Title: JAPAN in WWII
1JAPAN in WWII
2Attack on Pearl Harbor
- DEC. 7, 1941 A single, carefully-planned and
well-executed attack removed the United States
Navy's battleship force as a possible threat to
the Japanese Empire's southward expansion. - America, unprepared and now considerably
weakened, was abruptly brought into the Second
World War as a full combatant. - So what happened?
3Pearl Harbor Attack
- July 1940 President Franklin D. Roosevelt had
transferred the United States Fleet to Pearl
Harbor as a deterrent to Japanese aggression. - The Japanese military was deeply engaged in the
war it had started against China in mid-1937, and
badly needed oil and other raw materials. - July 1941 The Western powers effectively halted
trade with Japan. A Pacific war was virtually
inevitable because the Japanese were desperate
and schemed to seize the oil and mineral-rich
East Indies and Southeast Asia
4Attack on Pearl Harbor
- November 1941 U.S. officials were expecting a
Japanese attack into the Indies, Malaya and
probably the Philippines. - The U.S. Fleet's Pearl Harbor base was reachable
by an aircraft carrier force. Japans planes hit
just before 8 am December 7th. - Within a short time five of eight battleships at
Pearl Harbor were sunk or sinking, with the rest
damaged. Several other ships and most
Hawaii-based combat planes were also knocked out
and over 2400 Americans were dead. Soon after,
Japanese planes eliminated much of the American
air force in the Philippines, and a Japanese Army
was ashore in Malaya. (now Malaysia) - These great Japanese successes, achieved without
prior diplomatic formalities, shocked and enraged
the previously divided American people into a
level of purposeful unity hardly seen before or
since.
5- PLAY NATIONAL GEO MAP / SERIES OF EVENTS
6JapaneseCanadians in the 1940s
Canadas National Flag
Japans National Flag
7Overview
- Early in the war, many Japanese-Canadians
volunteered to fight with the Canadian forces. - Canadians were suspicious of populations
connected with enemy countries. - After the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour,
JapaneseCanadians began to be treated unfairly
by the Canadian government. - They were denied the right to vote and to own
property because of their association with Japan
in WWII.
JapaneseCanadians from British Columbia were
forced to work on farms throughout Canada, often
for little to no pay at all.
8JapaneseCanadians in 1941
- After Japan bombed Pearl Harbor in Hawaii in
1941, Canadians became suspicious of Japanese
Canadians within our borders. - There were 23,000 people of Japanese decent
living in Canada during WWII. - 22,000 of them were located in British Columbia.
- The government wanted to protect Canada from
possible terrorism, and formed internment camps
for Japanese Canadians.
9Internment Camps
- Early in 1942 there were several antiJapanese
marches in Vancouver. - In spite of these marches, only 750
JapaneseCanadians moved voluntarily. - They received hostile greetings from local
residents in the Okanagan Valley. - The government was unhappy with the small number
who moved. - In March 1942 all JapaneseCanadians were rounded
up and sent to internment camps in British
Columbia.
An internment camp for Japanese Canadians
during WWII.
10Conditions of Camps
- Camps were secured with armed guards.
- Japanese Canadians slept in dormitory style
wooden huts. - There were no flushing toilets or running water
in these huts. - Quality of life in these camps was very
primitive.
Inside a Japanese internment camp.
11Deportation of JapaneseCanadians
- The Canadian government offered all
JapaneseCanadians free passage to Japan. - People who refused were interned.
- In 1942 the Canadian government began deporting
people of Japanese decent. - More than 4000 people were deported, many of whom
had never been to Japan in their lives. - Families were torn apart.
JapaneseCanadians being taken to their
deportation.
12Loss of Property
- In 1943, the government was given the power to
sell JapaneseCanadian property including - Houses
- Cars
- Shops
- Fishing Boats
- The owners of these items received little to none
of the money.
A Canadian officer meets with two Japanese
Canadians during WWII.
13The Apology
- In 1988 the Canadian government finally
apologized to the Japanese Canadian population. - The government agreed to pay 21,000 to each of
the 1400 people still living who had been
affected by the policy of internment. - Canadian citizenship was also granted to people
who were deported.
Prime Minister Brian Mulroney meetswith Japanese
representatives in apology for Canadas actions
in the 1940s.