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Japanese Americans

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Opportunity Most Japanese Americans did not have many opportunities in America after Pearl Harbor most of the Japanese were put into internment camps ... on American ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Japanese Americans


1
Japanese Americans
  • Michael Hagen / Chase Berklacich / Michael
    Codorniz / Jared Drake

2
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  • 150,000 Japanese Anericans lived in Hawaii during
    the time of Pearl Harbor. These civilians were
    accused of helping plan the surprise attack and
    had their loyalty to the US questioned. The
    United States War Department suggested we
    evacuate the entire race from our country. This
    recommendation was denied due to the Hawaiin
    military governor calming down his people.
    Businesses also opposed an evacuation because so
    many jobs would be lost and these companies would
    be unable to provide profit for the island's
    economy. The press worked hard to back up this
    position. In the end, nearly all Japanese
    Americans stayed.

3
Opportunity
Most Japanese Americans did not have many
opportunities in America after Pearl Harbor most
of the Japanese were put into internment camps
because the government saw them as a threat to
national security
4
Hardships
  • Hawaii suggests that their mass removal on the
    West Coast was racially motivated rather than
    born of "military necessity." Due to the attack
    on Pearl Harbor.
  • Executive Order 9066 was written in vague terms
    that did not specify an ethnicity, it was used
    for the mass incarceration of Japanese Americans.
    The government claimed that incarceration was for
    military necessity and, ironically, to "protect"
    Japanese Americans from racist retribution they
    might face as a result of Pearl Harbor.
  • "Evacuated" families left behind homes,
    businesses, pets, land, and most of their
    belongings. Taking only what they could carry,
    Japanese Americans were taken by bus and train to
    assembly centers hastily converted facilities
    such as race tracks and fairgrounds. Here they
    awaited reassignment to the "relocation camps."
  • The bombing of Pearl Harbor it shows the power of
    the japanese military as it was a surprise attack
    towards the United States.On December 7, 1941,
    Japan launched a devastating surprise aerial
    attack on the U. S. Pacific Fleet anchored at
    Pearl Harbor and on American military airfields
    on Oahu.
  • On January 2, 1945, the Exclusion Order was
    lifted and Japanese Americans were free to leave
    the relocation camps and to return to their
    former homes, or to any location they pleased.
    Some of the interned Japanese (1,327) who
    although U. S. residents were Japanese citizens,
    chose to emigrate to Japan (although the war was
    still on). The last relocation camp closed in
    1946.

5
Terms
  • Internment Camps
  • An internment camp is a center for confining
    people who have been relocated for reasons of
    national security
  • Korematsu v. United States
  • The court upheld his convention on the
    grounds that a groups civil rights can be set
    aside in a time of war.
  • Executive Order 9066
  • This authorized the secretary of war to
    prescribe certain areas as military zones. This
    cleared the way for the deportation of japanese
    americans to internment camps.
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