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From Pearl Harbor to Manzanar

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Title: Pearl Harbor and Internment Author: Redwood High School. Last modified by: Brown, Ted Created Date: 2/6/2002 1:52:43 AM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: From Pearl Harbor to Manzanar


1
From Pearl Harbor to Manzanar
2
This is No Drill
  • Dec. 7, 1941 Japanese Imperial Navy bombs Pearl
    Harbor, home of the Pacific fleet
  • Japanese navy only 450 kilometers from Hawaii
  • Dec. 8, 1941 FDR asks for a declaration of war
    from Congress
  • Congress gives vast war-making powers to the
    President
  • day which will live in infamy
  • result of poor communication and underestimation
    of the Japanese military capability

3
Public Response to Pearl Harbor
  • Shock, indignation Pearl Harbor deemed a sneak
    attack-not war by gentlemens rules
  • How did we let this one get by?
  • In addition to patriotism and unity, rioting,
    looting, harassment, propaganda, anger, hysteria

4
Demonizing the Enemy
5
Propaganda Methods
  • Stereotyping
  • Substitution of names
  • Transfer connection between something
    valued/hated and idea being discussed
  • Selection of simple facts
  • Repetition
  • Assertion
  • Appeals to values authority, patriotism

6
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7
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8
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9
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10
Did racism make internment possible?
  • Pre WWII racism toward people of Japanese descent
    made internment possible
  • 1905 Asiatic Exclusion League--SF
  • Japanese farm laborers often deported from towns
    by vigilante groups-Turlock, CA 1921
  • 1922 Ozawa Case in USSC Issei cant become
    naturalized citizens on basis of race ban lasts
    until 1952
  • 1924 anti-immigration signed by
    Coolidge-effectively ends Japanese immigration

11
The Nikkei
  • Nikkei--Four generations of people of Japanese
    ancestry living in America
  • Issei-1st generation-born in Japan
  • Nisei---2nd generation, raised in the US for the
    most part--Japanese and American in culture
    (Kibei--Nisei who return to Japan)
  • Sansei--3rd Generation, some born in the
    internment camps, but too little to
    remember--have tried to reetablish link with this
    tragedy
  • Yonsei--children of the Sansei

Issei Volunteer for US Army 1918
12
FDR and Japanese-Americans
  • Executive Order 9066-Feb. 19, 1942
  • Executive Order 9102-Mar. 18-establishes WRA
  • FDR declares West Coast a war theater
  • 110,000 forcibly interned to 10 locations in 7
    states
  • families given 48 hrs. to dispose of belongings
  • if sold, most received only about 5 of value of
    possessions
  • 1/3 Issei, 2/3 Nisei

13
Internment Camps
14
LEAVING HOME
15
Japanese Farms in California and Internment Policy
16
Life in Manzanar
17
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18
Attitudes about Internment
  • Entertainment Little Tokyo, USA-20th Century
    Fox--all Issei and Nisei are seen as volunteer
    spies
  • Japanese are the only ethnic group singled out
    for internment during WWII in America--not
    Italian or German Americans
  • Business/labor
  • opportunity to take out the competition
  • FDR Oct. 1942--refers to relocation centers
    as concentration camps
  • Relocation deemednecessary as states refused to
    accept Japanese
  • Military/Society
  • Japanese-Americans seen as potential spies

19
Internment and the Constitution
  • Korematsu vs. US
  • Supreme Court rules internment Constitutional
  • Court could not second-guess military decisions
  • but once loyalty was established, then you
    couldnt hold the person
  • (by then, the camps were being closed down)

20
The Camps up Close
  • Assembly Centers-temporary camps from winter to
    fall of 42
  • Relocation Centers permanent camps
  • Dry, arid conditions--fit for toxic waste
    disposal today

21
Nisei US Soldier visiting family
Gila River, AZ
Two Issei playing Go at Poston Relocation Center
Manzanar, CA
22
What were the results?
  • Greatest violation of civil liberties on the
    homefront
  • 105 million of farmland lost
  • 500 million in yearly income, plus uncalculated
    personal savings
  • No act of sabotage proved
  • March 46 camps closed
  • 1981-83 CWRIC-Commission on Wartime Relocation
    and Internment of Civilians
  • 1988 Official govt. apology reparations
  • 1990 20,000 to each internee
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