What Are The Changes In Farewell To Manzanar

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Living in Manzanar, Jeanne had to go through a lot. Whether it be death, fighting, or family issues, there was always something going on .The novel, Farewell to Manzanar, by Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston and James D. Houston , includes several tragic or difficult circumstances. Difficult circumstances can make a novel so much more interesting, conveying different emotions, and really emphasizing hardships and struggles in the storyline. In Farewell to Manzanar, tragic circumstances really gave the reader insight on what Jeanne and her family had to go through during her life. The most difficult circumstance in Farewell to Manzanar is being put in the camp due to its effect on Jeanne’s family, how it changed people, and how it affected people of …show more content…

Being taken away from their home and put in a camp really took its toll on Jeanne and her family. Before everything happened, Jeanne and her family were very close, and they loved eachother very much. When put into Manzanar, they slowly began to drift apart. A lot of their problems stemmed from mealtimes. “Before Manzanar, mealtime had always been the center of our family scene.”(Houston and Houston 35). The family was separated when they ate. Most of the children would sit with each other in one area, parents in another. Younger boys would go to as many mess halls as they could, seeing how much food they could possibly eat. After a few weeks, Jeanne and her family gradually stopped eating together, which put a strain on how close they were. Being in Manzanar majorly affected Jeanne and her …show more content…

They were put into internment camps due to Americans believing that they were all dangerous. This was because of Pearl Harbor. It made Japanese Americans feeling like they were all at fault, when they clearly were not. When it all started, anyone of Japanese descent was terrified to be taken to a camp, or worse. They were being arrested left and right, sometimes for things they didn't even do. “Five Hundred Japanese Families lived there then, and FBI deputies had been questioning everyone, ransacking houses for anything that could conceivably used for signaling planes or ships ar that indicated loyalty to the Emperor.”(Houston and Houston 7). Papa ended up getting arrested for delivering oil to Japanese submarines offshore. Manzanar made most people there feel like prisoners, or like they were animal in a cage. They were not treated well, had poor living conditions, and they faced daily discrimination. Many people of Japanese ancestry were affected by