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Similarities Between The Holocaust And Japanese Internment

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There are many awful situations that happen and people in this world. We have poverty, drug abuse, domestic violence, climate change, kidnapping, sex trafficking, the willow project, possible wars like with Russia and Ukraine and honestly so much more and not just in the present but also in the past too. For example, the Holocaust and Japanese internment these two situations were two of many awful situations that have happened in this world but these two are so much worse and quite similar to each other. Both of these situations were during World War II, the Holocaust was a systematic murder of Europe's Jews in 1933. This systematic murder was runned by the Nais with their leader Adolf Hitler who made this whole idea and brought it to life, …show more content…

During the Japanese internment during WWII, Japanese people were taken from their homes and relocated to relocation Camps. Before this, though, they were placed in horse stables stuffed with many people and with barely any room just like how the Jews were placed in ghettos and then placed in camps. These camps the Japanese were placed in were similar to the camps the Jews were placed in because not only the similarities but also because in the article “Japanese Relocation during WWII by National Archives” it states “Some people refer to the relocation camps as concentration camps”. Some Japanese people felt like they were placed in concentration camps just like the …show more content…

Just like the jews during the Holocaust they were displaced from their homes so then they could be placed in ghettos, concentration camps, gas chambers, etc.. For example in the article Introduction to the Holocaust by The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum it states “The Germans and their collaborations created ghettos, transit camps, and forced labor camps in order to keep Jews grouped closely together during the war years.”. For the Japanese people that wasn’t really the case. They never got put in a gas chamber but in similar situations as ghettos and concentration camps. In the article it states “President Roosevelt, as commander-in-chief, issued the Executive Order 9066, which had the effect of relocating all persons of Japanese ancestry, both citizens and aliens, inland, outside of the Pacific military zones” (National Archives,p. 1). The president of the United States chose to make a legal order to be able to take further action leading to the displacement of Japanese people from their homes. By being taken from their homes and brought to camps and staying there an uncertain amount of time it could possibly leave the Japanese people with nothing to come back to. Both these pieces of evidence help illustrate the similarity that happened during this time and how both targeted groups were taken and placed

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