There were many differences between the Concentration Camps of Germany and the Internment Camps of the USA. “Concentration Camps of 1933-1939” it talks about the Concentration Camps Hitler created in Germany. However, in the article “Did the United States Put Its Own Citizens in Concentration Camps During WWII?” by Jane McGrath it talks about the Internment Camps created in the USA for the Japanese-Americans. While both of these articles describe life in a camp, such as a concentration camp or internment camp, the authors write about two different camps with different people and different issues that come about because of them. In the article “Concentration Camps 1933-1939” the topic of Jewish Concentration camps was disgusted. The people in concentration camps were forced to work with no reward or pay off …show more content…
After the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor, people were scared that the Japanese-Americans might try to hurt the United States further. The internment camps collected the Japanese-Americans in certain areas, but they were not used to kill them. Families were allowed to stay together, but their family activities changed immensely. Jobs in the internment camps were low paying and often the children earned nearly the same amount as their parents allowing the kids to believe their parents had less authority. The internment camps greatly disrupted the family hierarchy. “Although the Japanese-Americans staying in these camps tried their best to maintain the semblance of a normal life... family life suffered a blow,” Jane McGrath writes. The article “Did the United States Put Its Own Citizens in Concentration Camps During WWII?” informs it’s audience about the internment camps the United States build and gives us facts about why and how bad they