that occurred during the War. Congress received a report that announced that, “The broad historical causes which shaped [the decisions to relocate and detain Japanese Americans] were race prejudice, war hysteria, and a failure of political leadership” (Muller n.pag.). After the U.S. entered the War, the Japanese-Americans were blamed for the mishaps that occurred during their war …show more content…

The internment violated the Constitution. First, basic freedoms were revoked from innocent citizens. The internment camps deprived the citizens of their liberty and kept them fenced in with barbed wire and armed guards. Families had to share a single-roomed, poorly build, barrack (Daniels 2). America was built on the foundation of the Constitution, and depriving American citizens of civil rights provided by the Constitution is hypocritical. Secondly, the property owned by the interned Japanese-Americans was taken away. When the Japanese-Americans were told that they would be relocated, they had to sell any property they had, and they had to entrust their neighbors and friends with their pets. They only property they were allowed to take with them was whatever they could carry (“Japanese-American Internment” n.pag.). If the citizens are being forced to live in internment, then their private property should remain under their

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